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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(9): 3853-3862, 2019 02 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30755521

RESUMO

The human dopamine (DA) transporter (hDAT) mediates clearance of DA. Genetic variants in hDAT have been associated with DA dysfunction, a complication associated with several brain disorders, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Here, we investigated the structural and behavioral bases of an ASD-associated in-frame deletion in hDAT at N336 (∆N336). We uncovered that the deletion promoted a previously unobserved conformation of the intracellular gate of the transporter, likely representing the rate-limiting step of the transport process. It is defined by a "half-open and inward-facing" state (HOIF) of the intracellular gate that is stabilized by a network of interactions conserved phylogenetically, as we demonstrated in hDAT by Rosetta molecular modeling and fine-grained simulations, as well as in its bacterial homolog leucine transporter by electron paramagnetic resonance analysis and X-ray crystallography. The stabilization of the HOIF state is associated both with DA dysfunctions demonstrated in isolated brains of Drosophila melanogaster expressing hDAT ∆N336 and with abnormal behaviors observed at high-time resolution. These flies display increased fear, impaired social interactions, and locomotion traits we associate with DA dysfunction and the HOIF state. Together, our results describe how a genetic variation causes DA dysfunction and abnormal behaviors by stabilizing a HOIF state of the transporter.


Assuntos
Transtorno do Espectro Autista/genética , Proteínas da Membrana Plasmática de Transporte de Dopamina/genética , Dopamina/genética , Locomoção/genética , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Transtorno do Espectro Autista/fisiopatologia , Cristalografia por Raios X , Dopamina/metabolismo , Proteínas da Membrana Plasmática de Transporte de Dopamina/química , Drosophila melanogaster/genética , Drosophila melanogaster/fisiologia , Espectroscopia de Ressonância de Spin Eletrônica , Medo/fisiologia , Humanos , Relações Interpessoais , Locomoção/fisiologia , Modelos Moleculares , Mutação , Deleção de Sequência/genética
2.
Br J Hist Sci ; 51(1): 17-40, 2018 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29103389

RESUMO

In this essay, I examine Robert Boyle's strategies for making imperceptible entities accessible to the senses. It is well known that, in his natural philosophy, Boyle confronted the challenge of making imperceptible particles of matter into objects of sensory experience. It has never been noted, however, that Boyle confronted a strikingly similar challenge in his natural theology - he needed to make an equally imperceptible God accessible to the senses. Taking this symmetrical difficulty as my starting point, I propose a new approach to thinking about the interconnections between Boyle's natural philosophy and natural theology. For the most part, studies of science and religion in the early modern period work by seeking out the influence of explicitly stated religious beliefs on scientific ideas. I argue, by contrast, that we need to focus on Boyle's representational practices, using his attempts to represent imperceptible entities as a means of uncovering metaphysical and theological presuppositions that he did not always articulate when stating his religious beliefs. With new interpretations of both A Discourse of Things Above Reason (1681) and Some Physico-Theological Considerations about the Possibility of the Resurrection (1675), I show that there were crucial similarities between Boyle's practices for representing both God and atoms. I go on to show, moreover, that Boyle used these practices to enact an ontological stance at odds with one of his most important professed beliefs.

3.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 40(18): e144, 2012 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22735698

RESUMO

RNA degradation can distort or prevent measurement of RNA transcripts. A mathematical model for degradation was constructed, based on random RNA damage and exponential polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification. Degradation, measured as the number of lesions/base, can be quantified by amplifying several sequences of a reference gene, calculating the regression of C(t) on amplicon length and determining the slope. Reverse transcriptase-quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) data can then be corrected for degradation using lesions/base, amplicon length(s) and the relevant equation obtained from the model. Several predictions of the model were confirmed experimentally; degradation in a sample quantified using the model correlated with degradation quantified using an additional control sample and the ΔΔCt method and application of the model corrected erroneous results for relative quantification resulting from degradation and differences in amplicon length. Compared with RIN, the method was quantitative, simpler, more sensitive and spanned a wider range of RNA damage. The method can use either random or specifically primed complementary DNA and it enables relative and absolute quantification of RNA to be corrected for degradation. The model and method should be applicable to many situations in which RNA is quantified, including quantification of RNA by methods other than nucleic acid amplification.


