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1.
A series of mono- and dinuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complexes containing the hydrophilic oligo(para-phenylene ethynylene) with two 3,6,9-trioxadec-1-yloxy chains was designed and synthesized. The mononuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complex was found to display a very strong tendency toward the formation of supramolecular structures. Interestingly, additional end-capping with another platinum(II) terpyridine moiety of various steric bulk at the terminal alkyne would lead to the formation of nanotubes or helical ribbons. These desirable nanostructures were found to be governed by the steric bulk on the platinum(II) terpyridine moieties, which modulates the directional metal−metal interactions and controls the formation of nanotubes or helical ribbons. Detailed analysis of temperature-dependent UV-visible absorption spectra of the nanostructured tubular aggregates also provided insights into the assembly mechanism and showed the role of metal−metal interactions in the cooperative supramolecular polymerization of the amphiphilic platinum(II) complexes.Square-planar d8 platinum(II) polypyridine complexes have long been known to exhibit intriguing spectroscopic and luminescence properties (154) as well as interesting solid-state polymorphism associated with metal−metal and π−π stacking interactions (114, 25). Earlier work by our group showed the first example, to our knowledge, of an alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine system [Pt(tpy)(C ≡ CR)]+ that incorporates σ-donating and solubilizing alkynyl ligands together with the formation of Pt···Pt interactions to exhibit notable color changes and luminescence enhancements on solvent composition change (25) and polyelectrolyte addition (26). This approach has provided access to the alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine and other related cyclometalated platinum(II) complexes, with functionalities that can self-assemble into metallogels (2731), liquid crystals (32, 33), and other different molecular architectures, such as hairpin conformation (34), helices (3538), nanostructures (3945), and molecular tweezers (46, 47), as well as having a wide range of applications in molecular recognition (4852), biomolecular labeling (4852), and materials science (53, 54). Recently, metal-containing amphiphiles have also emerged as a building block for supramolecular architectures (4244, 5559). Their self-assembly has always been found to yield different molecular architectures with unprecedented complexity through the multiple noncovalent interactions on the introduction of external stimuli (4244, 5559).Helical architecture is one of the most exciting self-assembled morphologies because of the uniqueness for the functional and topological properties (6069). Helical ribbons composed of amphiphiles, such as diacetylenic lipids, glutamates, and peptide-based amphiphiles, are often precursors for the growth of tubular structures on an increase in the width or the merging of the edges of ribbons (64, 65). Recently, the optimization of nanotube formation vs. helical nanostructures has aroused considerable interests and can be achieved through a fine interplay of the influence on the amphiphilic property of molecules (66), choice of counteranions (67, 68), or pH values of the media (69), which would govern the self-assembly of molecules into desirable aggregates of helical ribbons or nanotube scaffolds. However, a precise control of supramolecular morphology between helical ribbons and nanotubes remains challenging, particularly for the polycyclic aromatics in the field of molecular assembly (6469). Oligo(para-phenylene ethynylene)s (OPEs) with solely π−π stacking interactions are well-recognized to self-assemble into supramolecular system of various nanostructures but rarely result in the formation of tubular scaffolds (7073). In view of the rich photophysical properties of square-planar d8 platinum(II) systems and their propensity toward formation of directional Pt···Pt interactions in distinctive morphologies (2731, 3945), it is anticipated that such directional and noncovalent metal−metal interactions might be capable of directing or dictating molecular ordering and alignment to give desirable nanostructures of helical ribbons or nanotubes in a precise and controllable manner.Herein, we report the design and synthesis of mono- and dinuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complexes containing hydrophilic OPEs with two 3,6,9-trioxadec-1-yloxy chains. The mononuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complex with amphiphilic property is found to show a strong tendency toward the formation of supramolecular structures on diffusion of diethyl ether in dichloromethane or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) solution. Interestingly, additional end-capping with another platinum(II) terpyridine moiety of various steric bulk at the terminal alkyne would result in nanotubes or helical ribbons in the self-assembly process. To the best of our knowledge, this finding represents the first example of the utilization of the steric bulk of the moieties, which modulates the formation of directional metal−metal interactions to precisely control the formation of nanotubes or helical ribbons in the self-assembly process. Application of the nucleation–elongation model into this assembly process by UV-visible (UV-vis) absorption spectroscopic studies has elucidated the nature of the molecular self-assembly, and more importantly, it has revealed the role of metal−metal interactions in the formation of these two types of nanostructures.  相似文献   

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Cognition presents evolutionary research with one of its greatest challenges. Cognitive evolution has been explained at the proximate level by shifts in absolute and relative brain volume and at the ultimate level by differences in social and dietary complexity. However, no study has integrated the experimental and phylogenetic approach at the scale required to rigorously test these explanations. Instead, previous research has largely relied on various measures of brain size as proxies for cognitive abilities. We experimentally evaluated these major evolutionary explanations by quantitatively comparing the cognitive performance of 567 individuals representing 36 species on two problem-solving tasks measuring self-control. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that absolute brain volume best predicted performance across species and accounted for considerably more variance than brain volume controlling for body mass. This result corroborates recent advances in evolutionary neurobiology and illustrates the cognitive consequences of cortical reorganization through increases in brain volume. Within primates, dietary breadth but not social group size was a strong predictor of species differences in self-control. Our results implicate robust evolutionary relationships between dietary breadth, absolute brain volume, and self-control. These findings provide a significant first step toward quantifying the primate cognitive phenome and explaining the process of cognitive evolution.Since Darwin, understanding the evolution of cognition has been widely regarded as one of the greatest challenges for evolutionary research (1). Although researchers have identified surprising cognitive flexibility in a range of species (240) and potentially derived features of human psychology (4161), we know much less about the major forces shaping cognitive evolution (6271). With the notable exception of Bitterman’s landmark studies conducted several decades ago (63, 7274), most research comparing cognition across species has been limited to small taxonomic samples (70, 75). With limited comparable experimental data on how cognition varies across species, previous research has largely relied on proxies for cognition (e.g., brain size) or metaanalyses when testing hypotheses about cognitive evolution (7692). The lack of cognitive data collected with similar methods across large samples of species precludes meaningful species comparisons that can reveal the major forces shaping cognitive evolution across species, including humans (48, 70, 89, 9398).To address these challenges we measured cognitive skills for self-control in 36 species of mammals and birds (Fig. 1 and Tables S1–S4) tested using the same experimental procedures, and evaluated the leading hypotheses for the neuroanatomical underpinnings and ecological drivers of variance in animal cognition. At the proximate level, both absolute (77, 99107) and relative brain size (108112) have been proposed as mechanisms supporting cognitive evolution. Evolutionary increases in brain size (both absolute and relative) and cortical reorganization are hallmarks of the human lineage and are believed to index commensurate changes in cognitive abilities (52, 105, 113115). Further, given the high metabolic costs of brain tissue (116121) and remarkable variance in brain size across species (108, 122), it is expected that the energetic costs of large brains are offset by the advantages of improved cognition. The cortical reorganization hypothesis suggests that selection for absolutely larger brains—and concomitant cortical reorganization—was the predominant mechanism supporting cognitive evolution (77, 91, 100106, 120). In contrast, the encephalization hypothesis argues that an increase in brain volume relative to body size was of primary importance (108, 110, 111, 123). Both of these hypotheses have received support through analyses aggregating data from published studies of primate cognition and reports of “intelligent” behavior in nature—both of which correlate with measures of brain size (76, 77, 84, 92, 110, 124).