Refine
Year of publication
- 2018 (72) (remove)
Document Type
- Preprint (72) (remove)
Language
- English (72)
Has Fulltext
- yes (72)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (72)
Keywords
Institute
Background: Drugs used to treat gastrointestinal diseases (GI drugs) are widely used either as prescription or over23 the-counter (OTC) medications and belong to both the ten most prescribed and ten most sold OTC medications worldwide. Current clinical practice shows that in many cases, these drugs are administered concomitantly with other drug products. Due to their metabolic properties and mechanisms of action, the drugs used to treat gastrointestinal diseases can change the pharmacokinetics of some co27 administered drugs. In certain cases, these interactions can lead to failure of treatment or to the occurrence of serious adverse events. The mechanism of interaction depends highly on drug properties and differs among therapeutic categories. Understanding these interactions is essential to providing recommendations for optimal drug therapy.
Objective: To discuss the most frequent interactions between GI and other drugs, including identification of the mechanisms behind these interactions, where possible.
Conclusion: Interactions with GI drugs are numerous and can be highly significant clinically. Whilst alterations in bioavailability due to changes in solubility, dissolution rate and metabolic interactions can be (for the most part) easily identified, interactions that are mediated through other mechanisms, such as permeability or microbiota, are less well understood. Future work should focus on characterizing these aspects.
Objectives Supersaturating formulations hold great promise for delivery of poorly soluble active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). To profit from supersaturating formulations, precipitation is hindered with precipitation inhibitors (PIs), maintaining drug concentrations for as long as possible. This review provides a brief overview of supersaturation and precipitation, focusing on precipitation inhibition. Trial-and-error PI selection will be examined alongside established PI screening techniques. Primarily, however, this review will focus on recent advances that utilise advanced analytical techniques to increase mechanistic understanding of PI action and systematic PI selection.
Key Findings. Advances in mechanistic understanding have been made possible by the use of analytical tools such as spectroscopy, microscopy and mathematical and molecular modelling, which have been reviewed herein. Using these techniques, PI selection can instead be guided by molecular rationale. However, more work is required to see wide-spread application of such an approach for PI selection.
Conclusions PIs are becoming increasingly important in enabling formulations. Trial-and-error approaches have seen success thus far. However, it is essential to learn more about the mode of action of PIs if the most optimal formulations are to be realised. Robust analytical tools, and the knowledge of where and how they can be applied, will be essential in this endeavour.
The gradual heterogeneity of climatic factors pose varying selection pressures across geographic distances that leave signatures of clinal variation in the genome. Separating signatures of clinal adaptation from signatures of other evolutionary forces, such as demographic processes, genetic drift, and adaptation to non-clinal conditions of the immediate local environment is a major challenge. Here, we examine climate adaptation in five natural populations of the harlequin fly Chironomus riparius sampled along a climatic gradient across Europe. Our study integrates experimental data, individual genome resequencing, Pool-Seq data, and population genetic modelling. Common-garden experiments revealed a positive correlation of population growth rates corresponding to the population origin along the climate gradient, suggesting thermal adaptation on the phenotypic level. Based on a population genomic analysis, we derived empirical estimates of historical demography and migration. We used an FST outlier approach to infer positive selection across the climate gradient, in combination with an environmental association analysis. In total we identified 162 candidate genes as genomic basis of climate adaptation. Enriched functions among these candidate genes involved the apoptotic process and molecular response to heat, as well as functions identified in other studies of climate adaptation in other insects. Our results show that local climate conditions impose strong selection pressures and lead to genomic adaptation despite strong gene flow. Moreover, these results imply that selection to different climatic conditions seems to converge on a functional level, at least between different insect species.
Background: MDM2 inhibitors are under investigation for the treatment of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients in phase III clinical trials. To study resistance formation to MDM2 inhibitors in AML cells, we here established 45 sub-lines of the AML TP53 wild-type cell lines MV4-11 (15 sub-lines), OCI-AML-2 (10 sub-lines), OCI-AML-3 (12 sub-lines), and SIG-M5 (8 sub-lines) with resistance to the MDM2 inhibitor nutlin-3.
Methods: Nutlin-3-resistant sub-lines were established by continuous exposure to stepwise increasing drug concentrations. The TP53 status was determined by next generation sequencing, cell viability was measured by MTT assay, and p53 was depleted using lentiviral vectors encoding shRNA.