Assuntos
Estabilidade de RNA , RNA Mensageiro/análise , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase Via Transcriptase Reversa , Temperatura Alta , Humanos , Modelos Estatísticos , RNA Mensageiro/química
4.
PLoS One ; 18(4): e0284538, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37083935

RESUMO

AIMS: qPCR, is widely used for quantifying minimal residual disease (MRD) and is conventionally performed according to guidelines proposed by the EuroMRD consortium. However it often fails when quantifying MRD levels below 10-4. By contrast, HAT-PCR, a recent modification designed to minimise false-positive results, can quantify MRD down to 10-6. METHODS: The factors leading to failure of conventional qPCR to quantify low levels of MRD were studied by analysing PCR reagents, protocol and primers and by testing for inhibition by adding primers to a plasmid amplification system. Complementary primers, ending in either G/C or A/T, were used to determine the effect of the 3' end of a primer. RESULTS: Inhibition of conventional PCR resulted from interaction of primers with genomic DNA leading to exponential amplification of nonspecific amplicons. It was observed with approximately half of the EuroMRD J primers tested. Inhibition by a primer was significantly related to primer Tm and G/C content and was absent when extension at the 3' end was blocked. Nonspecificity and inhibition were decreased or abolished by increasing the annealing temperature and inhibition was decreased by increasing the concentration of polymerase. Primers terminating with G/C produced significantly more nonspecificity and inhibition than primers terminating with A/T. HAT-PCR produced minimal nonspecificity and no inhibition. CONCLUSIONS: Inhibition of the PCR may result from the presence of genomic DNA and resultant exponential amplification of nonspecific amplicons. Factors contributing to the phenomenon include suboptimal annealing temperature, suboptimal primer design, and suboptimal polymerase concentration. Optimisation of these factors, as in HAT-PCR, enables sensitive quantification of MRD. PCR assays are increasingly used for sensitive detection of other rare targets against a background of genomic DNA and such assays may benefit from similar improvement in PCR design.


Assuntos
DNA , Técnicas de Amplificação de Ácido Nucleico , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos , DNA/genética , Primers do DNA/genética , Genômica
5.
Hist Sci ; 60(4): 481-499, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32847416

RESUMO

This essay reconsiders the links between medicine, connoisseurship, and aesthetic theory in early eighteenth-century Britain. Taking a satire on the body of the physician and collector John Woodward as its starting point, I show that medicine and connoisseurship shared a deep preoccupation with the possibility that the animal body could excessively influence the workings of the mind. Pursuing this line of argument, moreover, I will reconsider the place of mind-body dualism in eighteenth-century British medicine and aesthetics. With the exception of materialists such as the philosopher-physician Bernard Mandeville, medics and aesthetic theorists tended to identify the exercise of judgment with the operations of a disembodied mind, unsullied by the embodied mechanisms of the lower body. In practice, however, the insistence that the most refined forms of judgment depended on the presence and activity of a disembodied, immaterial soul was less meaningful than it seems. When confronted by failures of judgment, medics and connoisseurs alike sought explanations in the mechanisms of the animal body. Whether or not they believed in the immateriality of the soul, they pictured the mind as a malfunctioning animal machine, to be cured through the material agency of medical therapeutics.


Assuntos
Medicina , Relações Metafísicas Mente-Corpo , Animais
6.
Hist Sci ; 60(4): 439-457, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36427243

RESUMO

A major theme of the European Enlightenment was the rationalization of value, the use of reason to determine the value of things, from diamonds to civilizations. This view of the Enlightenment is well-established in the human sciences. It is ripe for extension to the natural sciences, given the rich recent literature on affect, evaluation, and subjectivity in early modern science. Meanwhile, in art history, the new history of connoisseurship provides a model for the historical study of the evaluation of material things. Historians of natural history have already noted the connections between science, Enlightenment, and connoisseurship. The time has come to extend their insights to other areas of Enlightenment science. This means recognizing the breadth of connoisseurship - the social, linguistic, and disciplinary diversity of the practice - as understood in Europe in the eighteenth century and the latter part of the seventeenth century. An outline of the three papers in this special section gives an indication of how this historiographical project might be carried out.


