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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Castillo-Ruiz, Mario"

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    Skeletal Muscle Atrophy Induced by Diabetes Is Mediated by Non-Selective Channels and Prevented by Boldine
    (2023) Cea, Luis A.; Vasquez, Walter; Hernandez-Salinas, Romina; Vielma, Alejandra Z.; Castillo-Ruiz, Mario; Velarde, Victoria; Salgado, Magdiel; Saez, Juan C.
    Individuals with diabetes mellitus present a skeletal muscle myopathy characterized by atrophy. However, the mechanism underlying this muscular alteration remains elusive, which makes it difficult to design a rational treatment that could avoid the negative consequences in muscles due to diabetes. In the present work, the atrophy of skeletal myofibers from streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats was prevented with boldine, suggesting that non-selective channels inhibited by this alkaloid are involved in this process, as has previously shown for other muscular pathologies. Accordingly, we found a relevant increase in sarcolemma permeability of skeletal myofibers of diabetic animals in vivo and in vitro due to de novo expression of functional connexin hemichannels (Cx HCs) containing connexins (Cxs) 39, 43, and 45. These cells also expressed P2X(7) receptors, and their inhibition in vitro drastically reduced sarcolemma permeability, suggesting their participation in the activation of Cx HCs. Notably, sarcolemma permeability of skeletal myofibers was prevented by boldine treatment that blocks Cx43 and Cx45 HCs, and now we demonstrated that it also blocks P2X(7) receptors. In addition, the skeletal muscle alterations described above were not observed in diabetic mice with myofibers deficient in Cx43/Cx45 expression. Moreover, murine myofibers cultured for 24 h in high glucose presented a drastic increase in sarcolemma permeability and levels of NLRP3, a molecular member of the inflammasome, a response that was also prevented by boldine, suggesting that, in addition to the systemic inflammatory response found in diabetes, high glucose can promote the expression of functional Cx HCs and activation of the inflammasome in skeletal myofibers. Therefore, Cx43 and Cx45 HCs play a critical role in myofiber degeneration, and boldine could be considered a potential therapeutic agent to treat muscular complications due to diabetes.
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    The Salmonella Typhi hlyE gene plays a role in invasion of cultured epithelial cells and its functional transfer to S. Typhimurium promotes deep organ infection in mice
    (2008) Fuentes, Juan A.; Villagra, Nicolas; Castillo-Ruiz, Mario; Mora, Guido C.
    Comparison of genome sequences of Salmonella enterica serovars Typhi and Typhimurium reveals that S. Typhi has a small 2.3 kb genomic island missing in S. Typhimurium, designated Salmonella pathogenicity island 18 (SPI-18), which includes two potential genes. One of these, hlyE, encodes a hemolysin related to the Escherichia coli K12 HlyE hemolysin. PCR assays show that SPI-18 is present in S. Typhi and in many other, but not all, serovars of S. enterica subsp. enterica belonging to the SARB collection. HlyE activity cannot be detected in S. Typhi by means of standard plate assays. Nevertheless, we were able to reveal this activity upon lysis of bacterial cells with phages, in the presence of ampicillin, and in a ompA genetic background, conditions that compromise the integrity of the bacterial envelope. Almost all serovars of the SARB collection shown to cause systemic infections in humans have SPI-18 and hlyE and express an active hemolysin revealed upon bacterial envelope destabilization. S. Typhi hlyE mutants are impaired in invasion of human epithelial cells in vitro, and its heterologous expression in S. Typhimurium improves the colonization of deep organs in mice, demonstrating that the HlyE hemolysin is a new virulence determinant. (C) 2008 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.

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