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.A phylogeny of the species included in this study. Branch lengths are proportional to time except where long branches have been truncated by parallel diagonal lines (split between mammals and birds ∼292 Mya).With respect to selective pressures, both social and dietary complexities have been proposed as ultimate causes of cognitive evolution. The social intelligence hypothesis proposes that increased social complexity (frequently indexed by social group size) was the major selective pressure in primate cognitive evolution (6, 44, 48, 50, 87, 115, 120, 125141). This hypothesis is supported by studies showing a positive correlation between a species’ typical group size and the neocortex ratio (80, 81, 8587, 129, 142145), cognitive differences between closely related species with different group sizes (130, 137, 146, 147), and evidence for cognitive convergence between highly social species (26, 31, 148150). The foraging hypothesis posits that dietary complexity, indexed by field reports of dietary breadth and reliance on fruit (a spatiotemporally distributed resource), was the primary driver of primate cognitive evolution (151154). This hypothesis is supported by studies linking diet quality and brain size in primates (79, 81, 86, 142, 155), and experimental studies documenting species differences in cognition that relate to feeding ecology (94, 156166).Although each of these hypotheses has received empirical support, a comparison of the relative contributions of the different proximate and ultimate explanations requires (i) a cognitive dataset covering a large number of species tested using comparable experimental procedures; (ii) cognitive tasks that allow valid measurement across a range of species with differing morphology, perception, and temperament; (iii) a representative sample within each species to obtain accurate estimates of species-typical cognition; (iv) phylogenetic comparative methods appropriate for testing evolutionary hypotheses; and (v) unprecedented collaboration to collect these data from populations of animals around the world (70).Here, we present, to our knowledge, the first large-scale collaborative dataset and comparative analysis of this kind, focusing on the evolution of self-control. We chose to measure self-control—the ability to inhibit a prepotent but ultimately counterproductive behavior—because it is a crucial and well-studied component of executive function and is involved in diverse decision-making processes (167169). For example, animals require self-control when avoiding feeding or mating in view of a higher-ranking individual, sharing food with kin, or searching for food in a new area rather than a previously rewarding foraging site. In humans, self-control has been linked to health, economic, social, and academic achievement, and is known to be heritable (170172). In song sparrows, a study using one of the tasks reported here found a correlation between self-control and song repertoire size, a predictor of fitness in this species (173). In primates, performance on a series of nonsocial self-control control tasks was related to variability in social systems (174), illustrating the potential link between these skills and socioecology. Thus, tasks that quantify self-control are ideal for comparison across taxa given its robust behavioral correlates, heritable basis, and potential impact on reproductive success.In this study we tested subjects on two previously implemented self-control tasks. In the A-not-B task (27 species, n = 344), subjects were first familiarized with finding food in one location (container A) for three consecutive trials. In the test trial, subjects initially saw the food hidden in the same location (container A), but then moved to a new location (container B) before they were allowed to search (Movie S1). In the cylinder task (32 species, n = 439), subjects were first familiarized with finding a piece of food hidden inside an opaque cylinder. In the following 10 test trials, a transparent cylinder was substituted for the opaque cylinder. To successfully retrieve the food, subjects needed to inhibit the impulse to reach for the food directly (bumping into the cylinder) in favor of the detour response they had used during the familiarization phase (Movie S2).Thus, the test trials in both tasks required subjects to inhibit a prepotent motor response (searching in the previously rewarded location or reaching directly for the visible food), but the nature of the correct response varied between tasks. Specifically, in the A-not-B task subjects were required to inhibit the response that was previously successful (searching in location A) whereas in the cylinder task subjects were required to perform the same response as in familiarization trials (detour response), but in the context of novel task demands (visible food directly in front of the subject).  相似文献   

4.
A series of discrete decanuclear gold(I) μ3-sulfido complexes with alkyl chains of various lengths on the aminodiphosphine ligands, [Au10{Ph2PN(CnH2n+1)PPh2}43-S)4](ClO4)2, has been synthesized and characterized. These complexes have been shown to form supramolecular nanoaggregate assemblies upon solvent modulation. The photoluminescence (PL) colors of the nanoaggregates can be switched from green to yellow to red by varying the solvent systems from which they are formed. The PL color variation was investigated and correlated with the nanostructured morphological transformation from the spherical shape to the cube as observed by transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. Such variations in PL colors have not been observed in their analogous complexes with short alkyl chains, suggesting that the long alkyl chains would play a key role in governing the supramolecular nanoaggregate assembly and the emission properties of the decanuclear gold(I) sulfido complexes. The long hydrophobic alkyl chains are believed to induce the formation of supramolecular nanoaggregate assemblies with different morphologies and packing densities under different solvent systems, leading to a change in the extent of Au(I)–Au(I) interactions, rigidity, and emission properties.Gold(I) complexes are one of the fascinating classes of complexes that reveal photophysical properties that are highly sensitive to the nuclearity of the metal centers and the metal–metal distances (159). In a certain sense, they bear an analogy or resemblance to the interesting classes of metal nanoparticles (NPs) (6069) and quantum dots (QDs) (7076) in that the properties of the nanostructured materials also show a strong dependence on their sizes and shapes. Interestingly, while the optical and spectroscopic properties of metal NPs and QDs show a strong dependence on the interparticle distances, those of polynuclear gold(I) complexes are known to mainly depend on the nuclearity and the internuclear separations of gold(I) centers within the individual molecular complexes or clusters, with influence of the intermolecular interactions between discrete polynuclear molecular complexes relatively less explored (3438), and those of polynuclear gold(I) clusters not reported. Moreover, while studies on polynuclear gold(I) complexes or clusters are known (3454), less is explored of their hierarchical assembly and nanostructures as well as the influence of intercluster aggregation on the optical properties (3438). Among the gold(I) complexes, polynuclear gold(I) chalcogenido complexes represent an important and interesting class (4451). While directed supramolecular assembly of discrete Au12 (52), Au16 (53), Au18 (51), and Au36 (54) metallomacrocycles as well as trinuclear gold(I) columnar stacks (3438) have been reported, there have been no corresponding studies on the supramolecular hierarchical assembly of polynuclear gold(I) chalcogenido clusters.Based on our interests and experience in the study of gold(I) chalcogenido clusters (4446, 51), it is believed that nanoaggegrates with interesting luminescence properties and morphology could be prepared by the judicious design of the gold(I) chalcogenido clusters. As demonstrated by our previous studies on the aggregation behavior of square-planar platinum(II) complexes (7780) where an enhancement of the solubility of the metal complexes via introduction of solubilizing groups on the ligands and the fine control between solvophobicity and solvophilicity of the complexes would have a crucial influence on the factors governing supramolecular assembly and the formation of aggregates (80), introduction of long alkyl chains as solubilizing groups in the gold(I) sulfido clusters may serve as an effective way to enhance the solubility of the gold(I) clusters for the construction of supramolecular assemblies of novel luminescent nanoaggegrates.Herein, we report the preparation and tunable spectroscopic properties of a series of decanuclear gold(I) μ3-sulfido complexes with alkyl chains of different lengths on the aminophosphine ligands, [Au10{Ph2PN(CnH2n+1)PPh2}43-S)4](ClO4)2 [n = 8 (1), 12 (2), 14 (3), 18 (4)] and their supramolecular assembly to form nanoaggregates. The emission colors of the nanoaggregates of 2−4 can be switched from green to yellow to red by varying the solvent systems from which they are formed. These results have been compared with their short alkyl chain-containing counterparts, 1 and a related [Au10{Ph2PN(C3H7)PPh2}43-S)4](ClO4)2 (45). The present work demonstrates that polynuclear gold(I) chalcogenides, with the introduction of appropriate functional groups, can serve as building blocks for the construction of novel hierarchical nanostructured materials with environment-responsive properties, and it represents a rare example in which nanoaggregates have been assembled with the use of discrete molecular metal clusters as building blocks.  相似文献   