Assuntos
Historiografia , Ciência , Humanos , Ciência/história , Europa (Continente) , Publicações , Civilização
7.
J Mol Diagn ; 24(6): 632-641, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35430373

RESUMO

PCR is widely used to measure minimal residual disease (MRD) in lymphoid neoplasms, but its sensitivity is limited. High Adenine/Thymine PCR and High Annealing Temperature PCR (HAT-PCR) is a modified PCR designed to minimize nonspecificity and hence increase sensitivity. It was evaluated in the laboratory and the clinic, using samples from 58 patients. Of these patients, 57 were adolescents or young adults who were participating in the Australasian Leukemia and Lymphoma Group ALL06 trial in which MRD was measured in blood principally by HAT-PCR and in marrow by conventional PCR. HAT-PCR produced significantly less nonspecificity than conventional PCR, and its limit of detection was <10-6 in 90% of patients. In 196 samples, an excellent correlation was found between blood and marrow MRD. Variable partitioning of leukemic cells between blood and marrow was observed. Measurement of MRD in blood by HAT-PCR was noninferior to measurement of MRD in marrow by conventional PCR, in terms of both detecting disease and predicting clinical outcome. At a median follow-up of 3 years and for MRD levels in blood at the end of consolidation treatment, an MRD level of >10-4 cells/L significantly predicted relapse and mortality, whereas undetectable MRD significantly predicted relapse-free survival and overall survival. HAT-PCR is a simple, quick, cheap and sensitive method for measurement of MRD, and its adoption for MRD in blood may be clinically useful.


Assuntos
Medula Óssea , Adolescente , Medula Óssea/patologia , Humanos , Neoplasia Residual/diagnóstico , Neoplasia Residual/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Recidiva , Adulto Jovem
8.
Haematologica ; 96(11): 1720-2, 2011 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21828123

RESUMO

Patients with chronic myeloid leukemia, treated with imatinib, who have a durable complete molecular response, might remain in complete molecular response after stopping treatment. Previous reports of patients stopping treatment in complete molecular response have included only patients with a good response to imatinib. We describe 3 patients with stable complete molecular response on dasatinib treatment following imatinib failure. Two of the 3 patients remain in complete molecular response more than 12 months after stopping dasatinib. In these 2 patients we used highly sensitive patient-specific BCR-ABL1 DNA PCR to show that the leukemic clone remains detectable, as we have previously shown in imatinib-treated patients. Dasatinib-associated immunological phenomena, such as the emergence of clonal T-cell populations, were observed both in one patient who relapsed and in one patient in remission. Our results suggest that the characteristics of complete molecular response on dasatinib treatment may be similar to that achieved with imatinib, at least in patients with adverse disease features.


Assuntos
Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/tratamento farmacológico , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/administração & dosagem , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/efeitos adversos , Pirimidinas/administração & dosagem , Pirimidinas/efeitos adversos , Tiazóis/administração & dosagem , Tiazóis/efeitos adversos , Adulto , Dasatinibe , Feminino , Genes abl/genética , Humanos , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/genética , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/metabolismo , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Neoplasia Residual , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , RNA Mensageiro/biossíntese , RNA Mensageiro/genética , RNA Neoplásico/biossíntese , RNA Neoplásico/genética , Indução de Remissão
9.
Anal Biochem ; 409(2): 176-82, 2011 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21040697

RESUMO

To overcome the disadvantages of two-round nested PCR, we developed a simple and robust closed single-tube nested PCR method (antisense PCR). The method uses antisense oligonucleotides that carry a 5' tag and that can potentially hybridize to the 3' ends of the outer primers, depending on the annealing temperature. During initial cycles, which are performed at a high annealing temperature, the antisense oligonucleotides do not hybridize and amplification is directed by the outer primers. During later cycles, for which the annealing temperature is decreased, the outer primers hybridize to the antisense oligonucleotides, extend to produce sequences that are mismatched to the amplicon templates, and consequently become inactivated, whereas the inner primers hybridize to the amplicon templates and continue amplification. Antisense quantitative PCR (qPCR) was compared with one-round qPCR for real-time amplification of four PCR targets (BCR, APC, N-RAS, and a rearranged IGH gene). It had equal amplification efficiency but produced much less nonspecific amplification. Antisense PCR enables both endpoint detection and real-time quantification. It can substitute for two-round nested PCRs but may also be applicable to instances of one-round PCR in which nonspecificity is a problem.


