Publications by authors named "Bogachuk A"

Recent advances in fate mapping and single-cell technologies have revealed how the dynamics and function of tissue-resident macrophages are shaped by their environment. However, macrophages in sensory organs such as the cochlea where the central nervous system and peripheral nervous system meet remain understudied. Combining single-cell transcriptomics, fate mapping, and parabiosis experiments, we show that five types of myeloid cells including three tissue-resident macrophage subpopulations, coexist in the mouse cochlea.

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Psilocybin may provide a useful treatment for mood disorders including anxiety and depression but its mechanisms of action for these effects are not well understood. While recent preclinical work has begun to assess psilocybin's role in affective behaviors through innate anxiety or fear conditioning, there is scant evidence for its role in conflict between reward and punishment. The current study was designed to determine the impact of psilocybin on the learning of reward-punishment conflict associations, as well as its effects after learning, in male and female rats.

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Dietary maternal deficiency in omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) is a potential risk factor for the development of anxiety and other mood disorders in children and adolescents. Here, we used a previously characterized maternal PUFA dietary deficiency model in rats to determine the impact of postweaning supplementation on adolescent anxiety-like behaviors. We focused on two models of anxiety: innate anxiety tested by the elevated plus maze and a novel operant model of learned anxiety where animals learn that actions may be associated with a variable probability of harm.

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Background: Anxiety is a common symptom of several mental health disorders and adversely affects motivated behaviors. Anxiety can emerge from associating risk of future harm while engaged in goal-guided actions. Using a recently developed behavioral paradigm to model this aspect of anxiety, we investigated the role of 2 cortical subregions, the prelimbic medial frontal cortex (PL) and lateral orbitofrontal cortex (lOFC), which have been implicated in anxiety and outcome expectation, in flexible representation of actions associated with harm risk.

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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal disease affecting upper and lower motor neurons. Microglia directly interact with motor neurons and participate in the progression of ALS. Single-cell mass cytometry (CyTOF) analysis revealed prominent expression of α5 integrin in microglia and macrophages in a superoxide dismutase-1 G93A mouse model of ALS (SOD1).

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The coronavirus D-19 (Covid-19) pandemic has shaken almost every country in the world: as we stand, 6,3 million deaths from the infection have already been recorded, 167,000 and 380,000 of which are in Italy and the Russian Federation, respectively. In the first wave of the pandemic, Italy suffered an abnormally high death toll. A detailed analysis of available epidemiological data suggests that that rate was shockingly high in the Northern regions and in Lombardy, in particular, whilst in the southern region the situation was less dire.

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We studied the effect of the HLDF differentiation factor on production of cytokines by biopsy samples of nonmalignant breast diseases (ND) and invasive breast carcinoma of no special type (IBC-NST), in the absence and presence of lymphogenic metastasis: IBC-NST patients werw subdivided into groups on the prognostic protocol of the 8th edition of the AJCC committee. Group IA consisted of patients with T1-T2 tumor sizes, and predominantly with positive expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER+/PR+/HER2-); it also included one patient with the HER2+ (ER-/PR-/HER2+) molecular subtype. The IB group was mainly composed of patients with T2 tumor size, with the presence of lymphogenic metastasis (in 8 out of 10) patients and with positive expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER+/PR+/HER2-) and it also included three patients with the HER2+ (ER-/PR-/HER2+) molecular subtype.

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The study was carried out on samples of invasive breast carcinoma of no special type from 36 patients aged 48.0 to 62.8 years.

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The article focuses on the influence of human leukemia differentiation factor (HLDF), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), and polyclonal activators (PA) on cytokine production by peripheral blood cells in breast cancer and benign breast diseases. It was found that the influence of internal factors on the production of cytokines by the peripheral blood cells is associated with lymphatic metastasis (CEA: IL-10; HLDF: IL-6, IL-1β, TNF-α, and G-CSF). One special circumstance was that there were no differences between the production of cytokines by peripheral blood cells in the patients with breast cancer compared to the patients with benign breast diseases with a high risk of malignant transformation.

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In this work, we have compared malignant and non-malignant diseases of the mammary gland using 8 proteins: HRG, MUC1, PAI-1, HSP90αA1, CDH1, ERα, PGR and IL-12. Their concentrations in the supernatants of blood cells and breast biopsies were compared in terms of spontaneous production, induced by a polyclonal activator and after exposure to biopsy samples of the HLDF differentiation factor, as well as the indices of the effect of the polyclonal activator and HLDF on the protein production. In addition, the correlation relationships of the above indicators with the expression of markers of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition: collagen type II (CII), β-1 integrin (CD29) and cadherin-E (CDH1) were studied.