Results: All MV4-11 sub-lines harboured the same R248W mutation and all OCI-AML-2 sub-lines the same Y220C mutation, indicating the selection of pre-existing TP53-mutant subpopulations. In concordance, rare alleles harbouring the respective mutations could be detected in the parental MV4-11 and OCI-AML-2 cell lines. The OCI-AML-3 and SIG-M5 sub-lines were characterised by varying TP53 mutations or wild type TP53, indicating the induction of de novo TP53 mutations. Doxorubicin, etoposide, gemcitabine, cytarabine, and fludarabine resistance profiles revealed a noticeable heterogeneity among the sub-lines even of the same parental cell lines. Loss-of-p53 function was not generally associated with decreased sensitivity to cytotoxic drugs.
Conclusion: We introduce a substantial set of models of acquired MDM2 inhibitor resistance in AML. MDM2 inhibitors select, in dependence on the nature of a given AML cell population, pre-existing TP53-mutant subpopulations or induce de novo TP53 mutations. Although loss-of-p53 function has been associated with chemoresistance in AML, nutlin-3-adapted sub-lines displayed in the majority of experiments similar or increased drug sensitivity compared to the respective parental cells. Hence, chemotherapy may remain an option for AML patients after MDM2 inhibitor therapy failure. Even sub-lines of the same parental cancer cell line displayed considerable heterogeneity in their response to other anti-cancer drugs, indicating the need for the detailed understanding and monitoring of the evolutionary processes in cancer cell populations in response to therapy as part of future individualised treatment protocols.
Objectives Omeprazole was shown to improve the anti-cancer effect of the nucleoside-analogue 5-fluorouracil. Here, we investigated the effects of omeprazole on the activities of the antiviral nucleoside analogues ribavirin and acyclovir.
Methods West Nile virus-infected Vero cells and influenza A H1N1-infected MDCK cells were treated with omeprazole and/ or ribavirin. Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1)- or HSV-2-infected Vero or HaCat cells were treated with omeprazole and/ or acyclovir. Antiviral effects were determined by examination of cytopathogenic effects (CPE), immune staining, and virus yield assay. Cell viability was investigated by MTT assay.
Results Omeprazole concentrations up to 80μg/mL did not affect the antiviral effects of ribavirin. In contrast, omeprazole increased the acyclovir-mediated effects on HSV-1- and HSV-2-induced CPE formation in a dose-dependent manner in Vero and HaCat cells. Addition of omeprazole 80μg/mL resulted in a 10.8-fold reduction of the acyclovir concentration that reduces CPE formation by 50% (IC50) in HSV-1-infected Vero cells and in a 47.7-fold acyclovir IC50 reduction in HSV-1-infected HaCat cells. In HSV-2-infected cells, omeprazole reduced the acyclovir IC50 by 7.3-fold (Vero cells) or by 12.9-fold (HaCat cells). Omeprazole also enhanced the acyclovir-mediated effects on viral antigen expression and virus replication in HSV-1- and HSV-2-infected cells. In HSV-1-infected HaCat cells, omeprazole 80μg/mL reduced the virus titre in the presence of acyclovir 1μg/mL by 1.6×105-fold. In HSV-2-infected HaCat cells omeprazole 80μg/mL reduced the virus titre in the presence of acyclovir 2μg/mL by 9.2×103-fold. The investigated drug concentrations did not affect cell viability, neither alone nor in combination.
Conclusions Omeprazole increases the anti-HSV activity of acyclovir. As clinically well-established and tolerated drug, it is a candidate drug for antiviral therapies in combination with acyclovir.
MAPK6/ERK3 is an atypical member of the MAPKs. An essential role has been suggested by the perinatal lethal phenotype of ERK3 knockout mice carrying a lacZ insertion in exon 2 due to pulmonary disfunction and by defects in function, activation and positive selection of T cells. To study the role of ERK3 in vivo, we generated mice carrying a conditional Erk3 allele with exon3 flanked by LoxP sites. Loss of ERK3 protein was validated after deletion of Erk3 in the female germ line using zona pellucida 3 (Zp3)-cre and a clear reduction of the protein kinase MK5 is detected, providing first evidence for the existence of the ERK3/MK5 signaling complex in vivo. In contrast to the previously reported Erk3 knockout phenotype, these mice are viable and fertile, do not display pulmonary hypoplasia, acute respiratory failure, abnormal T cell development, reduction of thymocyte numbers or altered T cells selection. Hence, ERK3 is dispensable for pulmonary and T-cell functions. The perinatal lethality, lung and T-cell defects of the previous ERK3 knockout mice are likely due to ERK3-unrelated effects of the inserted lacZ-neomycin-resistance-cassette. The knockout mouse of the closely related atypical MAPK ERK4/MAPK4 is also normal suggesting redundant functions of both protein kinases.
