BACKGROUND ABO-incompatible and ABO-compatible kidney transplantation are equivalent in terms of short-term graft and patient survival. This is thought to be the result of ABO-incompatible graft accommodation, which o...BACKGROUND ABO-incompatible and ABO-compatible kidney transplantation are equivalent in terms of short-term graft and patient survival. This is thought to be the result of ABO-incompatible graft accommodation, which occurs when anti-blood group antibodies re-occur after transplantation but somehow do not yield their detrimental effect. The underlying mechanism is unclear, but one of the hypotheses is that this is the result of complement inhibition. Since virtually all ABO-incompatible graft biopsies are C4d positive, this complement inhibition must occur somewhere in the complement cascade after the formation of C4d has already taken place, but where exactly is unclear. It is also unclear whether complement inhibition is complete. Incomplete accommodation could explain why recent studies have shown that long-term graft function in ABOincompatible transplantation is somewhat inferior to ABO-compatible kidney transplantation.AIM To unravel the relationship between pre-transplant anti-ABO antibodies,complement activation, and long-term graft function.METHODS We included all 27 ABO-incompatible transplantations that were performed between 2008 and 2013 at the Academic Medical Center Amsterdam and the University Medical Center Groningen. For each ABO-incompatible transplantation, we included four ABO-compatible controls matched by age, sex,and transplantation date.RESULTS Graft and patient survival were not significantly different. The slope of kidney function during five-year follow-up was also not significantly different, but ABOincompatible recipients did have a lower kidney function at three months(creatinine clearance 58 vs 69 mL/min, P = 0.02, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease 46 vs 52 mL/min/1.73 m^2, P = 0.08), due to a high rate of early rejection(33% vs 15%, P = 0.03), mostly T-cell mediated. Pre-transplant anti-ABO Ig G titers were positively correlated with C5b-9 staining, which itself was positively correlated with the occurrence of T-cell mediated rejection. This may be the result of concurrent C5a formation, which could function as a costimulatory signal for T-cell activation.CONCLUSION Co-stimulation of T-cell activation by ongoing complement activation by antiABO antibodies may be responsible for an impaired long-term graft function in ABO-incompatible kidney transplantation.展开更多
Let Z(λ,G)denote the zeta function of a graph G.In this paper the complement G^Cand the G^(xyz)-transformation G^(xyz)of an r-regular graph G with n vertices and m edges for x,y,z∈{0,1,+,-},are considerd.The relatio...Let Z(λ,G)denote the zeta function of a graph G.In this paper the complement G^Cand the G^(xyz)-transformation G^(xyz)of an r-regular graph G with n vertices and m edges for x,y,z∈{0,1,+,-},are considerd.The relationship between Z(λ,G)and Z(λ,G^C)is obtained.For all x,y,z∈{0,1,+,-},the explicit formulas for the reciprocal of Z(λ,G^(xyz))in terms of r,m,n and the characteristic polynomial of G are obtained.Due to limited space,only the expressions for G^(xyz)with z=0,and xyz∈{0++,+++,1+-}are presented here.展开更多
[Objective] The aims were to obtain cloning of HDR gene from Ginkgo biloba.and study its function.[Method] The coding sequence of HDR gene was cloned from G.biloba by reversed transcription polymerase chain reaction,w...[Objective] The aims were to obtain cloning of HDR gene from Ginkgo biloba.and study its function.[Method] The coding sequence of HDR gene was cloned from G.biloba by reversed transcription polymerase chain reaction,which was designated as GbHDR (GenBank accession No.:DQ364231).The cDNA full-length of GbHDR is 1 827 bp containing a 1 425-bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding a 474-amino-acid polypeptide and constructed into the prokaryotic expression vector pTrcGbHDR.The β-carotene biosynthetic pathway in E.coli strain XL1-Blue was reconstructed by transforming with pAC-BETA.This engineered XL1-Blue was transformed with pTrcGbHDR.[Result] A 1 441 bp GbHDR was obtained containing a 1 425-bp ORF encoding a 474-amino-acid residues of protein,the predicted molecular weight was 53.2 kD,and predicted isoelectric point was 5.76.Functional complementation assay indicated that GbHDR could promote theβ-carotene accumulation in engineered XL1-Blue harboring pTrcGbHDR and pAC-BETA,and as a result,the engineered bacteria showed the brightly orange given by β-carotene.This suggested that GbHDR had the typical function of known HDR genes.[Conclusion] A engineered bacteria of E.coli which could highly accumulate β-carotene was obtained,which will provide candidate genes and targets for realizing β-carotene metabolic engineering.展开更多