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The cytokine production potential of immunocompetent cells from the blood of stomach adenocarcinoma patients was analyzed after the pretreatment of cells with the HLDF differentiation factor with subsequent exposure to polyclonal activators (HLDF+PA). IL-1β, IL-1Ra, TNFα, IL-2, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-17, IL-18, IL-18BPa, IFNγ, G-CSF, and GM-CSF were quantified in the supernatants after precipitation of the cells. Specific effects of HLDF+PA were manifested as an increase in the production of IL-8, IL-17, and GM-CSF due to suppression of Th1-dependent immune reactions in a Th17-mediated mechanism that is a part of a broader functional antagonism of Th1 and Th17 lymphocyte subpopulations.

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Pigment Epithelium-Derived Factor (PEDF) is a secreted glycoprotein belonging to the family of non-inhibitory serpins. It is known, that in cases of complicated myopia, the content of PEDF in aqueous humor of the anterior chamber is significantly reduced. Here we examined a bulk of Tenon's capsule samples obtained from various groups of myopes, to examine PEDF processing in progressive myopia.

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This study is focused on a new amide derivative of the peptide HLDF-6 (Thr-Gly-Glu-Asn-His-Arg). This hexapeptide is a fragment of Human Leukaemia Differentiation Factor (HLDF). It displays a broad range of nootropic and neuroprotective activities.

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We have shown previously the presence of full length (50 kD) and truncated proteolytic form (45 kD) of pigment epithelium derived factor (PEDF) in the eye Tenon's capsule in progressive myopia. The full length PEDF is prevalent in myopia that correlates with breach in collagen fibrils forming. Immunohistochemical analysis of Tenon's capsule with polyclonal antibodies to PEDF revealed PEDF in control group being exclusively inside fibroblasts, whereas in myopia, PEDF was distributed extracellularly as halo around blasted fibroblasts.

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It was shown that the full-size neurotrophic factor from pigment epithelium (PEDF) induces the cell differentiation of the human promyelocyte leukemia cell line HL-60. A structural analysis of PEDF revealed in its C-terminal region a six-membered peptide fragment PEDF-(352-357) (PEDF-6) whose sequence is highly homologous to the 41-46 fragment of the active site of the human leukocyte differentiation factor HLDF (HLDF-6). The biological effect of PEDF and synthetic peptides PEDF-6 and HLDF-6 on the HL-60 cells and the early gastrula ectoderm of Xenopus laevis embryos was studied.

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A structural homology between the endogenous differentiation factor of the HL-60 cell line of promyelocyte leukemia (HLDF) and several DNA/RNA-binding and DNA/RNA-hydrolyzing proteins was revealed, and expression of the hldf gene in prokaryotic systems was studied. On the basis of these experiments, the amino acid sequence of an 8-membered fragment of HLDF with potential nuclease activity was identified. The synthetic octapeptide RRWHRLKE was shown to be capable of the cleavage of RNA, linear DNA from phage lambda, and all forms of plasmid DNA.

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To elucidate the mechanism of differentiating activity on L-Glu to HL-60 cells, its influence on binding of human recombinant interleukine-1beta (rHuIL-1beta), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (rHuTNF-alpha) and interleukine-6 (IL-6) by HL-60 cells was studied. It was established, that L-Glu converted the high affinity binding of [125I]rHuIL-1beta (Kd = 0.32 nM) and [125I]rHuIL-6 (Kd = 0.

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Covalent coupling of bovine rhodopsin to CPG-thiol glass was used for separation of CNBr peptides. It is shown that cysteine residues 322 and 323 in the C-terminal cytoplasmic fragment of rhodopsin are modified with palmitic acid.

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The alpha- and beta-subunits of the GTP-binding protein (transducin) from cattle retina were cleaved with cyanogen bromide. 21 peptides covering 90-100% of the amino acid sequence of the alpha- and beta-subunits were isolated from the hydrolyzate. Cyanogen bromide peptides complete or partial amino acid sequence was determined, the results were compared with those by Numa and coworkers [1] and Lochrie et al.

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The complete amino acid sequence of the gamma-subunit of the GTP-binding protein from cattle retina has been established. The polypeptide chain of the gamma-subunit consists of 69 amino acid residues and contains the unusual sequence Cys35-Cys36. The Mr of the gamma-subunit is 8008.

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The carboxymethylated beta'-subunit of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase was hydrolyzed with trypsin. The hydrolysate was separated on Bio-Gel P-4, followed by ion exchange chromatography, and was further purified by paper chromatography and electrophoresis. A mixture of large peptides was digested with Staphylococcus aureus protease, the fragments obtained were separated by an HPLC procedure.

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Tryptic hydrolysis of apomembranes, BNPS-skatole cleavage of carboxymethylated rhodopsin and thermolytic digestion of native membranes were carried out to obtain the peptides necessary for the polypeptide chain reconstruction. Gel-filtration on Bio-Gel P-30 in 80% formic acid, ion-exchange and reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography were used for the peptide isolation. A comparison of rhodopsin hydrophobicity profile with the accessibility of the polypeptide chain in native photoreceptor membranes for proteases allowed to distinguish seven alpha-helical segments and propose a model for arrangement of the protein molecule in the membrane.

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