Assuntos
Primers do DNA/química , Oligonucleotídeos Antissenso/química , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos , Sequência de Bases
10.
J Mol Diagn ; 23(3): 341-346, 2021 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33359070

RESUMO

The widespread use of PCR to quantify minimal residual disease has been hampered by the apparently wide variation in amplification efficiency (AE) of PCR primers. A new method to measure AE was developed on the basis of the Ct results of PCR amplification of single copies of a target molecule placed by limiting dilution into wells of a microplate. The mean one copy Ct of a population of primers or of a reference primer was calibrated against the AE determined by the standard method of regression analysis. The AE of a test primer could then be determined by relating its one copy Ct value to the calibrated mean one copy Ct value. This new method was much more precise than direct determination of AE by regression analysis. The AE of minimal residual disease primers, and of primers for eight other genes, was determined to be >95% and often close to 100%. A primer/plasmid standard was produced to enable transfer of the method to other laboratories. The one copy Ct method thus enables AE of a patient-specific primer to be simply and accurately determined.


Assuntos
Primers do DNA , Neoplasia Residual/diagnóstico , Neoplasia Residual/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos , Biomarcadores Tumorais , Humanos , Cadeias Pesadas de Imunoglobulinas/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/normas , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
11.
Nat Neurosci ; 24(5): 694-704, 2021 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33782620

RESUMO

Neural correlates of external variables provide potential internal codes that guide an animal's behavior. Notably, first-order features of neural activity, such as single-neuron firing rates, have been implicated in encoding information. However, the extent to which higher-order features, such as multineuron coactivity, play primary roles in encoding information or secondary roles in supporting single-neuron codes remains unclear. Here, we show that millisecond-timescale coactivity among hippocampal CA1 neurons discriminates distinct, short-lived behavioral contingencies. This contingency discrimination was unrelated to the tuning of individual neurons, but was instead an emergent property of their coactivity. Contingency-discriminating patterns were reactivated offline after learning, and their reinstatement predicted trial-by-trial memory performance. Moreover, optogenetic suppression of inputs from the upstream CA3 region during learning impaired coactivity-based contingency information in the CA1 and subsequent dynamic memory retrieval. These findings identify millisecond-timescale coactivity as a primary feature of neural firing that encodes behaviorally relevant variables and supports memory retrieval.


Assuntos
Região CA1 Hipocampal/fisiologia , Memória/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Animais , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Rememoração Mental/fisiologia , Camundongos , Modelos Neurológicos , Optogenética
12.
Br J Haematol ; 149(2): 231-6, 2010 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20067557

RESUMO

Isolation and sequencing of the translocation breakpoint in chronic myeloid leukaemia-(CML) and acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APML) may help to elucidate the mechanism of translocation and provide a molecular marker for monitoring of minimal residual disease. Amplification across the translocation breakpoint was performed in samples from 91 patients with CML and 15 patients with APML using single-tube multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) involving 308 primers for CML and 40 primers for APML. Nonspecific amplification was removed by a modification of PCR, termed sequential hybrid primer PCR (SHP-PCR), which involved two sequential rounds of PCR, each of which used a low concentration of a specially designed hybrid primer. The resultant amplified material was sequenced. The method as finally developed was simple quick and robust. The translocation breakpoint was successfully isolated and sequenced in all 106 samples. The strategy of highly multiplexed PCR followed by SHP-PCR is thus an effective method for isolating the translocation breakpoint in CML and APML. It may also be applicable to other haematological disorders characterised by translocation, deletion or inversion.


Assuntos
Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/genética , Leucemia Promielocítica Aguda/genética , Translocação Genética , Proteínas de Fusão bcr-abl/genética , Humanos , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos
13.
Anal Biochem ; 399(2): 308-10, 2010 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20074545

RESUMO

We developed a simple and robust method for removing nonspecific amplification produced during gene walking with a gene-specific primer and a degenerate primer. The primary walking polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was followed by two or three PCR rounds, each incorporating a low concentration of a reverse hybrid primer, where the 3' end was bound to a target sequence generated in the preceding PCR round and the 5' end was a new sequence that generated a target sequence for the next PCR round. The low concentration of the hybrid primer and the extent of amplicon stem-loop formation inhibited nonspecific amplification and enabled successful walking along three genes.