Previous studies have reported age-specific pathological and functional outcomes in young and aged patients suffering spinal cord injury,but the mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, we examined mice wit...Previous studies have reported age-specific pathological and functional outcomes in young and aged patients suffering spinal cord injury,but the mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, we examined mice with spinal cord injury. Gene expression profiles from the Gene Expression Omnibus database (accession number GSE93561) were used, including spinal cord samples from 3 young injured mice (2–3-months old, induced by Impactor at Th9 level) and 3 control mice (2–3-months old, no treatment), as well as 2 aged injured mice (15–18-months old, induced by Impactor at Th9 level) and 2 control mice (15–18-months old, no treatment). Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in spinal cord tissue from injured and control mice were identified using the Linear Models for Microarray data method,with a threshold of adjusted P 〈 0.05 and |logFC(fold change)| 〉 1.5. Protein–protein interaction networks were constructed using data from the STRING database, followed by module analysis by Cytoscape software to screen crucial genes. Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes pathway and Gene Ontology enrichment analyses were performed to investigate the underlying functions of DEGs using Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery. Consequently, 1,604 and 1,153 DEGs were identified between injured and normal control mice in spinal cord tissue of aged and young mice, respectively. Furthermore, a Venn diagram showed that 960 DEGs were shared among aged and young mice, while 644 and 193 DEGs were specific to aged and young mice, respectively. Functional enrichment indicates that shared DEGs are involved in osteoclast differentiation, extracellular matrix–receptor interaction, nuclear factor-kappa B signaling pathway, and focal adhesion. Unique genes for aged and young injured groups were involved in the cell cycle (upregulation of PLK1) and complement (upregulation of C3) activation, respectively. These findings were confirmed by functional analysis of genes in modules (common, 4; aged, 2; young, 1) screened from protein–protein interaction networks. Accordingly, cell cycle and complement inhibitors may be specific treatments for spinal cord injury in aged and young mice, respectively.展开更多
文摘BACKGROUND ABO-incompatible and ABO-compatible kidney transplantation are equivalent in terms of short-term graft and patient survival. This is thought to be the result of ABO-incompatible graft accommodation, which occurs when anti-blood group antibodies re-occur after transplantation but somehow do not yield their detrimental effect. The underlying mechanism is unclear, but one of the hypotheses is that this is the result of complement inhibition. Since virtually all ABO-incompatible graft biopsies are C4d positive, this complement inhibition must occur somewhere in the complement cascade after the formation of C4d has already taken place, but where exactly is unclear. It is also unclear whether complement inhibition is complete. Incomplete accommodation could explain why recent studies have shown that long-term graft function in ABOincompatible transplantation is somewhat inferior to ABO-compatible kidney transplantation.AIM To unravel the relationship between pre-transplant anti-ABO antibodies,complement activation, and long-term graft function.METHODS We included all 27 ABO-incompatible transplantations that were performed between 2008 and 2013 at the Academic Medical Center Amsterdam and the University Medical Center Groningen. For each ABO-incompatible transplantation, we included four ABO-compatible controls matched by age, sex,and transplantation date.RESULTS Graft and patient survival were not significantly different. The slope of kidney function during five-year follow-up was also not significantly different, but ABOincompatible recipients did have a lower kidney function at three months(creatinine clearance 58 vs 69 mL/min, P = 0.02, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease 46 vs 52 mL/min/1.73 m^2, P = 0.08), due to a high rate of early rejection(33% vs 15%, P = 0.03), mostly T-cell mediated. Pre-transplant anti-ABO Ig G titers were positively correlated with C5b-9 staining, which itself was positively correlated with the occurrence of T-cell mediated rejection. This may be the result of concurrent C5a formation, which could function as a costimulatory signal for T-cell activation.CONCLUSION Co-stimulation of T-cell activation by ongoing complement activation by antiABO antibodies may be responsible for an impaired long-term graft function in ABO-incompatible kidney transplantation.
