Short-Term Metformin Ingestion by Healthy Older Adults Improves Myoblast Function

Author(s):  
Ziad S. Mahmassani ◽  
Alec I. McKenzie ◽  
Jonathan J. Petrocelli ◽  
Naomi M. de Hart ◽  
Paul T. Reidy ◽  
...  

Muscle progenitor cells (MPCs) in aged muscle exhibit impaired activation into proliferating myoblasts, thereby impairing fusion and changes in secreted factors. The anti-hyperglycemic drug, metformin, currently studied as a candidate anti-aging therapy, may have potential to promote function of aged MPCs. We evaluated the impact of 2 weeks of metformin ingestion on primary myoblast function measured in vitro after being extracted from muscle biopsies of older adult participants. MPCs were isolated from muscle biopsies of community-dwelling older (4m/4f, ~69y) adult participants before (pre) and after (post) the metformin ingestion period and studied in vitro. Cells were extracted from Young participants (4m/4f, ~27y) to serve as a "youthful" comparator. MPCs from Old subjects had lower fusion index and myoblast-endothelial cell homing compared to Young, while Old MPCs, extracted after short-term metformin ingestion, performed better at both tasks. Transcriptomic analyses of Old MPC's (vs Young) revealed decreased histone expression and increased myogenic pathway, yet this phenotype was partially restored by metformin. However, metformin ingestion exacerbated pathways related to inflammation signaling. Together, this study demonstrated that 2-weeks of metformin ingestion induced persistent effects on Old MPCs that improved function in vitro and altered their transcriptional signature including histone expression.

2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (22) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tracey Lee Peters ◽  
Yaxiong Song ◽  
Daniel W. Bryan ◽  
Lauren K. Hudson ◽  
Thomas G. Denes

ABSTRACT Bacteriophages (phages) are currently available for use by the food industry to control the foodborne pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. Although phage biocontrols are effective under specific conditions, their use can select for phage-resistant bacteria that repopulate phage-treated environments. Here, we performed short-term coevolution experiments to investigate the impact of single phages and a two-phage cocktail on the regrowth of phage-resistant L. monocytogenes and the adaptation of the phages to overcome this resistance. We used whole-genome sequencing to identify mutations in the target host that confer phage resistance and in the phages that alter host range. We found that infections with Listeria phages LP-048, LP-125, or a combination of both select for different populations of phage-resistant L. monocytogenes bacteria with different regrowth times. Phages isolated from the end of the coevolution experiments were found to have gained the ability to infect phage-resistant mutants of L. monocytogenes and L. monocytogenes strains previously found to be broadly resistant to phage infection. Phages isolated from coinfected cultures were identified as recombinants of LP-048 and LP-125. Interestingly, recombination events occurred twice independently in a locus encoding two proteins putatively involved in DNA binding. We show that short-term coevolution of phages and their hosts can be utilized to obtain mutant and recombinant phages with adapted host ranges. These laboratory-evolved phages may be useful for limiting the emergence of phage resistance and for targeting strains that show general resistance to wild-type (WT) phages. IMPORTANCE Listeria monocytogenes is a life-threatening bacterial foodborne pathogen that can persist in food processing facilities for years. Phages can be used to control L. monocytogenes in food production, but phage-resistant bacterial subpopulations can regrow in phage-treated environments. Coevolution experiments were conducted on a Listeria phage-host system to provide insight into the genetic variation that emerges in both the phage and bacterial host under reciprocal selective pressure. As expected, mutations were identified in both phage and host, but additionally, recombination events were shown to have repeatedly occurred between closely related phages that coinfected L. monocytogenes. This study demonstrates that in vitro evolution of phages can be utilized to expand the host range and improve the long-term efficacy of phage-based control of L. monocytogenes. This approach may also be applied to other phage-host systems for applications in biocontrol, detection, and phage therapy.


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 73-74
Author(s):  
M. B. Gulin

The impact of H2S on some representatives of marine zoobenthos was studied in a series of experiments with the use of the redox flow cell. All the experiments have shown the rapid mortality of O. bottae under the influence of H2S and, on the contrary, the relatively high resistance of O. bottae to a short-term deficiency of dissolved oxygen.