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Tumor heterogeneity confounds cancer diagnosis and the outcome of therapy, necessitating analysis of tumor cell subsets within the tumor mass. Elevated expression of hyaluronan (HA) and HA receptors, receptor for HA-mediated motility (RHAMM)/HA-mediated motility receptor and cluster designation 44 (CD44), in breast tumors correlates with poor outcome. We hypothesized that a probe for detecting HA–HA receptor interactions may reveal breast cancer (BCa) cell heterogeneity relevant to tumor progression. A fluorescent HA (F-HA) probe containing a mixture of polymer sizes typical of tumor microenvironments (10–480 kDa), multiplexed profiling, and flow cytometry were used to monitor HA binding to BCa cell lines of different molecular subtypes. Formulae were developed to quantify binding heterogeneity and to measure invasion in vivo. Two subsets exhibiting differential binding (HA−/low vs. HAhigh) were isolated and characterized for morphology, growth, and invasion in culture and as xenografts in vivo. F-HA–binding amounts and degree of heterogeneity varied with BCa subtype, were highest in the malignant basal-like cell lines, and decreased upon reversion to a nonmalignant phenotype. Binding amounts correlated with CD44 and RHAMM displayed but binding heterogeneity appeared to arise from a differential ability of HA receptor-positive subpopulations to interact with F-HA. HAhigh subpopulations exhibited significantly higher local invasion and lung micrometastases but, unexpectedly, lower proliferation than either unsorted parental cells or the HA−/low subpopulation. Querying F-HA binding to aggressive tumor cells reveals a previously undetected form of heterogeneity that predicts invasive/metastatic behavior and that may aid both early identification of cancer patients susceptible to metastasis, and detection/therapy of invasive BCa subpopulations.Breast tumors display substantial heterogeneity driven by genetic and epigenetic mechanisms (13). These processes select and support tumor cell subpopulations with distinct phenotypes in proliferation, metastatic/invasive proclivity, and treatment susceptibility that contribute to clinical outcomes. Currently, there is a paucity of biomarkers to identify these subpopulations (312). Although detection of genetic heterogeneity may itself be a breast cancer (BCa) prognostic marker (3, 1315), the phenotypes manifested from this diversity are context-dependent. Therefore, phenotypic markers provide additional powerful tools for biological information required to design diagnostics and therapeutics. Glycomic approaches have enormous potential for revealing tumor cell phenotypic heterogeneity because glycans are themselves highly heterogeneous and their complexity reflects the nutritional, microenvironmental, and genetic dynamics of the tumors (1618).We used hyaluronan (HA) as a model carbohydrate ligand for probing heterogeneity in glycosaminoglycan–BCa cell receptor interactions. We reasoned this approach would reveal previously undetected cellular and functional heterogeneity linked to malignant progression because the diversity of cell glycosylation patterns, which can occur as covalent and noncovalent modifications of proteins and lipids as well as different sizes of such polysaccharides as HA, is unrivaled (16, 17, 19). In particular, tumor and wound microenvironments contain different sizes of HA polymers that bind differentially to cell receptors to activate signaling pathways regulating cell migration, invasion, survival, and proliferation (1922).More than other related glycosaminoglycans, HA accumulation within BCa tumor cells and peritumor stroma is a predictor of poor outcome (23) and of the conversion of the preinvasive form of BCa, ductal carcinoma in situ, to an early invasive form of BCa (24). HA is a nonantigenic and large, relatively simple, unbranched polymer, but the manner in which it is metabolized is highly complex (19, 25). There are literally thousands of different HA sizes in remodeling microenvironments, including tumors. HA polymers bind to cells via at least six known receptors (16, 19, 20, 2632). Two of these, cluster designation 44 (CD44) and receptor for HA-mediated motility/HA-mediated motility receptor (RHAMM/HMMR), form multivalent complexes with different ranges of HA sizes (19, 29, 33), and both receptors are implicated in BCa progression (1921, 23, 29, 30, 3336). Elevated CD44 expression in the peritumor stroma is associated with increased relapse (37), and in primary BCa cell subsets may contribute to tumor initiation and progression (3840). Elevated RHAMM expression in BCa tumor subsets is a prognostic indicator of poor outcome and increased metastasis (22, 33, 41). RHAMM polymorphisms may also be a factor in BCa susceptibility (42, 43).We postulated that multivalent interactions resulting from mixture of a polydisperse population of fluorescent HA (F-HA) sizes, typical of those found in remodeling microenvironments of wounds and tumors (19, 20, 29), with cellular HA receptors would uncover a heterogeneous binding pattern useful for sorting tumor cells into distinct subsets. We interrogated the binding of F-HA to BCa lines of different molecular subtypes, and related binding/uptake patterns to CD44 and RHAMM display, and to tumor cell growth, invasion, and metastasis.  相似文献   

7.
Global analysis of gene expression via RNA sequencing was conducted for trisomics for the left arm of chromosome 2 (2L) and compared with the normal genotype. The predominant response of genes on 2L was dosage compensation in that similar expression occurred in the trisomic compared with the diploid control. However, the male and female trisomic/normal expression ratio distributions for 2L genes differed in that females also showed a strong peak of genes with increased expression and males showed a peak of reduced expression relative to the opposite sex. For genes in other autosomal regions, the predominant response to trisomy was reduced expression to the inverse of the altered chromosomal dosage (2/3), but a minor peak of increased expression in females and further reduced expression in males were also found, illustrating a sexual dimorphism for the response to aneuploidy. Moreover, genes with sex-biased expression as revealed by comparing amounts in normal males and females showed responses of greater magnitude to trisomy 2L, suggesting that the genes involved in dosage-sensitive aneuploid effects also influence sex-biased expression. Each autosomal chromosome arm responded to 2L trisomy similarly, but the ratio distributions for X-linked genes were distinct in both sexes, illustrating an X chromosome-specific response to aneuploidy.Changes in chromosomal dosage have long been known to affect the phenotype or viability of an organism (14). Altering the dosage of individual chromosomes typically has a greater impact than varying the whole genome (57). This general rule led to the concept of “genomic balance” in that dosage changes of part of the genome produce a nonoptimal relationship of gene products. The interpretation afforded these observations was that genes on the aneuploid chromosome produce a dosage effect for the amount of gene product present in the cell (8).However, when gene expression studies were conducted on aneuploids, it became known that transacting modulations of gene product amounts were also more prevalent with aneuploidy than with whole-genome changes (914). Assays of enzyme activities, protein, and RNA levels revealed that any one chromosomal segment could modulate in trans the expression of genes throughout the genome (915). These modulations could be positively or negatively correlated with the changed chromosomal segment dosage, but inverse correlations were the most common (1013). For genes on the varied segment, not only were dosage effects observed, but dosage compensation was also observed, which results from a cancelation of gene dosage effects by inverse effects operating simultaneously on the varied genes (9, 10, 1418). This circumstance results in “autosomal” dosage compensation (14, 1618). Studies of trisomic X chromosomes examining selected endogenous genes or global RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) studies illustrate that the inverse effect can also account for sex chromosome dosage compensation in Drosophila (15, 1921). In concert, autosomal genes are largely inversely affected by trisomy of the X chromosome (15, 19, 21).The dosage effects of aneuploidy can be reduced to the action of single genes whose functions tend to be involved in heterogeneous aspects of gene regulation but which have in common membership in macromolecular complexes (8, 2224). This fact led to the hypothesis that genomic imbalance effects result from the altered stoichiometry of subunits that affects the function of the whole and that occurs from partial but not whole-genome dosage change (8, 2225). Genomic balance also affects the evolutionary trajectory of duplicate genes differently based on whether the mode of duplication is partial or whole-genome (22, 23).Here we used RNA-seq to examine global patterns of gene expression in male and female larvae trisomic for the left arm of chromosome 2 (2L). The results demonstrate the strong prevalence of aneuploidy dosage compensation and of transacting inverse effects. Furthermore, because both trisomic males and females could be examined, a sexual dimorphism of the aneuploid response was discovered. Also, the response of the X chromosome to trisomy 2L was found to be distinct from that of the autosomes, illustrating an X chromosome-specific effect. Genes with sex-biased expression, as determined by comparing normal males and females, responded more strongly to trisomy 2L. Collectively, the results illustrate the prevalence of the inverse dosage effect in trisomic Drosophila and suggest that the X chromosome has evolved a distinct response to genomic imbalance as would be expected under the hypothesis that X chromosome dosage compensation uses the inverse dosage effect as part of its mechanism (15).  相似文献   

8.