Assuntos
Passeio de Cromossomo/métodos , Primers do DNA/química , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos , Proteína da Polipose Adenomatosa do Colo/genética , Proteína BRCA1/genética , Sequência de Bases , Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/genética , Proteínas do Olho/genética , Glicoproteínas/genética
14.
Elife ; 92020 05 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32427564

RESUMO

Spike sorting is a crucial step in electrophysiological studies of neuronal activity. While many spike sorting packages are available, there is little consensus about which are most accurate under different experimental conditions. SpikeForest is an open-source and reproducible software suite that benchmarks the performance of automated spike sorting algorithms across an extensive, curated database of ground-truth electrophysiological recordings, displaying results interactively on a continuously-updating website. With contributions from eleven laboratories, our database currently comprises 650 recordings (1.3 TB total size) with around 35,000 ground-truth units. These data include paired intracellular/extracellular recordings and state-of-the-art simulated recordings. Ten of the most popular spike sorting codes are wrapped in a Python package and evaluated on a compute cluster using an automated pipeline. SpikeForest documents community progress in automated spike sorting, and guides neuroscientists to an optimal choice of sorter and parameters for a wide range of probes and brain regions.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Modelos Neurológicos , Processamento de Sinais Assistido por Computador , Software , Algoritmos , Animais , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
16.
Prog Brain Res ; 243: 55-73, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30514530

RESUMO

During the 1660s and 1670s, Thomas Willis (1621-1675) pursued an ambitious program of brain science. Instead of the speculative approach favored by René Descartes (1596-1659), Willis used comparative anatomy to figure out the workings of the brain and nerves. As a result, Willis is still cited by science writers as the "founder" of the modern neurosciences. This chapter, by contrast, builds on a wealth of scholarship showing that Willis in fact had aims that few scientists would recognize. One of his key objectives, for instance, was to work out how much influence the immaterial, immortal soul had over the mechanisms of the human body. Despite his empiricism, moreover, Willis relied to a large extent on the imagination in his efforts to hypothesize mechanisms for complex cognitive and neurological processes. For the most part, scholars have argued that Willis used such strategies because of an unfortunate tendency to frame hypotheses even when the evidence was lacking. In this chapter, however, I show that the imagination played a surprisingly important role in the neurosciences of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, thereby challenging modern assumptions about the shape and causes of progress in brain research.


Assuntos
Anatomia/história , Encéfalo/anatomia & histologia , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Imaginação , Nervos Periféricos/anatomia & histologia , História do Século XVI , História do Século XVII , História do Século XVIII , Humanos , Masculino , Nervos Periféricos/fisiologia
17.
Neuron ; 100(4): 940-952.e7, 2018 11 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30344040

RESUMO

Theta oscillations reflect rhythmic inputs that continuously converge to the hippocampus during exploratory and memory-guided behavior. The theta-nested operations that organize hippocampal spiking could either occur regularly from one cycle to the next or be tuned on a cycle-by-cycle basis. To resolve this, we identified spectral components nested in individual theta cycles recorded from the mouse CA1 hippocampus. Our single-cycle profiling revealed theta spectral components associated with different firing modulations and distinguishable ensembles of principal cells. Moreover, novel co-firing patterns of principal cells in theta cycles nesting mid-gamma oscillations were the most strongly reactivated in subsequent offline sharp-wave/ripple events. Finally, theta-nested spectral components were differentially altered by behavioral stages of a memory task; the 80-Hz mid-gamma component was strengthened during learning, whereas the 22-Hz beta, 35-Hz slow gamma, and 54-Hz mid-gamma components increased during retrieval. We conclude that cycle-to-cycle variability of theta-nested spectral components allows parsing of theta oscillations into transient operating modes with complementary mnemonic roles.


Assuntos
Potenciais de Ação/fisiologia , Hipocampo/fisiologia , Memória/fisiologia , Comportamento Espacial/fisiologia , Ritmo Teta/fisiologia , Animais , Masculino , Aprendizagem em Labirinto/fisiologia , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Transgênicos , Ratos , Ratos Long-Evans
18.
PLoS One ; 12(10): e0185556, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28973007

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: The level of minimal residual disease (MRD) in marrow predicts outcome and guides treatment in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) but accurate prediction depends on accurate measurement. METHODS: Forty-one children with ALL were studied at the end of induction. Two samples were obtained from each iliac spine and each sample was assayed twice. Assay, sample and side-to-side variation were quantified by analysis of variance and presumptively incorrect decisions related to high-risk disease were determined using the result from each MRD assay, the mean MRD in the patient as the measure of the true value, and each of 3 different MRD cut-off levels which have been used for making decisions on treatment. RESULTS: Variation between assays, samples and sides each differed significantly from zero and the overall standard deviation for a single MRD estimation was 0.60 logs. Multifocal residual disease seemed to be at least partly responsible for the variation between samples. Decision errors occurred at a frequency of 13-14% when the mean patient MRD was between 10-2 and 10-5. Decision errors were observed only for an MRD result within 1 log of the cut-off value used for assessing high risk. Depending on the cut-off used, 31-40% of MRD results were within 1 log of the cut-off value and 21-16% of such results would have resulted in a decision error. CONCLUSION: When the result obtained for the level of MRD is within 1 log of the cut-off value used for making decisions, variation in the assay and/or sampling may result in a misleading assessment of the true level of marrow MRD. This may lead to an incorrect decision on treatment.