1998 ◽  
Vol 274 (6) ◽  
pp. E1121-E1123 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. K. Maxfield ◽  
K. D. Sinclair ◽  
P. J. Broadbent ◽  
T. G. McEvoy ◽  
J. J. Robinson ◽  
...  

Certain reproductive techniques culture embryos in vitro; however, little is known about the impact of culture on fetal growth. Coculture of day 1ovine zygotes on a bovine granulosa cell layer to blastocysts followed by transfer to synchronous recipients increased fetal weight by 11 and 40% at days 61 and 125, respectively, compared with the transfer of in vivo-produced blastocysts. Plantaris muscle weights were increased by 40% in cultured fetuses at day 125. Examination of myogenesis in plantaris muscle showed that primary fiber number was unchanged at day 61 by culture but that primary fiber area was increased significantly by 15 and 25% at days 61 and 125, respectively; secondary fiber area was increased by 40% at day 125 by culture, and the ratio of secondary to primary fiber numbers was 18–20% greater in the cultured groups compared with the controls at days 61 and 125. The results show that coculture of preimplantation embryos may alter myogenic programming. These changes may contribute to the abnormally large muscles observed in oversize fetuses.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-244
Author(s):  
Blanca E. Vacaflor ◽  
Olivier Beauchet ◽  
G. Eric Jarvis ◽  
Alessandra Schiavetto ◽  
Soham Rej

Background The impact of cannabis use on mental health and cognition in older adults remains unclear. With the recent legalization of cannabis in Canada, physicians will need up-to-date infor­mation about the mental and cognitive effects of cannabis use in this specific population. Method A narrative review was conducted to summarize the literature on mental health and cognitive effects of cannabis use in older adults using Medline (OvidSP). Results A total of 16 studies were identified, including nine cross-sectional studies on mental health comorbidities reported by older cannabis users. The self-reported prevalence of mental and substance use disorders is approximately two to three times higher in older adults who report past-year cannabis use, compared to older adults who report using more than one year ago or never using. The remaining seven clinical trials found that short-term, low-dose medical cannabis was generally well-tolerated in older adults without prior serious mental illness. However, mental/cognitive adverse effects were not systematically assessed. Conclusion Although preliminary findings suggests that low-dose, short-term medical cannabis does not carry significant risk of serious mental health and cognitive adverse effects in older adults without prior psychiatric history, epidemiological studies find a correlation between past-year cannabis use and poor mental health outcomes in community-dwelling older adults. These findings may indicate that longer term cannabis use in this population is detrimental to their mental health, al­though a direct causal link has not been established. Larger, longitudinal studies on the safety of medical cannabis in older adults are needed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judit Pomothy ◽  
Gergely Szombath ◽  
Patrik Rokonál ◽  
Gábor Mátis ◽  
Zsuzsanna Neogrády ◽  
...  

