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Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology

Thyroid Hormone Receptor Beta Inhibits Pi3k Signaling And Glycogen Metabolism In Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer, Cole Davidson Jan 2022

Thyroid Hormone Receptor Beta Inhibits Pi3k Signaling And Glycogen Metabolism In Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer, Cole Davidson

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine malignancy, and the global incidence has increased rapidly over the past few decades. While differentiated thyroid cancers often respond to standard therapies, there are no durable long-term treatment options for anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC). The limited treatment options highlight a need for a deeper understanding of the molecular signaling in these aggressive tumors for development of more effective therapies.Non-steroidal nuclear receptors, such as thyroid hormone receptors (TRs), are an emerging class of therapeutic targets and tumor suppressors in thyroid and other cancers.Loss of expression of the tumor suppressor thyroid hormone receptor beta (TRβ) …


The Impact Of Nitric Oxide On Dendritic Cell Metabolism, Julia Priscilla Snyder Jan 2022

The Impact Of Nitric Oxide On Dendritic Cell Metabolism, Julia Priscilla Snyder

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Dendritic cells (DCs) are sentinel immune cells capable of directly sensing and responding to pathogens. Upon pathogen recognition, DCs undergo a process of activation that allows them to participate in the proinflammatory response at the site of infection and to initiate the adaptive immune response through antigen presentation to T cells. Because activated DCs serve as the critical link between innate and adaptive immunity, modulating DC activation could be a powerful tool in various clinical contexts such as vaccine design. DC activation is accompanied by widespread changes in metabolism including the rapid upregulation of glycolysis, which is sustained in DCs …


The Maintenance Of Genomic Stability: Impacts Of The Loss Of Kif18a, Leslie Anne Sepaniac Jan 2021

The Maintenance Of Genomic Stability: Impacts Of The Loss Of Kif18a, Leslie Anne Sepaniac

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Regulated and repeated cell division is necessary for the development, growth, and reproduction of multicellular organisms. A central purpose of mitosis is to faithfully pass hereditary information from one cell onto two genetically identical daughter cells, thus maintaining genomic stability. Cells employ several mechanisms for maintaining genomic stability, including well-characterized cell cycle checkpoints. However, chromosome segregation errors can occur in spite of these regulatory mechanisms. Such errors can result in an improper number of chromosomes being distributed to daughter cells – termed aneuploidy – or improper localization of chromosomes into separate satellite nuclei – termed micronuclei. What, if any, additional …


Glutathionylation/Glutaredoxin Axis And The Regulation Of Epithelial Cell Plasticity And Fibroblast Activation In Airway Fibrosis, Shi Biao Chia Jan 2020

Glutathionylation/Glutaredoxin Axis And The Regulation Of Epithelial Cell Plasticity And Fibroblast Activation In Airway Fibrosis, Shi Biao Chia

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Asthma is a complex lung disorder that affects more than 200 million people across the globe. About 10% of asthmatics have severe disease accompanied by structural airway remodeling, including subepithelial fibrosis, airway smooth muscle cell hyperplasia, goblet metaplasia, and increased vascularization. Oxidative stress has been well-linked to asthma pathogenesis; however, the precise redox mechanisms governing the pathological states are slowly being teased apart in the recent years. Protein S-glutathionylation (PSSG) is a posttranslational modification where a three amino acid-peptide, glutathione, forms a disulfide bond with reactive cysteines of a protein thereby potentially changing the protein’s biological functions. Glutaredoxins are members …


Anti-Tumor Signaling Of Thyroid Hormone Receptor Beta In Breast And Thyroid Cancer Cells, Eric Bolf Jan 2020

Anti-Tumor Signaling Of Thyroid Hormone Receptor Beta In Breast And Thyroid Cancer Cells, Eric Bolf

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Dysregulation of the tumor suppressor thyroid hormone receptor beta (TRβ) is a frequent event in a number of solid tumors. As a nuclear hormone receptor, the primary function of TRβ is to regulate transcriptional activity in a ligand-dependent manner. However, TRβ activity is not well-defined and the pathways it regulates are not yet fully delineated. The two cancer types where TRβ is best studied are thyroid cancer and breast cancer. Interestingly, thyroid cancer is a risk factor for breast cancer and breast cancer is a risk factor for thyroid cancer, suggestive of an etiological link. Determining the molecular mechanisms of …


Exosomes And Their Role In Asbestos Exposure And Mesothelioma, Phillip Blake Munson Jan 2019

Exosomes And Their Role In Asbestos Exposure And Mesothelioma, Phillip Blake Munson