Assuntos
Neoplasia Residual , Leucemia-Linfoma Linfoblástico de Células Precursoras/patologia , Adolescente , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino
19.
J Immunol Methods ; 308(1-2): 1-12, 2006 Jan 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16325196

RESUMO

We have established a method to estimate the number of clones in peripheral blood, using rearranged T cell receptor gamma genes as clonal markers, selecting cells at random, and establishing the sizes of the clones to which they belong. Clone sizes were quantified by a clone-specific PCR test based on the VNJ junctional sequence, which typically detects 1-2 copies of its target gene. All clones chosen for study were subsequently quantified in blood, and sizes ranged from 3 x 10(-6) (1 cell in 330,000 CD8+CD45RO+ cells) to 3.5 x 10(-2) permitting numbers of clones to be estimated from the harmonic mean of clone size. Two independent estimates from a healthy young adult (20-30 years old) gave repertoires of 94,000 and 110,000 clones. Two other healthy young adults gave repertoires of 40,000 and 55,000 clones. Repertoires in four healthy active older (>75 years old) adults were more variable but generally lower, being 3600, 5500, 14,000 and 97,000 clones, despite enlarged clones making up >1% of the compartment in the last individual. Overall, young adults had smaller clones (p=0.026, non-directional Mann-Whitney U-test). If the human body contains 5 l of blood, clones have 2 x 10(3)-1.0 x 10(7) cells in blood. These results confirm a diverse repertoire of rearranged T cell receptor gamma genes. The number of clones thus defined are broadly consistent with other estimates of repertoire, despite differences in marker genes used and subsets of cells studied.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento/imunologia , Linfócitos T Citotóxicos/imunologia , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Envelhecimento/genética , Células Clonais , Clonagem Molecular , Feminino , Rearranjo Gênico da Cadeia gama dos Receptores de Antígenos dos Linfócitos T , Marcadores Genéticos , Humanos , Memória Imunológica , Antígenos Comuns de Leucócito/metabolismo , Masculino , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Subpopulações de Linfócitos T/citologia , Subpopulações de Linfócitos T/imunologia , Linfócitos T Citotóxicos/citologia
20.
J Clin Pathol ; 69(9): 817-21, 2016 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26837312

RESUMO

AIMS: RT-qPCR is used to quantify minimal residual disease (MRD) in chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) in order to make decisions on treatment, but its results depend on the level of BCR-ABL1 expression as well as leukaemic cell number. The aims of the study were to quantify inter-individual differences in expression level, to determine the relationship between expression level and response to treatment, and to investigate the effect of expression level on interpretation of the RT-qPCR result. METHODS: BCR-ABL1 expression was studied in 248 samples from 65 patients with CML by determining the difference between MRD quantified by RT-qPCR and DNA-qPCR. The results were analysed statistically and by simple indicative modelling. RESULTS: Inter-individual levels of expression approximated a normal distribution with an SD of 0.36 log. Expression at diagnosis correlated with expression during treatment. Response to treatment, as measured by the number of leukaemic cells after 3, 6 or 12 months of treatment, was not related to the level of expression. Indicative modelling suggested that interpretation of RT-qPCR results in relation to treatment guidelines could be affected by variation in expression when MRD was around 10% at 3 months and by both expression variation and Poisson variation when MRD was around or below the limit of detection of RT-qPCR. CONCLUSIONS: Variation between individuals in expression of BCR-ABL1 can materially affect interpretation of the RT-qPCR when this test is used to make decisions on treatment.


Assuntos
Tomada de Decisão Clínica , Proteínas de Fusão bcr-abl/genética , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/diagnóstico , Neoplasia Residual/diagnóstico , Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Proteínas de Fusão bcr-abl/metabolismo , Humanos , Mesilato de Imatinib/uso terapêutico , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/tratamento farmacológico , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/genética , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/metabolismo , Neoplasia Residual/genética , Neoplasia Residual/metabolismo , Pirimidinas/uso terapêutico , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase em Tempo Real
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