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1.
Anal Biochem ; 596: 113646, 2020 05 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32112722

RESUMO

Quantification of therapeutic antibodies is commonly based on physico-chemical assays such as enzyme-linked immunoabsorption assays (ELISA) and lately on mass spectrometry. However, the functional integrity of evaluated immunoglobulins is yet not assessed. Consequently, a commercially available reporter cell line was used to quantify the functional concentration of the anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) antibody adalimumab present in serum of a healthy beagle dog treated with 3 mg intravenous adalimumab (Humira®). HEK-Blue™-hTLR3 cells express a secreted alkaline phosphatase under the control of a nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) response element. Its enzymatic activity can be recorded using colorimetry, which reports activity of extracellular NF-κB stimuli such as TNF-α. Using an adalimumab concentration-response calibration curve, the functional concentration of serum adalimumab was estimated to be 4.9 ± 1.4 µg/ml, which was in excellent agreement with ELISA results (4.8 µg/ml). The obtained data suggest that this simple, easy-to-handle reporter cell assay can be used for the functional quantification of adalimumab present in samples from in vitro or pre-clinical in vivo experiments. Moreover, this assay could be used in vitro to compare the pharmacodynamics of adalimumab biosimilars or different anti-TNF-α compounds, respectively.


Assuntos
Adalimumab/sangue , Adalimumab/farmacologia , Fator de Necrose Tumoral alfa/antagonistas & inibidores , Adalimumab/administração & dosagem , Administração Intravenosa , Animais , Células Cultivadas , Cães , Ensaio de Imunoadsorção Enzimática , Células HEK293 , Humanos
2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 15081, 2019 10 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31636334

RESUMO

Evolutionary theory predicts potential shifts between cooperative and uncooperative behaviour under fluctuating environmental conditions. This leads to unstable benefits to the partners and restricts the evolution of dependence. High dependence is usually found in those hosts in which vertically transmitted symbionts provide nutrients reliably. Here we study host dependence in the marine, giant colonial ciliate Zoothamnium niveum and its vertically transmitted, nutritional, thiotrophic symbiont from an unstable environment of degrading wood. Previously, we have shown that sulphidic conditions lead to high host fitness and oxic conditions to low fitness, but the fate of the symbiont has not been studied. We combine several experimental approaches to provide evidence for a sulphide-tolerant host with striking polyphenism involving two discrete morphs, a symbiotic and an aposymbiotic one. The two differ significantly in colony growth form and fitness. This polyphenism is triggered by chemical conditions and elicited by the symbiont's presence on the dispersing swarmer. We provide evidence of a single aposymbiotic morph found in nature. We propose that despite a high fitness loss when aposymbiotic, the ciliate has retained a facultative life style and may use the option to live without its symbiont to overcome spatial and temporal shortage of sulphide in nature.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Cilióforos/microbiologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , Sulfetos/farmacologia , Simbiose , Bactérias/efeitos dos fármacos , Teorema de Bayes , Cilióforos/efeitos dos fármacos , Cilióforos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Cilióforos/ultraestrutura , Filogenia , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética , Simbiose/efeitos dos fármacos
3.
PLoS One ; 11(9): e0162834, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27683199

RESUMO

Symbioses between ciliate hosts and prokaryote or unicellular eukaryote symbionts are widespread. Here, we report on a novel ciliate species within the genus Zoothamnium Bory de St. Vincent, 1824, isolated from shallow-water sunken wood in the North Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean Sea), proposed as Zoothamnium ignavum sp. nov. We found this ciliate species to be associated with a novel genus of bacteria, here proposed as "Candidatus Navis piranensis" gen. nov., sp. nov. The descriptions of host and symbiont species are based on morphological and ultrastructural studies, the SSU rRNA sequences, and in situ hybridization with symbiont-specific probes. The host is characterized by alternate microzooids on alternate branches arising from a long, common stalk with an adhesive disc. Three different types of zooids are present: microzooids with a bulgy oral side, roundish to ellipsoid macrozooids, and terminal zooids ellipsoid when dividing or bulgy when undividing. The oral ciliature of the microzooids runs 1» turns in a clockwise direction around the peristomial disc when viewed from inside the cell and runs into the infundibulum, where it makes another ¾ turn. The ciliature consists of a paroral membrane (haplokinety), three adoral membranelles (polykineties), and one stomatogenic kinety (germinal kinety). One circular row of barren kinetosomes is present aborally (trochal band). Phylogenetic analyses placed Z. ignavum sp. nov. within the clade II of the polyphyletic family Zoothamniidae (Oligohymenophorea). The ectosymbiont was found to occur in two different morphotypes, as rods with pointed ends and coccoid rods. It forms a monophyletic group with two uncultured Gammaproteobacteria within an unclassified group of Gammaproteobacteria, and is only distantly related to the ectosymbiont of the closely related peritrich Z. niveum (Hemprich and Ehrenberg, 1831) Ehrenberg, 1838.

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