It is unknown whether anatomical specializations in the endbrains of different vertebrates determine the neuronal code to represent numerical quantity. Therefore, we recorded single-neuron activity from the endbrain of crows trained to judge the number of items in displays. Many neurons were tuned for numerosities irrespective of the physical appearance of the items, and their activity correlated with performance outcome. Comparison of both behavioral and neuronal representations of numerosity revealed that the data are best described by a logarithmically compressed scaling of numerical information, as postulated by the Weber–Fechner law. The behavioral and neuronal numerosity representations in the crow reflect surprisingly well those found in the primate association cortex. This finding suggests that distantly related vertebrates with independently developed endbrains adopted similar neuronal solutions to process quantity.Birds show elaborate quantification skills (13) that are of adaptive value in naturalistic situations like nest parasitism (4), food caching (5), or communication (6). The neuronal correlates of numerosity representations have only been explored in humans (79) and primates (1018), and they have been found to reside in the prefrontal and posterior parietal neocortices. In contrast to primates, birds lack a six-layered neocortex. The birds’ lineage diverged from mammals 300 Mya (19), at a time when the neocortex had not yet developed from the pallium of the endbrain. Instead, birds developed different pallial parts as dominant endbrain structures (20, 21) based on convergent evolution, with the nidopallium caudolaterale (NCL) as a high-level association area (2226). Where and how numerosity is encoded in vertebrates lacking a neocortex is unknown. Here, we show that neurons in the telencephalic NCL of corvid songbirds respond to numerosity and show a specific code for numerical information.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane recruitment of cytohesin family Arf guanine nucleotide exchange factors depends on interactions with phosphoinositides and active Arf GTPases that, in turn, relieve autoinhibition of the catalytic Sec7 domain through an unknown structural mechanism. Here, we show that Arf6-GTP relieves autoinhibition by binding to an allosteric site that includes the autoinhibitory elements in addition to the PH domain. The crystal structure of a cytohesin-3 construct encompassing the allosteric site in complex with the head group of phosphatidyl inositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate and N-terminally truncated Arf6-GTP reveals a large conformational rearrangement, whereby autoinhibition can be relieved by competitive sequestration of the autoinhibitory elements in grooves at the Arf6/PH domain interface. Disposition of the known membrane targeting determinants on a common surface is compatible with multivalent membrane docking and subsequent activation of Arf substrates, suggesting a plausible model through which membrane recruitment and allosteric activation could be structurally integrated.Guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) activate GTPases by catalyzing exchange of GDP for GTP (1). Because many GEFs are recruited to membranes through interactions with phospholipids, active GTPases, or other membrane-associated proteins (15), GTPase activation can be restricted or amplified by spatial–temporal overlap of GEFs with binding partners. GEF activity can also be controlled by autoregulatory mechanisms, which may depend on membrane recruitment (611). Structural relationships between these mechanisms are poorly understood.Arf GTPases function in trafficking and cytoskeletal dynamics (5, 12, 13). Membrane partitioning of a myristoylated (myr) N-terminal amphipathic helix primes Arfs for activation by Sec7 domain GEFs (1417). Cytohesins comprise a metazoan Arf GEF family that includes the mammalian proteins cytohesin-1 (Cyth1), ARNO (Cyth2), and Grp1 (Cyth3). The Drosophila homolog steppke functions in insulin-like growth factor signaling, whereas Cyth1 and Grp1 have been implicated in insulin signaling and Glut4 trafficking, respectively (1820). Cytohesins share a modular architecture consisting of heptad repeats, a Sec7 domain with exchange activity for Arf1 and Arf6, a PH domain that binds phosphatidyl inositol (PI) polyphosphates, and a C-terminal helix (CtH) that overlaps with a polybasic region (PBR) (2128). The overlapping CtH and PBR will be referred to as the CtH/PBR. The phosphoinositide specificity of the PH domain is influenced by alternative splicing, which generates diglycine (2G) and triglycine (3G) variants differing by insertion of a glycine residue in the β1/β2 loop (29). Despite similar PI(4,5)P2 (PIP2) affinities, the 2G variant has 30-fold higher affinity for PI(3,4,5)P3 (PIP3) (30). In both cases, PIP3 is required for plasma membrane (PM) recruitment (23, 26, 3133), which is promoted by expression of constitutively active Arf6 or Arl4d and impaired by PH domain mutations that disrupt PIP3 or Arf6 binding, or by CtH/PBR mutations (8, 3436).Cytohesins are autoinhibited by the Sec7-PH linker and CtH/PBR, which obstruct substrate binding (8). Autoinhibition can be relieved by Arf6-GTP binding in the presence of the PIP3 head group (8). Active myr-Arf1 and myr-Arf6 also stimulate exchange activity on PIP2-containing liposomes (37). Whether this effect is due to relief of autoinhibition per se or enhanced membrane recruitment is not yet clear. Phosphoinositide recognition by PH domains, catalysis of nucleotide exchange by Sec7 domains, and autoinhibition in cytohesins are well characterized (8, 16, 17, 30, 3843). How Arf-GTP binding relieves autoinhibition and promotes membrane recruitment is unknown. Here, we determine the structural basis for relief of autoinhibition and investigate potential mechanistic relationships between allosteric regulation, phosphoinositide binding, and membrane targeting.  相似文献   

10.