基金National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.11671258)
文摘Let Z(λ,G)denote the zeta function of a graph G.In this paper the complement G^Cand the G^(xyz)-transformation G^(xyz)of an r-regular graph G with n vertices and m edges for x,y,z∈{0,1,+,-},are considerd.The relationship between Z(λ,G)and Z(λ,G^C)is obtained.For all x,y,z∈{0,1,+,-},the explicit formulas for the reciprocal of Z(λ,G^(xyz))in terms of r,m,n and the characteristic polynomial of G are obtained.Due to limited space,only the expressions for G^(xyz)with z=0,and xyz∈{0++,+++,1+-}are presented here.
基金Supported by National Natural Science Foundation (30500303)~~
文摘[Objective] The aims were to obtain cloning of HDR gene from Ginkgo biloba.and study its function.[Method] The coding sequence of HDR gene was cloned from G.biloba by reversed transcription polymerase chain reaction,which was designated as GbHDR (GenBank accession No.:DQ364231).The cDNA full-length of GbHDR is 1 827 bp containing a 1 425-bp open reading frame (ORF) encoding a 474-amino-acid polypeptide and constructed into the prokaryotic expression vector pTrcGbHDR.The β-carotene biosynthetic pathway in E.coli strain XL1-Blue was reconstructed by transforming with pAC-BETA.This engineered XL1-Blue was transformed with pTrcGbHDR.[Result] A 1 441 bp GbHDR was obtained containing a 1 425-bp ORF encoding a 474-amino-acid residues of protein,the predicted molecular weight was 53.2 kD,and predicted isoelectric point was 5.76.Functional complementation assay indicated that GbHDR could promote theβ-carotene accumulation in engineered XL1-Blue harboring pTrcGbHDR and pAC-BETA,and as a result,the engineered bacteria showed the brightly orange given by β-carotene.This suggested that GbHDR had the typical function of known HDR genes.[Conclusion] A engineered bacteria of E.coli which could highly accumulate β-carotene was obtained,which will provide candidate genes and targets for realizing β-carotene metabolic engineering.
基金supported by the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scientists of China,No.81601052
文摘Previous studies have reported age-specific pathological and functional outcomes in young and aged patients suffering spinal cord injury,but the mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, we examined mice with spinal cord injury. Gene expression profiles from the Gene Expression Omnibus database (accession number GSE93561) were used, including spinal cord samples from 3 young injured mice (2–3-months old, induced by Impactor at Th9 level) and 3 control mice (2–3-months old, no treatment), as well as 2 aged injured mice (15–18-months old, induced by Impactor at Th9 level) and 2 control mice (15–18-months old, no treatment). Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in spinal cord tissue from injured and control mice were identified using the Linear Models for Microarray data method,with a threshold of adjusted P 〈 0.05 and |logFC(fold change)| 〉 1.5. Protein–protein interaction networks were constructed using data from the STRING database, followed by module analysis by Cytoscape software to screen crucial genes. Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes pathway and Gene Ontology enrichment analyses were performed to investigate the underlying functions of DEGs using Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery. Consequently, 1,604 and 1,153 DEGs were identified between injured and normal control mice in spinal cord tissue of aged and young mice, respectively. Furthermore, a Venn diagram showed that 960 DEGs were shared among aged and young mice, while 644 and 193 DEGs were specific to aged and young mice, respectively. Functional enrichment indicates that shared DEGs are involved in osteoclast differentiation, extracellular matrix–receptor interaction, nuclear factor-kappa B signaling pathway, and focal adhesion. Unique genes for aged and young injured groups were involved in the cell cycle (upregulation of PLK1) and complement (upregulation of C3) activation, respectively. These findings were confirmed by functional analysis of genes in modules (common, 4; aged, 2; young, 1) screened from protein–protein interaction networks. Accordingly, cell cycle and complement inhibitors may be specific treatments for spinal cord injury in aged and young mice, respectively.