Purpose. Dysfunction of matriptase-2 can be involved in iron regulatory disorder via downregulation of hepcidin expression. In the present study, we investigated the effects of 3-amidinophenylalanine-derived matriptase inhibitors on porcine hepatic inflammatory cell models.Methods. Hepatocyte-Kupffer cell cocultures (ratio of 2 : 1 and 6 : 1) were treated with four structurally related matriptase inhibitors at 50 μM. Cell cytotoxicity and relative expressions of IL-6 and IL-8 and the levels of hepcidin were determined by MTS and porcine-specific ELISA. The extracellular H2O2contents were analyzed by Amplex Red method.Results. Matriptase inhibitors at 50 µM for 24 h did not increase cell death rate. The elevated ROS production observed after short-term application of inhibitor MI-441 could be correlated with lowered hepcidin expression. MI-460 could significantly enhance hepcidin levels in the supernatants of cocultures (by62.21±26.8%in hepatocyte-Kupffer cell, 2 : 1, and by42.6±14.3%in hepatocyte-Kupffer cell, 6 : 1, cocultures, resp.). No significant changes were found in IL-6 and IL-8 levels in cocultures exposed to matriptase inhibitors.Conclusions. Based onin vitrofindings, administration of MI-460 via modulation of hepcidin expression without cytotoxic and oxidative stress inducing properties might be a reliable alternative to treat iron overload in human and veterinary clinical practice.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2527-2527
Author(s):  
David H Spencer ◽  
Jeffery M. Klco ◽  
Tamara Lamprecht ◽  
Todd Wylie ◽  
Vincent Magrini ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2527 Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a hematopoietic neoplasm with high mortality that is typically treated with daunorubicin/cytarabine induction chemotherapy. Alternative therapies with cytosine analogs such as decitabine are also used in some cases with a variable clinical response that some have estimated to be as high as 25%. The mechanism of these agents is unclear, but at low doses they produce passive DNA hypomethylation by inhibiting DNMT1. Although the impact of these drugs on cell growth and DNA methylation in AML cell lines has been evaluated1, studies using primary cells are limited; importantly, most have involved extended drug treatments that may be confounded by the differentiation of the treated cells2. In addition, some evidence suggests that decitabine has a differential effect on methylation in patients who respond to treatment2, but the utility of this phenotype as an in vitro biomarker for decitabine responsiveness is unknown. In this study, we used a novel in vitro culture system for primary leukemia cells to explore the initial genomic effects of short-term low dose decitabine on primary samples from 22 AML patients. Primary bone marrow or blood samples from these patients were cultured on HS27 stromal cells in DMEM supplemented with beta-mercaptoethanol and 15% FBS along with hSCF, hIL3, hIL-6, hTPO and hFLT3L for an initial 4-day period prior to daily treatment for 3 days with either 100 nM decitabine, 100 nM cytarabine, or vehicle controls. Cells were then evaluated for growth, cell cycle effects, and differentiation (by flow cytometry and morphologic evaluation). DNA was prepared from all samples for 5-methylcytosine content measurements by mass spectrometry, and 8 samples were selected for genome-wide methylation and gene expression profiling with the Illumina Human Methylation 450 and Affymetrix Human Exon 1.0ST array platforms. Mass spectrometry revealed a mean decrease in 5-mdC of 29% (range: 13% to 62%) in the decitabine-treated samples; in comparison, cytarabine treatment resulted in a mean increase in 5-mdC of 5% (range: −10% to 37%). Methylation arrays also showed a modest shift toward lower methylation values, but unsupervised hierarchical clustering demonstrated that methylation patterns were driven by sample-specific differences and not drug treatment. Analysis of methylation changes showed the most pronounced hypomethylation at CpGs with high baseline methylation levels, irrespective of CpG island and gene-based annotation, suggesting that the initial methylation status of each CpG is responsible for preferential effects of decitabine, rather than its genomic context. Methylation at promoter-associated CpGs showed a small but statistically significant negative correlation with change in gene expression, but expression changes at individual genes were not consistent across the samples, including genes previously shown to be regulated by methylation-dependent mechanisms (eg. CDKN2B and CDx H1). In addition to these findings, we observed that a sample from a long-term decitabine responder had an exaggerated in vitro response to decitabine (58% decrease in 5-mdC after 6 days of treatment), compared to a cohort of decitabine non-responders; a sample from a second patient also showed marked hypomethylation by both mass spectrometry and methylation array, although this patient was not treated with decitabine. While more investigation is needed, this observation might suggest that extreme in vitro hypomethylation in response to decitabine could serve as a biomarker for a clinical response. In summary, our study showed that short-term low dose decitabine treatment has modest but detectable effects on DNA methylation and gene expression, but these changes did not result in activation of any canonical gene expression pathway at this early time point. We found that the baseline methylation status of a CpG appears to be the best predictor of decitabine-induced hypomethylation, with highly methylated CpGs showing the greatest change. We also observed that hypomethylation is highly variable across primary samples and at specific genes, implying that single gene approaches for measuring decitabine effect may be problematic. Finally, extreme in vitro decitabine-induced hypomethylation should be further investigated as a biomarker for decitabine responsiveness. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2000 ◽  
Vol 2000 ◽  
pp. 61-61
Author(s):  
F.L. Mould ◽  
D. Colombatto ◽  
E. Owen

