BackgroundSeveral children with autism show regression in language and social development while maintaining normal motor milestones. A clear period of normal development followed by regression and subsequent improvement with treatment, suggests a multifactorial etiology. The role of inflammation in autism is now a major area of study. Viral and bacterial infections, hypoxia, or medication could affect both foetus and infant. These stressors could upregulate transcription factors like nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), a master switch for many genes including some implicated in autism like tumor necrosis factor (TNF). On this hypothesis, it was proposed to determine NF-κB in children with autism.MethodsPeripheral blood samples of 67 children with autism and 29 control children were evaluated for NF-κB using electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA). A phosphor imaging technique was used to quantify values. The fold increase over the control sample was calculated and statistical analysis was carried out using SPSS 15.ResultsWe have noted significant increase in NF-κB DNA binding activity in peripheral blood samples of children with autism. When the fold increase of NF-κB in cases (n = 67) was compared with that of controls (n = 29), there was a significant difference (3.14 vs. 1.40, respectively; p<0.02).ConclusionThis finding has immense value in understanding many of the known biochemical changes reported in autism. As NF-κB is a response to stressors of several kinds and a master switch for many genes, autism may then arise at least in part from an NF-κB pathway gone awry.
Patients with diabetes are more susceptible to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and as a consequence, develop more severe form of disease. This is partly due to a systemic inflammatory state and pro thrombotic milieu seen in metabolic syndrome. In this review, we attempt to explore the pathogenetic links between insulin resistance and COVID-19 disease severity. Insulin resistance is an underlying condition for metabolic syndromes, including type 2 diabetes, which impairs insulin signaling pathways affecting metabolic and cardiovascular homeostasis. A high concentration of circulating insulin shifts the balance to mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK)-dependent signaling and causes endothelial cell damage. The phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase and MAPK dependent signaling pathways maintain a balance between nitric oxide-dependent vasodilator and endothelin-1 dependent vasoconstriction actions of insulin. Vascular smooth muscle cell dysfunction is responsible for inflammation and blood coagulation leading to microvascular and macrovascular complications in diabetes. Hyperactivity in renin-angiotensin system is implicated in development of islet oxidative stress and subsequent β-cell dysfunction, as it alters the islet blood flow. These deleterious effects of insulin resistance involving altered blood pressure, vascular dysfunction, and inflammation could be associated with increased severity in COVID-19 patients. We conclude that clinical and/or biochemical markers of insulin resistance should be included as prognostic markers in assessment of acute COVID-19 disease.
Doxorubicin is one of the most effective agents used in the treatment of various tumors. Its use is restricted by the development of resistance to apoptosis, the mechanism of which is not fully understood. Nuclear transcription factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) has been shown both to block apoptosis and to promote cell proliferation, and hence has been considered as an important target for anticancer drug development. We found that in wild type and Dox-revertant MCF-7 cells, Doxorubicin induced NF-kappaB was transient and Dox-resistant cells showed high basal activity of NF-kappaB and expression of genes dependent on it. Moreover, in resistant cells Doxorubicin was unable to induce apoptosis as detected by assays for reactive oxygen intermediates generation, lipid peroxidation, cytotoxicity, PARP degradation and Bcl-2 expression. High basal expressions of multi-drug resistant protein and transglutaminase were found in Dox-resistant cells and inhibition of NF-kappaB decreased those amounts and also sensitized these cells by Doxorubicin. These observations collectively suggest that high NF-kappaB activity confers resistance to Doxorubicin and its inhibition potentiates apoptosis. This study indicates that NF-kappaB plays an important role in chemoresistance and establishes the fact that inhibition of NF-kappaB will be a novel approach in chemotherapy.
Oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC) is one of the major causes of fatality in India due to very high percentage of patients with habits of smoking and chewing tobacco and associated products. Being highly heterogeneous in nature, every patient poses a different challenge clinically. To understand disease progression in an improved way, knowledge of cross-talk between tumor stroma and the tumor cells becomes indispensable. Patient-derived in vitro cell line models are helpful to understand the complexity of diseases. However, they have very low efficiency of establishment from the tumor samples, particularly the cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). In the present study, two novel autologous pairs were immortalized spontaneously from non-habitual, HPV-positive patients, who presented with OTSCC. The epithelial and fibroblast cell lines had typical polygonal and spindle-shaped morphology, respectively. Positive staining with epithelial specific Pan-cytokeratin (PanCK) and fibroblast specific protein (FSP-1) further confirmed their epithelial and fibroblast origin. Unique Short Tandem Repeat (STR) profile of the cultures confirmed their novelty, while the similarity of the STR profiles between the epithelial and fibroblast cells from the same patient, confirmed their autologous nature. DNA analysis revealed aneuploidy of the established cultures. An increase in the tumorigenic potential of the established epithelial cultures upon treatment with CAF-conditioned medium proved the 'CAF-ness' of the established fibroblast cells. The established cultures are the first of their kind which would serve as a useful platform in understanding the tumor-stroma cross-talk in tongue cancer progression.
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