Publications by authors named "Arja Reinikainen"

Poly(ADP-ribos)ylation is one of the longest-known but most enigmatic posttranslational modifications transducing specific signals. The enzyme responsible for the majority of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerization in cells, PARP-1, promotes DNA repair but also mediates a caspase-independent form of apoptosis in response to stressors such as irradiation. However, the biologic function of most other PARPs is not known.

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The risk determinants of type 1 diabetes, initiators of autoimmune response, mechanisms regulating progress toward beta cell failure, and factors determining time of presentation of clinical diabetes are poorly understood. We investigated changes in the serum metabolome prospectively in children who later progressed to type 1 diabetes. Serum metabolite profiles were compared between sample series drawn from 56 children who progressed to type 1 diabetes and 73 controls who remained nondiabetic and permanently autoantibody negative.

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As a step toward understanding the role played by host gene expression in the development and pathogenesis of persistent Chlamydia pneumoniae infection, modulation of the host-cell transcriptional response during interferon (IFN)- gamma -induced persistent C. pneumoniae infection of HL cells was examined by a cDNA array and then selectively by a real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. We identified 9 host cell genes whose transcription was consistently altered during IFN- gamma -induced persistent C.

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The autoimmune regulator (AIRE) is a transcriptional regulator expressed in the thymic medullary epithelial cells and in the cells of the monocyte-dendritic lineage both in the thymus and in the secondary lymphoid organs. Mutations in the AIRE gene cause autoimmune polyendocrinopathy candidiasis ectodermal dystrophy (APECED), a recessively inherited disease characterized by loss of immunological self-tolerance to multiple endocrine organs. Recent mouse knockout studies suggest that AIRE is responsible for ectopic expression of peripheral self-antigens in the thymus.

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