The ASPP2 (also known as 53BP2L) tumor suppressor is a proapoptotic member of a family of p53 binding proteins that functions in part by enhancing p53-dependent apoptosis via its C-terminal p53-binding domain. Mounting evidence also suggests that ASPP2 harbors important nonapoptotic p53-independent functions. Structural studies identify a small G protein Ras-association domain in the ASPP2 N terminus. Because Ras-induced senescence is a barrier to tumor formation in normal cells, we investigated whether ASPP2 could bind Ras and stimulate the protein kinase Raf/MEK/ERK signaling cascade. We now show that ASPP2 binds to Ras–GTP at the plasma membrane and stimulates Ras-induced signaling and pERK1/2 levels via promoting Ras–GTP loading, B-Raf/C-Raf dimerization, and C-Raf phosphorylation. These functions require the ASPP2 N terminus because BBP (also known as 53BP2S), an alternatively spliced ASPP2 isoform lacking the N terminus, was defective in binding Ras–GTP and stimulating Raf/MEK/ERK signaling. Decreased ASPP2 levels attenuated H-RasV12–induced senescence in normal human fibroblasts and neonatal human epidermal keratinocytes. Together, our results reveal a mechanism for ASPP2 tumor suppressor function via direct interaction with Ras–GTP to stimulate Ras-induced senescence in nontransformed human cells.ASPP2, also known as 53BP2L, is a tumor suppressor whose expression is altered in human cancers (1). Importantly, targeting of the ASPP2 allele in two different mouse models reveals that ASPP2 heterozygous mice are prone to spontaneous and γ-irradiation–induced tumors, which rigorously demonstrates the role of ASPP2 as a tumor suppressor (2, 3). ASPP2 binds p53 via the C-terminal ankyrin-repeat and SH3 domain (46), is damage-inducible, and can enhance damage-induced apoptosis in part through a p53-mediated pathway (1, 2, 710). However, it remains unclear what biologic pathways and mechanisms mediate ASPP2 tumor suppressor function (1). Indeed, accumulating evidence demonstrates that ASPP2 also mediates nonapoptotic p53-independent pathways (1, 3, 1115).The induction of cellular senescence forms an important barrier to tumorigenesis in vivo (1621). It is well known that oncogenic Ras signaling induces senescence in normal nontransformed cells to prevent tumor initiation and maintain complex growth arrest pathways (16, 18, 2124). The level of oncogenic Ras activation influences its capacity to activate senescence; high levels of oncogenic H-RasV12 signaling leads to low grade tumors with senescence markers, which progress to invasive cancers upon senescence inactivation (25). Thus, tight control of Ras signaling is critical to ensure the proper biologic outcome in the correct cellular context (2628).The ASPP2 C terminus is important for promoting p53-dependent apoptosis (7). The ASPP2 N terminus may also suppress cell growth (1, 7, 2933). Alternative splicing can generate the ASPP2 N-terminal truncated protein BBP (also known as 53BP2S) that is less potent in suppressing cell growth (7, 34, 35). Although the ASPP2 C terminus mediates nuclear localization, full-length ASPP2 also localizes to the cytoplasm and plasma membrane to mediate extranuclear functions (7, 11, 12, 36). Structural studies of the ASPP2 N terminus reveal a β–Grasp ubiquitin-like fold as well as a potential Ras-binding (RB)/Ras-association (RA) domain (32). Moreover, ASPP2 can promote H-RasV12–induced senescence (13, 15). However, the molecular mechanism(s) of how ASPP2 directly promotes Ras signaling are complex and remain to be completely elucidated.Here, we explore the molecular mechanisms of how Ras-signaling is enhanced by ASPP2. We demonstrate that ASPP2: (i) binds Ras-GTP and stimulates Ras-induced ERK signaling via its N-terminal domain at the plasma membrane; (ii) enhances Ras-GTP loading and B-Raf/C-Raf dimerization and forms a ASPP2/Raf complex; (iii) stimulates Ras-induced C-Raf phosphorylation and activation; and (iv) potentiates H-RasV12–induced senescence in both primary human fibroblasts and neonatal human epidermal keratinocytes. These data provide mechanistic insight into ASPP2 function(s) and opens important avenues for investigation into its role as a tumor suppressor in human cancer.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The dismal prognosis of malignant brain tumors drives the development of new treatment modalities. In view of the multiple activities of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), we hypothesized that pretreatment with a GHRH agonist, JI-34, might increase the susceptibility of U-87 MG glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cells to subsequent treatment with the cytotoxic drug, doxorubicin (DOX). This concept was corroborated by our findings, in vivo, showing that the combination of the GHRH agonist, JI-34, and DOX inhibited the growth of GBM tumors, transplanted into nude mice, more than DOX alone. In vitro, the pretreatment of GBM cells with JI-34 potentiated inhibitory effects of DOX on cell proliferation, diminished cell size and viability, and promoted apoptotic processes, as shown by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide proliferation assay, ApoLive-Glo multiplex assay, and cell volumetric assay. Proteomic studies further revealed that the pretreatment with GHRH agonist evoked differentiation decreasing the expression of the neuroectodermal stem cell antigen, nestin, and up-regulating the glial maturation marker, GFAP. The GHRH agonist also reduced the release of humoral regulators of glial growth, such as FGF basic and TGFβ. Proteomic and gene-expression (RT-PCR) studies confirmed the strong proapoptotic activity (increase in p53, decrease in v-myc and Bcl-2) and anti-invasive potential (decrease in integrin α3) of the combination of GHRH agonist and DOX. These findings indicate that the GHRH agonists can potentiate the anticancer activity of the traditional chemotherapeutic drug, DOX, by multiple mechanisms including the induction of differentiation of cancer cells.Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is one of the most aggressive human cancers, and the afflicted patients inevitably succumb. The dismal outcome of this malignancy demands great efforts to find improved methods of treatment (1). Many compounds have been synthesized in our laboratory in the past few years that have proven to be effective against diverse malignant tumors (214). These are peptide analogs of hypothalamic hormones: luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), somatostatin, and analogs of other neuropeptides such as bombesin and gastrin-releasing peptide. The receptors for these peptides have been found to be widely distributed in the human body, including in many types of cancers (214). The regulatory functions of these hypothalamic hormones and other neuropeptides are not confined to the hypothalamo–hypophyseal system or, even more broadly, to the central nervous system (CNS). In particular, GHRH can induce the differentiation of ovarian granulosa cells and other cells in the reproductive system and function as a growth factor in various normal tissues, benign tumors, and malignancies (24, 6, 11, 1418). Previously, we also reported that antagonistic cytototoxic derivatives of some of these neuropeptides are able to inhibit the growth of several malignant cell lines (214).Our earlier studies showed that treatment with antagonists of LHRH or GHRH rarely effects complete regression of glioblastoma-derived tumors (5, 7, 10, 11). Previous studies also suggested that growth factors such as EGF or agonistic analogs of LHRH serving as carriers for cytotoxic analogs and functioning as growth factors may sensitize cancer cells to cytotoxic treatments (10, 19) through the activation of maturation processes. We therefore hypothesized that pretreatment with one of our GHRH agonists, such as JI-34 (20), which has shown effects on growth and differentiation in other cell lines (17, 18, 21, 22), might decrease the pluripotency and the adaptability of GBM cells and thereby increase their susceptibility to cytotoxic treatment.In vivo, tumor cells were implanted into athymic nude mice, tumor growth was recorded weekly, and final tumor mass was measured upon autopsy. In vitro, proliferation assays were used for the determination of neoplastic proliferation and cell growth. Changes in stem (nestin) and maturation (GFAP) antigen expression was evaluated with Western blot studies in vivo and with immunocytochemistry in vitro. The production of glial growth factors (FGF basic, TGFβ) was verified by ELISA. Further, using the Human Cancer Pathway Finder real-time quantitative PCR, numerous genes that play a role in the development of cancer were evaluated. We placed particular emphasis on the measurement of apoptosis, using the ApoLive-Glo Multiplex Assay kit and by detection of the expression of the proapoptotic p53 protein. This overall approach permitted the evaluation of the effect of GHRH agonist, JI-34, on the response to chemotherapy with doxorubicin.  相似文献   

13.
