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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Cholesterol Conjugated Hdac Inhibitor As Novel Anticancer Agent, Paul Orefice, Jane Peterson, Bin Sun Sep 2014

Cholesterol Conjugated Hdac Inhibitor As Novel Anticancer Agent, Paul Orefice, Jane Peterson, Bin Sun

Undergraduate Research Posters 2014

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors are a class of promising new multifunctional anticancer agents. These agents are able to affect multiple epigenetic changes in aberrant cells. In addition to regulating the gene expression and transcription via chromatin remodeling, HDAC inhibitors can also modulate a variety of cellular functions including proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. Vorinostat (SuberAniloHydroxamic Acid, SAHA), the first HDAC inhibitor approved by FDA, inhibited the metastasis of various cancer cells. However, SAHA distributes in cancer tissue and normal tissue in a similar level. It will be ideal to selectively delivery SAHA into cancer cells. Rapidly growing cancer cells have a …


Activation Of Dna Damage Checkpoint Pathways During Skeletal Myoblast Differentiation And Apoptosis, Mofetoluwa Oluwasanmi, Greg Kliment, Crystal M. Weyman Sep 2014

Activation Of Dna Damage Checkpoint Pathways During Skeletal Myoblast Differentiation And Apoptosis, Mofetoluwa Oluwasanmi, Greg Kliment, Crystal M. Weyman

Undergraduate Research Posters 2014

A subset of skeletal myoblasts undergo apoptosis rather than differentiation when cultured in differentiation media (DM: absence of growth factors). While the muscle regulatory transcription factor MyoD is known to control the process of differentiation, our lab has recently discovered that MyoD is also controlling the apoptotic process in response to culture in DM by direct up-regulation of the pro-apoptotic Bcl2 family member PUMA. We similarly discovered that MyoD plays a role in the increased expression of PUMA and apoptosis in response to the DNA damaging agent, etoposide. This led to the hypothesis that culture in DM may lead to …


Elcs In Ice: Cryo-Electron Microscopy Of Nuclear Envelope Limited Chromatin Sheets, Mikhail Eltsov, Sergey Sosnovksi, Ada L. Olins, Donald E. Olins Aug 2014

Elcs In Ice: Cryo-Electron Microscopy Of Nuclear Envelope Limited Chromatin Sheets, Mikhail Eltsov, Sergey Sosnovksi, Ada L. Olins, Donald E. Olins

Pharmaceutical Sciences Faculty Posters

Nuclear Envelope-Limited Chromatin Sheets (ELCS) form during excessive interphase nuclear envelope growth in a variety of cells. ELCS appear as extended sheets within the cytoplasm connecting distant nuclear lobes. Cross-section stained images of ELCS, viewed by transmission electron microscopy, resemble a sandwich of apposed nuclear envelopes separated by ~30 nm, containing a layer of ordered chromatin fibers. EM Procedures: The ultrastructure of ELCS was compared by three different methods: 1) aldehyde fixation/dehydration/plastic embedding/sectioning and staining; 2) high-pressure freezing/freeze substitution into plastic/sectioning and staining; 3) high-pressure freezing/cryo-sectioning/cryo-electron microscopy. Human leukemic (HL-60/S4) cells were treated with retinoic acid (4 days) to induce …


Glycosylation Of Cyclooxygenase-2 (Cox-2) Influences The Migratory And Invasive Potential Of Cells, Fahad Algaly, Julia Hand, Mary B. Sevigny Jan 2014

Glycosylation Of Cyclooxygenase-2 (Cox-2) Influences The Migratory And Invasive Potential Of Cells, Fahad Algaly, Julia Hand, Mary B. Sevigny

Natural Sciences and Mathematics | Faculty Research Posters

Prostaglandins are bioactive lipids involved in many physiological functions such as maintenance of the cardiovascular, immune, renal, and central nervous systems. They also play a role in certain diseases like arthritis, cancer, and Alzheimer’s. Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is the enzyme that catalyzes the initial rate-limiting step in the pathway that converts arachidonic acid to prostaglandins. COX-2 exists as two glycoforms with the molecular weights of 72 and 74 kDa, the latter resulting from the addition of a high mannose chain to the Asn580 residue ~50% of the time. The over-expression of COX-2 is believed to be linked to cancer progression and …


Integrating Phage Therapy Into Western Medicine, Jacob B. Jaminet Jan 2014

Integrating Phage Therapy Into Western Medicine, Jacob B. Jaminet

Undergraduate Research Posters

The World Health Organization has described the rise of antibiotic use as a “global heath security emergency” (who.int). With the growing concern about antibiotic resistant bacteria, there has been an increased interest in bacteriophages. Bacteriophages are high-specific viruses that only infect bacteria. The use of bacteriophages medicinally to treat bacteria is called phage therapy. Research in phage therapy gained momentum until the introduction of antibiotics. While the USA and other Western countries accepted antibiotics, the Soviet Union and their satellite nations still continued to research phages. Since the funding for research was supplied by the Soviet military, the results of …