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Malignant mesothelioma (MM) is a locally invasive and highly aggressive cancer arising on the mesothelial surface of organ cavities (mainly pleural) as a direct result of asbestos exposure. The latency period of MM is long (20-50yrs) after initial asbestos exposure, and the prognostic outcomes are dismal with median life expectancy of 6-12 months post-diagnosis. There are no useful biomarkers for early MM diagnosis, no successful therapeutic interventions. These vast voids of knowledge led to our hypotheses that secreted vesicles, termed exosomes, play an important role in MM development and tumorigenic properties. Exosomes are nano-sized particles secreted from all cell types …


Effects Of Tumor-Related Factors And Chemotherapy On Skeletal Muscle And The Protective Effects Of Exercise, Blas Anselmo Guigni Jan 2019

Effects Of Tumor-Related Factors And Chemotherapy On Skeletal Muscle And The Protective Effects Of Exercise, Blas Anselmo Guigni

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Cancer patients often experience cachexia, a form of weight loss consisting mostly of skeletal muscle wasting. Muscle wasting leads to physical disability, poor quality of life, reduced tolerance to treatments and shorter survival. Although the causes of cancer-related muscle atrophy have been studied for decades, the exact mechanisms through which cancer and its treatments promote muscle wasting have yet to be defined.

The overall aim of this dissertation is to examine the mediators of muscle wasting in cancer patients during their treatment and examine the modulatory role of exercise to maintain muscle size and function. To address these aims, we …


Evidence For The Involvement Of Runx1 And Runx2 In Maintenance Of The Breast Cancer Stem Cell Phenotype, Mark Fitzgerald Jan 2018

Evidence For The Involvement Of Runx1 And Runx2 In Maintenance Of The Breast Cancer Stem Cell Phenotype, Mark Fitzgerald

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

In the United States, metastatic breast cancer kills approximately 40,000 women and 400 men annually, and approximately 200,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed each year. Worldwide, breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths among women. Despite advances in the detection and treatment of metastatic breast cancer, mortality rates from this disease remain high because the fact is that once metastatic, it is virtually incurable. It is widely accepted that a major reason breast cancer continues to exhibit recurrence after remission is that current therapies are insufficient for targeting and eliminating therapy-resistant cancer cells. Emerging research has …


A Proximity-Dependent Biotin Labeling Based Screen For Protein Kinase A Anchoring Proteins Within Focal Adhesion Complexes, Hannah Naughton Jan 2018

A Proximity-Dependent Biotin Labeling Based Screen For Protein Kinase A Anchoring Proteins Within Focal Adhesion Complexes, Hannah Naughton

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Protein kinase A (PKA) regulates a diverse array of cellular activities including metabolism, differentiation, actomyosin contractility, and migration. The multifunctionality of this ubiquitous enzyme is achieved, in part, through subcellular targeting mediated by the A Kinase Anchoring Proteins (AKAP) family of proteins. AKAPs serve as scaffolding proteins that localize PKA to various cellular compartments and bring together specific targets and modulators of PKA activity.

The importance of spatially restricted PKA signaling is particularly apparent in the context of cell motility. It has been observed that both anchoring through AKAPs and the subsequent localized activation of PKA at the leading edge …


Changes In Threonyl-Trna Synthetase Expression And Secretion In Response To Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress By Monensin In Ovarian Cancer Cells, Jared Louis Hammer Jan 2017

Changes In Threonyl-Trna Synthetase Expression And Secretion In Response To Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress By Monensin In Ovarian Cancer Cells, Jared Louis Hammer

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARS) are a family of enzymes that catalyze the charging of amino acids to their cognate tRNA in an aminoacylation reaction. Many members of this family have been found to have secondary functions independent of their primary aminoacylation function. Threonyl-tRNA synthetase (TARS), the ARS responsible for charging tRNA with threonine, is secreted from endothelial cells in response to both vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and stimulates angiogenesis and cell migration. Here we show a novel experimental approach for studying TARS secretion, and for observing the role of intracellular TARS in the endoplasmic reticulum …


Myo2 Motor Function In The Contractile Ring And The Regulation Of Fission Yeast Cytokinesis, Luther Woodrow Pollard Jan 2017

Myo2 Motor Function In The Contractile Ring And The Regulation Of Fission Yeast Cytokinesis, Luther Woodrow Pollard

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Animals, fungi, and amoebas require an actomyosin contractile ring at the division site to perform cytokinesis. The contractile ring initiates and guides the invagination of the plasma membrane as it forms new barriers between the nuclei at the cell equator. Defects in the contractile ring can result in misdirected, delayed, or premature cytokinesis, which leads to abnormal chromosome numbers. Aneuploidies resulting from failed cytokinesis sometimes lead to aggressive forms of cancer. This dissertation was motivated by the goal of better understanding the properties of the contractile ring and how it drives cytokinesis.