The extent of rumen degradability of a feedstuff depends on the interaction between rate of degradation and residence time. In situ techniques require that substrates are ground to obtain a homogenous sample and to reduce result variability. However undegraded feed particle losses increase with bag pore size and fineness of grinding. If these particles are degraded at a similar or lower rate than the retained material, degradability, especially for short-term incubations, will be overestimated. In contrast if the feed particles lost are more readily degraded the degradability measurements obtained will be unaffected. Where improvements due to grinding have been recorded in situ these are assumed to result from variations in the proportion of fine particles that are immediately soluble or rapidly degradable. Gas-based in vitro feed evaluation systems offer the possibility of quantifying this effect directly and a study was therefore conducted to investigate the impact of particle size on the rate and extent of fermentation using the Reading Pressure Technique (Mauricio et al., 1999).


Cartilage ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 194760352096706
Author(s):  
Jessica M. Falcon ◽  
Dylan Chirman ◽  
Alyssa Veneziale ◽  
Justin Morman ◽  
Katherine Bolten ◽  
...  

Objective Articular cartilage exists in a hypoxic environment, which motivates the use of hypoxia-simulating chemical agents to improve matrix production in cartilage tissue engineering. The aim of this study was to investigate whether dimethyloxalylglycine (DMOG), a HIF-1α stabilizer, would improve matrix production in 3-dimensional (3D) porcine synovial-derived mesenchymal stem cell (SYN-MSC) co-culture with chondrocytes. Design Pellet cultures and scaffold-based engineered cartilage were grown in vitro to determine the impact of chemically simulated hypoxia on 2 types of 3D cell culture. DMOG-treated groups were exposed to DMOG from day 14 to day 21 and grown up to 6 weeks with n = 3 per condition and time point. Results The addition of DMOG resulted in HIF-1α stabilization in the exterior of the engineered constructs, which resulted in increased regional type II collagen deposition, but the stabilization did not translate to overall increased extracellular matrix deposition. There was no increase in HIF-1α stabilization in the pellet cultures. DMOG treatment also negatively affected the mechanical competency of the engineered cartilage. Conclusions Despite previous studies that demonstrated the efficacy of DMOG, here, short-term treatment with DMOG did not have a uniformly positive impact on the chondrogenic capacity of SYN-MSCs in either pellet culture or in scaffold-based engineered cartilage, as evidenced by reduced matrix production. Such 3D constructs generally have a naturally occurring hypoxic center, which allows for the stabilization of HIF-1α in the interior tissue. Thus, short-term addition of DMOG may not further improve this in cartilage tissue engineered constructs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlin Heslin ◽  
Daniela Boehm ◽  
Brendan F. Gilmore ◽  
Julianne Megaw ◽  
Theresa A. Freeman ◽  
...  

The potential applications for cold plasma in medicine are extensive, from microbial inactivation and induction of apoptosis in cancer cells to stimulating wound healing and enhancing the blood coagulation cascade. The safe bio-medical application of cold plasma and subsequent effect on complex biological pathways requires precision and a distinct understanding of how physiological redox chemistry is manipulated. Chemical modification of biomolecules such as carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids treated with cold plasma have been characterized, however, the context of how alterations of these molecules affect cell behavior or in vivo functionality has not been determined. Thus, this study examines the cytotoxic and mutagenic effects of plasma-treated molecules in vitro using CHO-K1 cells and in vivo in Galleria mellonella larvae. Specifically, albumin, glucose, cholesterol, and arachidonic acid were chosen as representative biomolecules, with established involvement in diverse bioprocesses including; cellular respiration, intracellular transport, cell signaling or membrane structure. Long- and short-term effects depended strongly on the molecule type and the treatment milieu indicating the impact of chemical and physical modifications on downstream biological pathways. Importantly, absence of short-term toxicity did not always correlate with absence of longer-term effects, indicating the need to comprehensively assess ongoing effects for diverse biological applications.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document