Exposure to a novel environment enhances the extinction of contextual fear. This has been explained by tagging of the hippocampal synapses used in extinction, followed by capture of proteins from the synapses that process novelty. The effect is blocked by the inhibition of hippocampal protein synthesis following the novelty or the extinction. Here, we show that it can also be blocked by the postextinction or postnovelty intrahippocampal infusion of the NMDA receptor antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphono pentanoic acid; the inhibitor of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII), autocamtide-2–related inhibitory peptide; or the blocker of L-voltage–dependent calcium channels (L-VDCCs), nifedipine. Inhibition of proteasomal protein degradation by β-lactacystin has no effect of its own on extinction or on the influence of novelty thereon but blocks the inhibitory effects of all the other substances except that of rapamycin on extinction, suggesting that their action depends on concomitant synaptic protein turnover. Thus, the tagging-and-capture mechanism through which novelty enhances fear extinction involves more molecular processes than hitherto thought: NMDA receptors, L-VDCCs, CaMKII, and synaptic protein turnover.Frey and Morris (1, 2) and their collaborators (37) proposed a mechanism whereby relatively “weak” hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) or long-term depression (LTD) lasting only a few minutes can nevertheless “tag” the synapses involved with proteins synthesized ad hoc, so that other plasticity-related proteins (PRPs) produced at other sets of synapses by other LTPs or LTDs can be captured by the tagged synapses and strengthen their activity to “long” LTPs or LTDs lasting hours or days (8). LTDs and LTPs can “cross”-tag each other; that is, LTDs can enhance both LTDs and LTPs, and vice versa (6, 8). Because many learned behaviors rely on hippocampal LTP or LTD (79), among them the processing of novelty (9, 10) and the making of extinction (1113), interactions between consecutive learnings can also be explained by the “tagging-and-capture” hypothesis (9, 10, 13), whose application to behavior became known as “behavioral tagging and capture” (5, 7, 9, 13). Typically, exposure to a novel environment [e.g., a nonanxiogenic 50 × 50 × 40-cm open field (OF) (5, 7, 9, 10, 14)] is interpolated before testing for another task, which becomes enhanced (410, 13). The usual reaction to novelty is orienting and exploration (14), followed by habituation of this response (1416). Habituation is perhaps the simplest form of learning, and it consists of inhibition of the orienting/exploratory response (14, 16).We recently showed that the brief exposure of rats to a novel environment (the OF) within a limited time window enhances the extinction of contextual fear conditioning (CFC) through a mechanism of synaptic tagging and capture (13), which is a previously unidentified example of behavioral tagging of inhibitory learning. Fear extinction is most probably due to LTD in the hippocampus (11, 12), although the possibility that it may also involve LTP is not discarded (13). The enhancement of extinction by novelty probably relies on the habituation to the novel environment, which is also probably due to LTD (15, 16). The enhancement of extinction by the exposure to novelty depends on hippocampal gene expression and ribosomal protein synthesis following extinction training and on both ribosomal and nonribosomal protein synthesis caused by the novel experience (13). Nonribosomal protein synthesis that can be blocked by rapamycin is believed to be dendritic (13, 17), so it would be strategically located for tagging-and-capture processes, but it has not been studied in synaptic tagging to date (38) or in other forms of behavioral tagging (710). As occurs with the interactions between LTPs and/or LTDs (4), the enhancement of extinction by novelty relies on hippocampal but not amygdalar processes (13).Recent findings indicate that several hippocampal processes related to learning and memory, such as the reconsolidation of spatial learning, are highly dependent on NMDA glutamate receptors, calcium/calmodulin protein kinase II (CaMKII), and long-term voltage channel blockers (L-VDCCs), which, in turn, rely on the proteasomal degradation of proteins (18). Here, we study the effects of an NMDA blocker, 2-amino-5-phosphono pentanoic acid (AP5); the L-VDCC blocker nifedipine (Nife); a CaMKII inhibitor, the autocamtide-2–related inhibitory peptide (AIP); and the irreversible proteasome blocker β-lactacystin (12, 13) on the interaction between novelty and extinction (11). As will be seen, we found that both the setting up of tags by extinction and the presumable production of PRPs by the processing of novelty are dependent on NMDA receptors, CaMKII, and L-VDCCs. This endorses and expands the hypothesis that the novelty–extinction interaction relies on synaptic tagging and capture (13).  相似文献   

14.
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces the infectiousness of HIV-infected persons, but only after testing, linkage to care, and successful viral suppression. Thus, a large proportion of HIV transmission during a period of high infectiousness in the first few months after infection (“early transmission”) is perceived as a threat to the impact of HIV “treatment-as-prevention” strategies. We created a mathematical model of a heterosexual HIV epidemic to investigate how the proportion of early transmission affects the impact of ART on reducing HIV incidence. The model includes stages of HIV infection, flexible sexual mixing, and changes in risk behavior over the epidemic. The model was calibrated to HIV prevalence data from South Africa using a Bayesian framework. Immediately after ART was introduced, more early transmission was associated with a smaller reduction in HIV incidence rate—consistent with the concern that a large amount of early transmission reduces the impact of treatment on incidence. However, the proportion of early transmission was not strongly related to the long-term reduction in incidence. This was because more early transmission resulted in a shorter generation time, in which case lower values for the basic reproductive number (R0) are consistent with observed epidemic growth, and R0 was negatively correlated with long-term intervention impact. The fraction of early transmission depends on biological factors, behavioral patterns, and epidemic stage and alone does not predict long-term intervention impacts. However, early transmission may be an important determinant in the outcome of short-term trials and evaluation of programs.Recent studies have confirmed that effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces the transmission of HIV among stable heterosexual couples (13). This finding has generated interest in understanding the population-level impact of HIV treatment on reducing the rate of new HIV infections in generalized epidemic settings (4). Research, including mathematical modeling (510), implementation research (11), and major randomized controlled trials (1214), are focused on how ART provision might be expanded strategically to maximize its public health benefits (15, 16).One concern is that if a large fraction of HIV transmission occurs shortly after a person becomes infected, before the person can be diagnosed and initiated on ART, this will limit the potential impact of HIV treatment on reducing HIV incidence (9, 17, 18). Data suggest that persons are more infectious during a short period of “early infection” after becoming infected with HIV (1922), although there is debate about the extent, duration, and determinants of elevated infectiousness (18, 23). The amount of transmission that occurs also will depend on patterns of sexual behavior and sexual networks (17, 2427). There have been estimates for the contribution of early infection to transmission from mathematical models (7, 17, 21, 2426) and phylogenetic analyses (2831), but these vary widely, from 5% to above 50% (23).In this study, we use a mathematical model to quantify how the proportion of transmission that comes from persons who have been infected recently affects the impact of treatment scale-up on HIV incidence. The model is calibrated to longitudinal HIV prevalence data from South Africa using a Bayesian framework. Thus, the model accounts for not only the early epidemic growth rate highlighted in previous research (5, 9, 18), but also the heterogeneity and sexual behavior change to explain the peak and decline in HIV incidence observed in sub-Saharan African HIV epidemics (32, 33).The model calibration allows uncertainty about factors that determine the amount of early transmission, including the relative infectiousness during early infection, heterogeneity in propensity for sexual risk behavior, assortativity in sexual partner selection, reduction in risk propensity over the life course, and population-wide reductions in risk behavior in response to the epidemic (32, 33). This results in multiple combinations of parameter values that are consistent with the observed epidemic and variation in the amount of early transmission. We simulated the impact of a treatment intervention and report how the proportion of early transmission correlates with the reduction in HIV incidence from the intervention over the short- and long-term.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