Bleaching-independent, whole-cell, 3D and multi-color STED imaging with exchangeable fluorophores
(2018)
We demonstrate bleaching-independent STED microscopy using fluorogenic labels that reversibly bind to their target structure. A constant exchange of labels guarantees the removal of photobleached fluorophores and their replacement by intact fluorophores, thereby circumventing bleaching-related limitations of STED super-resolution imaging in fixed and living cells. Foremost, we achieve a constant labeling density and demonstrate a fluorescence signal for long and theoretically unlimited acquisition times. Using this concept, we demonstrate whole-cell, 3D, multi-color and live cell STED microscopy with up to 100 min acquisition time.
Single-particle electron cryo-microscopy (cryoEM) has undergone a “resolution revolution” that makes it possible to characterize megadalton (MDa) complexes at atomic resolution without crystals. To fully exploit the new opportunities in molecular microscopy, new procedures for the cloning, expression and purification of macromolecular complexes need to be explored. Macromolecular assemblies are often unstable, and invasive construct design or inadequate purification conditions or sample preparation methods can result in disassembly or denaturation. The structure of the 2.6 MDa yeast fatty acid synthase (FAS) has been studied by electron microscopy since the 1960s. We report a new, streamlined protocol for the rapid production of purified yeast FAS for structure determination by high-resolution cryoEM. Together with a companion protocol for preparing cryoEM specimens on a hydrophilized graphene layer, our new protocol has yielded a 3.1 Å map of yeast FAS from 15,000 automatically picked particles within a day. The high map quality enabled us to build a complete atomic model of an intact fungal FAS.
A key event in cellular physiology is the decision between membrane biogenesis and fat storage. Phosphatidic acid (PA) is an important lipid intermediate and signaling lipid at the branch point of these pathways and constantly monitored by the transcriptional repressor Opi1 to orchestrate lipid metabolism. Here, we report on the mechanism of membrane recognition by Opi1 and identify an amphipathic helix (AH) for the selective binding to membranes containing PA over phosphatidylserine (PS). The insertion of the AH into the hydrophobic core of the membrane renders Opi1 sensitive to the lipid acyl chain composition as an important factor contributing to the regulation of membrane biogenesis. Based on these findings, we rationally designed the membrane binding properties of Opi1 to control its responsiveness in the physiological context. Using extensive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we identified two PA-selective three-finger grips that tightly bind the phosphate headgroup, while interacting less intimately and more transiently with PS. This work establishes lipid headgroup selectivity as a new feature in the family of AH-containing membrane property sensors.
The cortical networks that underlie behavior exhibit an orderly functional organization at local and global scales, which is readily evident in the visual cortex of carnivores and primates1-6. Here, neighboring columns of neurons represent the full range of stimulus orientations and contribute to distributed networks spanning several millimeters2,7-11. However, the principles governing functional interactions that bridge this fine-scale functional architecture and distant network elements are unclear, and the emergence of these network interactions during development remains unexplored. Here, by using in vivo wide-field and 2-photon calcium imaging of spontaneous activity patterns in mature ferret visual cortex, we find widespread and specific modular correlation patterns that accurately predict the local structure of visually-evoked orientation columns from the spontaneous activity of neurons that lie several millimeters away. The large-scale networks revealed by correlated spontaneous activity show abrupt ‘fractures’ in continuity that are in tight register with evoked orientation pinwheels. Chronic in vivo imaging demonstrates that these large-scale modular correlation patterns and fractures are already present at early stages of cortical development and predictive of the mature network structure. Silencing feed-forward drive through either retinal or thalamic blockade does not affect network structure suggesting a cortical origin for this large-scale correlated activity, despite the immaturity of long-range horizontal network connections in the early cortex. Using a circuit model containing only local connections, we demonstrate that such a circuit is sufficient to generate large-scale correlated activity, while also producing correlated networks showing strong fractures, a reduced dimensionality, and an elongated local correlation structure, all in close agreement with our empirical data. These results demonstrate the precise local and global organization of cortical networks revealed through correlated spontaneous activity and suggest that local connections in early cortical circuits may generate structured long-range network correlations that underlie the subsequent formation of visually-evoked distributed functional networks.