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Exploring The Role Of Il-1Β/Il-1r In The Pathogenesis Of K-Ras Mutant Lung Cancer, Avantika Krishna May 2024

Exploring The Role Of Il-1Β/Il-1r In The Pathogenesis Of K-Ras Mutant Lung Cancer, Avantika Krishna

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

As the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, the development of targeted therapeutics to treat lung cancer remains crucial. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the most common histological subtype predominantly comprises lung adenocarcinoma with driver mutations in the K-ras oncogene (KM-LUAD). KM-LUAD progression partly occurs through activation of the NF-κB pathway initiating an inflammatory response and creating a pro-tumor microenvironment. Notably, the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1β a potent activator and product of the NF-κB pathway is elevated in the lungs and sera of KM-LUAD patients. We have shown that IL-1β blockade promotes an anti-tumor immune phenotype in a mouse model of …


Importance Of Specific Nk Cell Subsets For Antitumor Immunity In Hpv+ Cancers, Madison O'Hara May 2024

Importance Of Specific Nk Cell Subsets For Antitumor Immunity In Hpv+ Cancers, Madison O'Hara

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

High-risk type human papillomaviruses (HPV) are associated with genital and oral cancers, and the incidence of HPV+ head and neck squamous cell cancers is fast increasing worldwide. Survival rates for patients with locally advanced disease are poor and variable after standard of care (SOC) treatment. Identifying the antitumor host immune mediators important for treatment response and designing strategies to promote them are essential for improving clinical outcome. The natural killer (NK) cells are a critical component for antitumor innate effector immunity. Among the multitude of activation and inhibitory receptors on immune cells, HLA-DR is recognized as an important activation marker …


Biophysical Model Of Retraction Motor Neurons And Their Modification By Operant Conditioning, Maria Rasheed May 2024

Biophysical Model Of Retraction Motor Neurons And Their Modification By Operant Conditioning, Maria Rasheed

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Operant conditioning (OC) is a form of associative learning in which an animal modifies its behavior based on the consequences that follow that behavior. Despite its ubiquity, the underlying mechanisms of OC are poorly understood. Insights into the mechanisms of OC can be obtained by studying Aplysia feeding behavior as it can be modified by OC. This behavior is mediated by a central pattern generator (CPG) network in the buccal ganglia that contains a relatively small number of neurons. This CPG generates rhythmic motor patterns (BMPs) that move food into the gut by closing a tongue-like structure (i.e., radula) during …


Molecular Mechanisms Of Opioid Use Disorder In Human Brain Models, Emily Mendez May 2024

Molecular Mechanisms Of Opioid Use Disorder In Human Brain Models, Emily Mendez

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a national and global public health crisis with no end in sight. While studies from animal models hint at widespread epigenetic and transcriptomic alterations of opioid drugs, the molecular consequences of long-term exposure to opioid drugs in human brain is still unclear, and human-centered translational models are necessary to discern the human cell type-specific effects of OUD.

Using postmortem brain Brodmann area 9 (BA9) from the UTHealth Brain Collection for Research on Psychiatric Disorders, I identified angiogenic gene networks perturbed in the RNA and protein of OUD subjects, as well as downregulation of many neuron-correlated …


Syntaxin-3 Mediates Baseline And Stimulated Mucin Secretion, Brianne Wharton May 2024

Syntaxin-3 Mediates Baseline And Stimulated Mucin Secretion, Brianne Wharton

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

There are two rates at which airway epithelial cells secrete mucin. The low baseline rate accounts for ciliary clearance, and the high stimulated rate obstructs airways in protection from helminths or in obstructive pulmonary diseases. The exocytosis of mucins occurs via the four-helix SNARE complex. The SNARE proteins contributing helices are the vesicle-SNARE VAMP, and the target-SNAREs SNAP and Syntaxin. Coiling of the complex fuses the granule and plasma membranes to release mucins into the extracellular space. The VAMP and SNAP isoforms mediating baseline and stimulated secretion are known, but the Syntaxin (Stx) isoform remains unknown.

Three candidate exocytic Stx, …