High-frequency deep brain stimulation (HFS) is clinically recognized to treat parkinsonian movement disorders, but its mechanisms remain elusive. Current hypotheses suggest that the therapeutic merit of HFS stems from increasing the regularity of the firing patterns in the basal ganglia (BG). Although this is consistent with experiments in humans and animal models of Parkinsonism, it is unclear how the pattern regularization would originate from HFS. To address this question, we built a computational model of the cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical loop in normal and parkinsonian conditions. We simulated the effects of subthalamic deep brain stimulation both proximally to the stimulation site and distally through orthodromic and antidromic mechanisms for several stimulation frequencies (20–180 Hz) and, correspondingly, we studied the evolution of the firing patterns in the loop. The model closely reproduced experimental evidence for each structure in the loop and showed that neither the proximal effects nor the distal effects individually account for the observed pattern changes, whereas the combined impact of these effects increases with the stimulation frequency and becomes significant for HFS. Perturbations evoked proximally and distally propagate along the loop, rendezvous in the striatum, and, for HFS, positively overlap (reinforcement), thus causing larger poststimulus activation and more regular patterns in striatum. Reinforcement is maximal for the clinically relevant 130-Hz stimulation and restores a more normal activity in the nuclei downstream. These results suggest that reinforcement may be pivotal to achieve pattern regularization and restore the neural activity in the nuclei downstream and may stem from frequency-selective resonant properties of the loop.High-frequency (i.e., above 100 Hz) deep brain stimulation (HFS) of the basal ganglia (BG) and thalamus is clinically recognized to treat movement disorders in Parkinson’s disease (PD) (14), but its therapeutic mechanisms remain unclear (5, 6).Early hypotheses about HFS were derived from the rate-based model of the BG function (7, 8) and postulated the disruption of the output of the BG-thalamic system via either the inactivation of neurons in the stimulated site (target) (915), which would provide an effect similar to a surgical lesion, or the abnormal excitation of axons projecting out of the target (1619), which would disrupt the neuronal activity in the structures downstream, including any pathophysiological activity (20).More recently, an ever-growing number of experiments in PD humans and animal models of Parkinsonism has indicated that HFS affects the firing patterns of the neurons rather than the mean firing rate both in the target and the structures downstream (18, 19, 2131) and it replaces repetitive low-frequency (i.e., ≤50 Hz) bursting patterns with regularized (i.e., more tonic) patterns at higher frequencies (25, 26). It has been proposed that increased pattern regularity of neurons in the target may be therapeutic (5, 3237), but it is still unknown how this regularity comes about with HFS.It has been suggested that an increased pattern regularity can deplete the information content of the target output and this lack of information would act as an “information lesion” (33) and prevent the pathological activity from being transmitted within the BG-thalamic system (22, 33, 36). As a result, an information lesion in the target [typically, one among the subthalamic nucleus (STN), internal globus pallidus (GPi), or thalamus] would have effects similar to those of a destructive lesion in the same site, which has been reported to alleviate the movement disorders (38).Instead, studies (32, 34, 35, 37) have suggested that an increased pattern regularity of the BG output partly compensates the PD-evoked impairment of the information-processing capabilities of the thalamo-cortical system, and this restores a more faithful thalamic relay of the sensorimotor information (35, 39).Although intriguing, these hypotheses remain elusive on (i) the neuronal mechanisms that would elicit pattern regularization (e.g., why regularization would be relevant only for HFS) and (ii) the effects that increased regularity would have on the cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical loop.It has been hypothesized that pattern regularization occurs because axons projecting out of the target follow the pattern of the stimulus pulses (40, 41) and, given the segregated organization of the BG-thalamic connections (42), it has been assumed that pattern regularization percolates straightforward from the target to the structures immediately downstream (34, 36). However, this representation of the pattern regularization as a “local” effect can hardly be reconciled with the fact that HFS of any structure of the cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical loop is therapeutic for at least some movement disorders (14, 4347), nor does it explain why stimulation at frequencies above 160–180 Hz is not necessarily therapeutic despite the fact that the regularity of the axonal patterns may increase (48, 49). Moreover, coherence in the 8–30-Hz band among neurons across different structures may decrease under HFS but not for lower frequencies (26, 5052), which suggests the emergence of diffused changes in neuronal activity that would be hardly accounted for with purely local effects.There is emerging evidence, instead, that HFS affects multiple structures simultaneously. First, it has been shown that deep brain stimulation (DBS) may antidromically activate afferent axons and fibers of passage (5359), thus reaching structures not immediately downstream. Second, studies (57, 58) observed in 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA)-intoxicated rats that the antidromic effects increase with the stimulation frequency and peak around 110–130 Hz. Third, it has been shown in 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP)-intoxicated nonhuman primates (NHPs) that STN DBS may evoke similar poststimulus responses in different BG structures, both downstream from and upstream to the STN (5, 27, 28, 30, 60). Finally, it has been reported that the cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical system consists of multiple sets of reentrant, interconnected, and partially overlapping neuronal loops (5, 42, 61, 62), which means that the structures upstream to the target (e.g., the striatum) may play an important role in the therapeutic mechanisms of HFS.Altogether, these results suggest that (A) pattern regularization is a global effect that exploits the closed-loop nature of the cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical system and selectively emerges only for specific HFS values, and that (B) the therapeutic merit of pattern regularization has to deal with the restoration of a more normal functionality of the entire cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical loop rather than with variations in the information content of one specific structure.We explored hypotheses (A) and (B) and assessed the system-wide effects of DBS by constructing a computational model of the cortico-BG-thalamo-cortical loop in both normal and parkinsonian conditions and by simulating the effects of STN DBS both at low (20–80 Hz) and high (100–180 Hz) frequencies. The model includes populations of single-compartment neurons and interneurons from motor cortex, striatum, GPi, and thalamus according to a network topology derived from the NHP anatomy, and it simulates both the orthodromic and antidromic effects of DBS. As a result, this model reproduced both average activity and discharge patterns of single units in NHP and rats under normal and parkinsonian conditions, with and without DBS, for all modeled structures.We show through numerical simulation that hypothesis (A) is significantly contributed by reinforcement mechanisms in the striatum. These mechanisms are selectively elicited by HFS, facilitate the percolation of regularized discharge patterns from the striatum to the GPi, and have a primary role in (B), because the percolated striato-pallidal input combines with the local effects of STN DBS to restore the thalamic relay function (63).  相似文献   

18.
Epilepsy is characterized by recurrent seizure activity that can induce pathological reorganization and alter normal function in neocortical networks. In the present study, we determined the numbers of cells and neurons across the complete extent of the cortex for two epileptic baboons with naturally occurring seizures and two baboons without epilepsy. Overall, the two epileptic baboons had a 37% average reduction in the number of cortical neurons compared with the two nonepileptic baboons. The loss of neurons was variable across cortical areas, with the most pronounced loss in the primary motor cortex, especially in lateral primary motor cortex, representing the hand and face. Less-pronounced reductions of neurons were found in other parts of the frontal cortex and in somatosensory cortex, but no reduction was apparent in the primary visual cortex and little in other visual areas. The results provide clear evidence that epilepsy in the baboon is associated with considerable reduction in the numbers of cortical neurons, especially in frontal areas of the cortex related to motor functions. Whether or not the reduction of neurons is a cause or an effect of seizures needs further investigation.Epilepsy is associated with structural changes in the cerebral cortex (e.g., refs. 16), and partial epilepsies (i.e., seizures originating from a brain region) may lead to loss of neurons (7) and altered connectivity (8). The cerebral cortex is a heterogeneous structure comprised of multiple sensory and motor information-processing systems (e.g., refs. 9 and 10) that vary according to their processing demands, connectivity (e.g., refs. 11 and 12), and intrinsic numbers of cells and neurons (1316). Chronic seizures have been associated with progressive changes in the region of the epileptic focus and in remote but functionally connected cortical or subcortical structures (3, 17). Because areas of the cortex are functionally and structurally different, they may also differ in susceptibility to pathological changes resulting from epilepsy.The relationship between seizure activity and neuron damage can be difficult to study in humans. Seizure-induced neuronal damage can be convincingly demonstrated in animals using electrically or chemically induced status epilepticus (one continuous seizure episode longer than 5 min) to reveal morphometric (e.g., refs. 18 and 19) or histological changes (e.g., refs. 20 and 21). Subcortical brain regions are often studied for vulnerability to seizure-induced injury (2127); however, a recent study by Karbowski et al. (28) observed reduction of neurons in cortical layers 5 and 6 in the frontal lobes of rats with seizures. Seizure-induced neuronal damage in the cortex has also been previously demonstrated in baboons with convulsive status epilepticus (29).The goal of the present study was to determine if there is a specific pattern of cell or neuron reduction across the functionally divided areas of the neocortex in baboons with epilepsy. Selected strains of baboons have been studied as a natural primate model of generalized epilepsy (3036) that is analogous to juvenile myoclonic epilepsy in humans. The baboons demonstrate generalized myoclonic and tonic-clonic seizures, and they have generalized interictal and ictal epileptic discharges on scalp EEG. Because of their phylogenetic proximity to humans, baboons and other Old World monkeys share many cortical areas and other features of cortical organization with humans (e.g., refs. 9 and 10). Cortical cell and neuron numbers were determined using the flow fractionator method (37, 38) in epileptic baboon tissue obtained from the Texas Biomedical Research Institute, where a number of individuals develop generalized epilepsy within a pedigreed baboon colony (3136). Our results reveal a regionally specific neuron reduction in the cortex of baboons with naturally occurring, generalized seizures.  相似文献   

19.
