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[
Adv Cancer Res,
2017]
More than six decades ago Watson and Crick published the chemical structure of DNA. This discovery revolutionized our approach to medical science and opened new perspectives for the diagnosis and treatment of many diseases including cancer. Since then, progress in molecular biology, together with the rapid advance of technologies, allowed to clone hundreds of protein-coding genes that were found mutated in all types of cancer. Normal and aberrant gene functions, interactions, and mechanisms of mutations were studied to identify the intricate network of pathways leading to cancer. With the acknowledgment of the genetic nature of cancer, new diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic strategies have been attempted and developed, but very few have found their way in the clinical field. In an effort to identify new translational targets, another great discovery has changed our way to look at genes and their functions. MicroRNAs have been the first noncoding genes involved in cancer. This review is a brief chronological history of microRNAs and cancer. Through the work of few of the greatest scientists of our times, this chapter describes the discovery of microRNAs from C. elegans to their debut in cancer and in the medical field, the concurrent development of technologies, and their future translational applications. The purpose was to share the exciting path that lead to one of the most important discoveries in cancer genetics in the past 20 years.
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Pennington PR, Heistad RM, Nyarko JNK, Barnes JR, Bolanos MAC, Parsons MP, Knudsen KJ, De Carvalho CE, Leary SC, Mousseau DD, Buttigieg J, Maley JM, Quartey MO
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Sci Rep,
2021]
The pool of -Amyloid (A) length variants detected in preclinical and clinical Alzheimer disease (AD) samples suggests a diversity of roles for A peptides. We examined how a naturally occurring variant, e.g. A(1-38), interacts with the AD-related variant, A(1-42), and the predominant physiological variant, A(1-40). Atomic force microscopy, Thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism, dynamic light scattering, and surface plasmon resonance reveal that A(1-38) interacts differently with A(1-40) and A(1-42) and, in general, A(1-38) interferes with the conversion of A(1-42) to a -sheet-rich aggregate. Functionally, A(1-38) reverses the negative impact of A(1-42) on long-term potentiation in acute hippocampal slices and on membrane conductance in primary neurons, and mitigates an A(1-42) phenotype in Caenorhabditis elegans. A(1-38) also reverses any loss of MTT conversion induced by A(1-40) and A(1-42) in HT-22 hippocampal neurons and APOE 4-positive human fibroblasts, although the combination of A(1-38) and A(1-42) inhibits MTT conversion in APOE 4-negative fibroblasts. A greater ratio of soluble A(1-42)/A(1-38) [and A(1-42)/A(1-40)] in autopsied brain extracts correlates with an earlier age-at-death in males (but not females) with a diagnosis of AD. These results suggest that A(1-38) is capable of physically counteracting, potentially in a sex-dependent manner, the neuropathological effects of the AD-relevant A(1-42).
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[
Worm Breeder's Gazette,
2003]
Wormgenes is a new resource for C.elegans offering a detailed summary about each gene and a powerful query system.
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[
Front Pharmacol,
2020]
Oligomeric assembly of Amyloid- (A) is the main toxic species that contribute to early cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's patients. Therefore, drugs that reduce the formation of A oligomers could halt the disease progression. In this study, by using transgenic <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> model of Alzheimer's disease, we investigated the effects of frondoside A, a well-known sea cucumber <i>Cucumaria frondosa</i> saponin with anti-cancer activity, on A aggregation and proteotoxicity. The results showed that frondoside A at a low concentration of 1 M significantly delayed the worm paralysis caused by A aggregation as compared with control group. In addition, the number of A plaque deposits in transgenic worm tissues was significantly decreased. Frondoside A was more effective in these activities than ginsenoside-Rg3, a comparable ginseng saponin. Immunoblot analysis revealed that the level of small oligomers as well as various high molecular weights of A species in the transgenic <i>C. elegans</i> were significantly reduced upon treatment with frondoside A, whereas the level of A monomers was not altered. This suggested that frondoside A may primarily reduce the level of small oligomeric forms, the most toxic species of A. Frondoside A also protected the worms from oxidative stress and rescued chemotaxis dysfunction in a transgenic strain whose neurons express A. Taken together, these data suggested that low dose of frondoside A could protect against A-induced toxicity by primarily suppressing the formation of A oligomers. Thus, the molecular mechanism of how frondoside A exerts its anti-A aggregation should be studied and elucidated in the future.
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[
International Journal of Developmental Biology,
1998]
Pleiotropy , a situation in which a single gene influences multiple phenotypic tra its, can arise in a variety of ways. This paper discusses possible underlying mechanisms and proposes a classification of the various phenomena involved.
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[
Curr Biol,
2011]
Recent work on a Caenorhabditis elegans transmembrane ATPase reveals a central role for the aminophospholipid phosphatidylethanolamine in the production of a class of extracellular vesicles.
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[
Naturwissenschaften,
2004]
Animals respond to signals and cues in their environment. The difference between a signal (e.g. a pheromone) and a cue (e.g. a waste product) is that the information content of a signal is subject to natural selection, whereas that of a cue is not. The model free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans forms an alternative developmental morph (the dauer larva) in response to a so-called 'dauer pheromone', produced by all worms. We suggest that the production of 'dauer pheromone' has no fitness advantage for an individual worm and therefore we propose that 'dauer pheromone' is not a signal, but a cue. Thus, it should not be called a pheromone.
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J Antibiot (Tokyo),
1990]
Cochlioquinone A, isolated from the fungus Helminthosporium sativum, was found to have nematocidal activity. Cochlioquinone A is a competitive inhibitor of specific [3H]ivermectin binding suggesting that cochlioquinone A and ivermectin interact with the same membrane receptor.
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J Lab Autom,
2016]
Microfluidic devices offer new technical possibilities for a precise manipulation of Caenorhabditis elegans due to the comparable length scale. C. elegans is a small, free-living nematode worm that is a popular model system for genetic, genomic, and high-throughput experimental studies of animal development and neurobiology. In this paper, we demonstrate a microfluidic system in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) for dispensing of a single C. elegans worm into a 96-well plate. It consists of two PDMS layers, a flow and a control layer. Using five microfluidic pneumatic valves in the control layer, a single worm is trapped upon optical detection with a pair of optical fibers integrated perpendicular to the constriction channel and then dispensed into a microplate well with a dispensing tip attached to a robotic handling system. Due to its simple design and facile fabrication, we expect that our microfluidic chip can be expanded to a multiplexed dispensation system of C. elegans worms for high-throughput drug screening.
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[
Curr Biol,
2003]
A novel protein in Caenorhabditis elegans, SAS-4, is a component of centrioles and is required for centriole duplication. Depletion of SAS-4 results in stunted centrioles and a smaller centrosome, suggesting a link to organelle size control.