Actomyosin is initially recruited to the cell equator …


Functional And Mechanistic Consequences Of Dual Oxidase 1 Suppression In Lung Cancer, Andrew Charles Little Jan 2017

Functional And Mechanistic Consequences Of Dual Oxidase 1 Suppression In Lung Cancer, Andrew Charles Little

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

The NADPH oxidase homolog, dual oxidase 1 (DUOX1), is an H2O2 producing transmembrane enzyme highly expressed in the airway epithelium. DUOX1-dependent redox signaling has been characterized to regulate many homeostatic processes in the lung epithelium, such as host defense, wound healing, and type II immune responses. Intriguingly, DUOX1 has been found to be suppressed in many epithelial cancers, including lung cancer, by hypermethylation of its promoter. Epigenetic silencing of DUOX1 in cancer is paradoxical to the understanding that tumors harbor elevated levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), suggesting that DUOX1 may be a tumor suppressor.

Since DUOX1 loss occurs in …


The Role Of Inflammasomes In Asbestos-Induced Mesothelial To Fibroblastic Transition, Joyce K. Thompson Jan 2017

The Role Of Inflammasomes In Asbestos-Induced Mesothelial To Fibroblastic Transition, Joyce K. Thompson

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Malignant Mesothelioma (MM) is a fatal disease with a low median survival between 8 to 12 months after diagnosis. MM has a long latency period (10-60 years), is causally related to asbestos exposure, and is refractory to all available modes of therapy. Despite the causal association between asbestos exposure and MM however, the mechanisms by which asbestos induces this deadly disease remain unclear. Chronic inflammation due to the presence of asbestos fibers is believed to play an important role in all aspects of MM pathogenesis, from development to progression and resistance. Chronic inflammation has been shown to promote dysregulated wound …


Epicardial Cell Engraftment And Signaling Promote Cardiac Repair After Myocardial Infarction, Krithika Rao Jan 2016

Epicardial Cell Engraftment And Signaling Promote Cardiac Repair After Myocardial Infarction, Krithika Rao

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

The epicardium is a single layer of epithelial (mesothelial) cells that covers the entire heart surface, but whose function in adult mammals is poorly understood. Defining the role of epicardial cells during homeostasis, growth and injury has potential to provide new treatment strategies for human diseases that result in heart failure, due to extensive loss of viable cardiac tissue. We hypothesized that epicardial cells contribute to repair as transplantable progenitor cells for cellular regeneration and as a source of secreted growth factors for cell protection after myocardial infarction.

Adult epicardial cells were prospectively isolated as uncommitted epithelial cells using epithelial-specific …


The Role Of Src Kinase Activation In Lung Epithelial Alterations In Response To The A,B-Unsaturated Aldehyde Acrolein, Robert Bauer Jan 2016

The Role Of Src Kinase Activation In Lung Epithelial Alterations In Response To The A,B-Unsaturated Aldehyde Acrolein, Robert Bauer

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

Cigarette smoke (CS) exposure is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States contributing to over 480,000 deaths a year with over 300 billion dollars in CS related costs spent per year. While the dangers of CS exposure have been studied and characterized for decades being largely attributed to reactive oxygen species and oxidative stress, increasing evidence suggests that reactive aldehydes in CS, specifically the α,β-unsaturated aldehyde acrolein, are responsible for many of the negative pathologies associated CS exposure. Previous work has shown that acrolein can bind directly to a number of cellular proteins containing redox sensitive cysteine …


Characterization Of A Non-Canonical Function For Threonyl-Trna Synthetase In Angiogenesis, Adam Christopher Mirando Jan 2015

Characterization Of A Non-Canonical Function For Threonyl-Trna Synthetase In Angiogenesis, Adam Christopher Mirando

Graduate College Dissertations and Theses

In addition to its canonical role in aminoacylation, threonyl-tRNA synthetase (TARS) possesses pro-angiogenic activity that is susceptible to the TARS-specific antibiotic borrelidin. However, the therapeutic benefit of borrelidin is offset by its strong toxicity to living cells. The removal of a single methylene group from the parent borrelidin generates BC194, a modified compound with significantly reduced toxicity but comparable anti-angiogenic potential. Biochemical analyses revealed that the difference in toxicities was due to borrelidin's stimulation of amino acid starvation at ten-fold lower concentrations than BC194. However, both compounds were found to inhibit in vitro and in vivo models of angiogenesis at …