It is well-believed that below a certain particle size, grain boundary-mediated plastic deformation (e.g., grain rotation, grain boundary sliding and diffusion) substitutes for conventional dislocation nucleation and motion as the dominant deformation mechanism. However, in situ probing of grain boundary processes of ultrafine nanocrystals during plastic deformation has not been feasible, precluding the direct exploration of the nanomechanics. Here we present the in situ texturing observation of bulk-sized platinum in a nickel pressure medium of various particle sizes from 500 nm down to 3 nm. Surprisingly, the texture strength of the same-sized platinum drops rapidly with decreasing grain size of the nickel medium, indicating that more active grain rotation occurs in the smaller nickel nanocrystals. Insight into these processes provides a better understanding of the plastic deformation of nanomaterials in a few-nanometer length scale.The plastic deformation of conventional polycrystalline metals has been well-studied. The plastic behavior of coarse-grained metals (with particle size larger than 100 nm) is mainly controlled by the nucleation and motion of lattice dislocations. Plastic deformation by dislocation glide results in crystallite rotations, generating lattice preferred orientation or texture. The anisotropic physical properties of a polycrystalline material are strongly related to the preferred alignment of its crystallites. Texture studies are of interest in many fields. In material science and engineering, texture control is essential in improving the strength and lifetime of structural materials (1). In Earth science, understanding texture development of minerals is important for interpreting seismic anisotropy in the Earth’s interior (25).The plastic deformation of nanomaterials has attracted much interest in recent years (612), but many controversies still exist (617). Various mechanisms have been reported (8, 1118). It has been proposed that below a critical length scale the strength of nanometals would exhibit an inverse Hall–Petch size dependence because in the plastic deformation of fine nanocrystals, dislocation activity gives way to grain boundary (GB) sliding, diffusion, and grain rotation (7). If GB-mediated mechanisms dominate plastic deformation, it would yield a d4 dependence on grain rotation rate, where d is the grain size (9), i.e., grain rotation activity would be greatly enhanced in fine nanocrystals. Grain-rotation-induced crystallographic alignment has been observed in 2–3-nm ferrihydrite nanocrystals (1517). In contrast, computer simulations suggest that GB mobility drops with decreasing grain size (19, 20). Although the observation of grain rotation during deformation of micrometer-sized crystals is feasible (21, 22), in situ probing of grain rotation of ultrafine nanocrystals is difficult, precluding the direct exploration of mechanics at nanometer scales. Whether grain rotation becomes more active and dominant in finer nanocrystals is not yet experimentally verified. In this work, radial diamond-anvil cell (rDAC) X-ray diffraction (XRD) experiments (2) are used to make in situ observation of the texturing of stressed polycrystalline platinum in nickel media of various mean particle sizes, from 500 nm down to 3 nm. The texturing change of platinum is expected to reflect some activity at the GBs of the nickel medium.  相似文献   

20.
Distinguishing tumor from normal glandular breast tissue is an important step in breast-conserving surgery. Because this distinction can be challenging in the operative setting, up to 40% of patients require an additional operation when traditional approaches are used. Here, we present a proof-of-concept study to determine the feasibility of using desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging (DESI-MSI) for identifying and differentiating tumor from normal breast tissue. We show that tumor margins can be identified using the spatial distributions and varying intensities of different lipids. Several fatty acids, including oleic acid, were more abundant in the cancerous tissue than in normal tissues. The cancer margins delineated by the molecular images from DESI-MSI were consistent with those margins obtained from histological staining. Our findings prove the feasibility of classifying cancerous and normal breast tissues using ambient ionization MSI. The results suggest that an MS-based method could be developed for the rapid intraoperative detection of residual cancer tissue during breast-conserving surgery.Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed carcinoma in women in the United States and Western countries. Breast conservation surgery (BCS) has become the preferred treatment option for many women with early-stage breast cancer (1). BCS entails resection of the tumor, with a clean margin of normal tissue around it. Surgery is usually followed by radiation therapy. Results from seven large randomized prospective studies, with the largest two having over 20 y of follow-up, have shown equal survival when comparing BCS coupled with whole-breast radiation and mastectomy (2, 3).Normally, breast surgeons aim to remove a patient’s tumor, along with a rim of normal tissue that is free of cancer. Preoperative mammography, ultrasonography, or MRI may be used by the surgeon to guide adequate resection (46). Despite numerous improvements in imaging and surgical technique, the need for reexcision to achieve complete tumor resection in the United States typically ranges from 20–40% (715), and has been reported as being as high as 60% (16). The importance of reexcision is underscored by numerous studies, which have shown that incomplete resection of tumor and positive margins are associated with increased locoregional recurrence compared with negative margins (12, 1720). Furthermore, the landmark meta-analysis performed by the Early Breast Cancer Trialists’ Collaborative Group (18, 21) directly linked local recurrence to survival, placing great emphasis on the surgeon’s role in minimizing local recurrence by obtaining adequate margins.Breast tumor reexcisions are accompanied by a number of undesirable problems: The completion of therapy is delayed, infection rates are increased, cost is increased, there can be a negative psychological impact on the patient, and there can be diminished aesthetic outcomes (2224). The development of an intraoperative technique that allows the fast and accurate identification of residual tumor at surgical resection margins could decrease the reexcision rate, and therefore improve the care delivered to patients with cancer who are receiving BCS.To this end, multiple intraoperative methods have been explored, with various benefits as well as limitations. These methods include touch frozen section analysis (25), touch preparation cytology (26), specimen radiography (27, 28), rf spectroscopy (29, 30), Raman spectroscopy (31), radioguided occult lesion localization (32), near-IR fluorescence (33, 34), and high-frequency ultrasound (3537). The intraoperative application of MRI, which has been successfully applied in brain surgery (3842), is limited in its application in BCS. These limitations include MRI interpretation in the presence of acute surgical changes; lack of real-time imaging, requiring the interruption of surgery; and accurate localization of tumor based on images requiring development of fiducials (4346).Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) has been applied to investigate the molecular distribution of proteins, lipids, and metabolites without the use of labels (47, 48). In particular, the newly developed ambient ionization technique of desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) allows direct tissue analysis with little to no sample preparation (49, 50). Therefore, with the advantage of easy use, DESI-MSI has great potential in the application of intraoperative tumor assessment. The development of DESI-MSI enables the correlation of lipid distribution in two or three dimensions with tissue morphology (47, 51) and the distinction of cancerous from noncancerous tissues based on lipidomic information (5254). Distinctive lipid profiles associated with different human cancers have been investigated by DESI-MSI (5558). Moreover, the grades and subtypes of human brain tumors have been discriminated using this technique. Additionally, tumor margins have been delineated using DESI-MSI, and the results have been correlated with histopathological examination (59, 60).It has been reported that breast cancer demonstrates metabolic profiles that are distinct from those metabolic profiles found in normal breast tissue. This finding suggests a potential for using metabolite information for breast cancer diagnosis and tumor margin identification (61, 62). Here, we demonstrate an MS-based methodology for using lipidomic information to distinguish cancerous from noncancerous tissue and to delineate tumor boundaries.  相似文献   

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