Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a common disease among elderly people that, when surgical treatment is inapplicable, results in progressive expansion and rupture of the aorta with high mortality. Although nonsurgical treatment for AAA is much awaited, few options are available because its molecular pathogenesis remains elusive. Here, we identify JNK as a proximal signaling molecule in the pathogenesis of AAA. Human AAA tissue showed a high level of phosphorylated JNK. We show that JNK programs a gene expression pattern in different cell types that cooperatively enhances the degradation of the extracellular matrix while suppressing biosynthetic enzymes of the extracellular matrix. Selective inhibition of JNK in vivo not only prevented the development of AAA but also caused regression of established AAA in two mouse models. Thus, JNK promotes abnormal extracellular matrix metabolism in the tissue of AAA and may represent a therapeutic target.
The 1,670-bp nucleotide sequence of the heat shock operon groESL and the 1,236-bp sequence of the citrate synthase gene (gltA) of Anaplasma (Ehrlichia) platys were determined. The topology of the groEL-and gltA-based phylogenetic tree was similar to that derived from 16S rRNA gene analyses with distances. Both groESL-and gltA-based PCRs specific to A. platys were also developed based upon the alignment data.
To assess the relationship between hepatitis C virus infection and Fas antigen expression on hepatocytes, we examined changes in hepatic Fas antigen expression in the presence or absence of active hepatitis C virus infection. Twenty patients with chronic hepatitis C infection were treated with interferon and underwent pre- and posttreatment liver biopsies. Patients were classified according to the absence (group A; n = 9) or the presence (group B; n = 11) of hepatitis C virus RNA (HCV-RNA) in the liver after interferon therapy. An immunohistochemical assay showed Fas antigen staining in hepatocytes membranes and cytoplasm with expression concentrated mainly in periportal areas. The percentage of Fas-positive cells in the liver before treatment was not different between group A (39.5+/-19.1%) and group B (32.5+/-15.6%). Hepatic Fas expression was reduced significantly after treatment (24.3+/-10.6%) compared with the pretreatment values in group A (p < 0.05) but not in group B (25.9+/-16.9%). There was no significant difference between the two groups in the degree of histologic improvement. These results suggest that hepatic Fas expression is associated with persistent infection of hepatitis C virus.
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