Publications by authors named "Florentin I"

Background: Substance dependence is one of the main factors contributing to morbidity and mortality worldwide. Gambling disorder has recently been included as an addictive disorder in DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition) and is associated with substantial psychiatric comorbidity and respective disability. Nevertheless, the vast majority of those suffering from these disorders do not receive treatment.

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Recent reports have indicated that in cells ectopically expressing only ERα or the full-length hormone-binding isoform of ERβ (ERβ1), the receptors interact with chromatin with different efficacies and that antibodies capable of probing such interactions by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) are scarce. We therefore produced nine subtype and isoform-specific antibodies to ERα or ERβ and validated their performance in receptor probing in cell lines and tissue biopsies by various immunochemical methods, including ChIP. We also produced clones of HEK-293 cells stably transfected with an estrogen response element (ERE)-dependent luciferase reporter and ERα or ERβ1, in order to comparatively study their interaction with reporter ERE.

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Fractionation of the neutral extract of Onobrychis ebenoides (Leguminosae) yielded a new isoflavone, named ebenosin (1), in addition to the known ones, afrormosin (2), formononetin (3) and daidzein (4). Although the relative binding affinities of 1 - 4 for estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) were nearly comparable and matched those of 1-3 for ERbeta, that of 4 for the latter receptor was significantly higher than any of the other. Compounds 1 - 4 induced cell proliferation and gene expression in breast and endometrial cancer cells in an ER-dependent manner.

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Major physical traumas provoke a systemic inflammatory response and immune dysfunction. In a model of thermal injury in rats, we previously showed that an overproduction of nitric oxide (NO) was responsible for the collapse of lymphoproliferative responses. In the present work, we performed a time-course analysis of cell proliferation and cell death parameters in order to establish the sequence of events triggered by the high NO output in Wistar/Han rat splenocytes activated with Con A, 10 days after burn injury.

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We have previously reported that severe heat shock of HeLa cells stably transfected with a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene, transcription of which is controlled by two glucocorticoid-responsive elements and a minimal promoter, pronouncedly enhanced glucocorticoid-induced CAT expression compared to that of non-heated cells, in spite of the glucocorticoid-receptor-mediated transcription of the gene being temporarily compromised by the shock. We now report that prolonged severe heat shock of properly heat-conditioned cells resulted in far more pronounced enhancement of glucocorticoid-induced CAT mRNA and protein expressions, in spite of a similar heat-induced loss of receptor-mediated CAT gene transcription. During recovery from the shock the hormonal activation of transcription exceeded that of non-heated cells.

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Background: The purpose of this study was to assess apoptosis in hematopoietic tumor cells irradiated with carbon ions, in order to define its contribution to the cytotoxicity of these high-LET radiations.

Materials And Methods: RDM4 (murine T lymphoma), MOLT-4, TK6 and WTK1 (human lymphoblastoid) cells were irradiated with 12C or 13C. Apoptosis was assessed by flow cytometry.

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We previously showed that an overproduction of nitric oxide (NO) by macrophages was responsible for the collapse of lymphoproliferative responses after burn injury in rats. First, we demonstrate here that 10 days post-burn, the inhibition of splenocyte response to concanavalin-A results from cytostatic, apoptotic, and necrotic effects of NO on activated T cells. This was evidenced by various criteria at the levels of DNA, mitochondria, and plasma membrane.

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The competence of the glucocorticoid receptor to regulate gene expression is thought to depend on Hsp70-driven continuous reactivation following spontaneous inactivation of its hormone-binding state. We show here that the glucocorticoid-binding capacity of HeLa cells fell with increasing temperature in the range 43-45 degrees C in a manner that closely paralleled the loss of soluble receptor protein. Receptor activity was maintained during moderate (43 degrees C) but not severe (45 degrees C) heat shock.

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To assess the capacity of heavy ions to induce apoptosis in lymphocytes, mice have been irradiated with accelerated carbon ions (95 MeV/nucleon) at doses ranging from 0.1 to 4 Gy. Their spleens were removed 24 h later and gently dissociated to prepare a single cell suspension.

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Immunodeficiency follows extensive burns. We investigated some underlying mechanisms in rats, 10 days after a full-thickness skin burn affecting 20% of total body surface area. In both normal and burned rats the splenocyte proliferative response to Con A was linearly and negatively correlated with nitric oxide (NO) production.

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NO generation in the course of two acute, non immune, inflammatory reactions (pleurisy induced by rat isologous serum and carrageenan) was assessed by means of nitrite measurement in pleural exudate from 0.5 to 24 h. NO release varied time-dependently, similarly for the two inflammatory reactions.

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In order to address the issue of the role of mast cells and nitric oxide (NO) in joint effusions occurring in the course of osteoarthritis (OA), synovial fluids collected from the knee of patients with OA, articular chondrocalcinosis and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were studied for number of mast cells, and histamine, tryptase, phospholipase A2 and nitrite content. Mast cell counts are elevated in synovial fluid from OA patients when compared with RA. Histamine content in synovial fluid parallels the number of mast cells.

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Objective: Administration of interleukin-6 partially reproduces the inhibitory effects of the acute-phase response on cytochrome P450-dependent drug metabolism. The aim of the study was to determine whether endogenous cytokine has such an effect in patients treated by cyclosporine, which is metabolized by the cytochrome P4503A subfamily.

Methods: Blood cyclosporine and serum interleukin-6 levels were determined in six patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation, as long as they received cyclosporine by continuous infusion.

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Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) has been implicated in postburn immunosuppression, which is responsible for septic complications. In the present work, seven non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), differing by their capacity to inhibit the cyclooxygenase pathway, were compared for their ability to restore T lymphocyte proliferative responses evaluated 4 days after thermal injury in rats. Salicylic acid, 5-aminosalicylic acid, and niflumic acid, given daily, fully restored spleen cell responses to concanavalin A (Con A) and phytohemagglutinin.

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Adenosine receptor agonists and agents enhancing pericellular concentrations of adenosine possess antiinflammatory properties. In the present study, we found that R-phenylisopropyladenosine (R-PIA), 5'-N-ethylcarboxamido adenosine (NECA), other agonists of adenosine receptors and dipyridamole, an adenosine uptake inhibitor, inhibited tumor necrosis factor (TNF) production by endotoxin-stimulated human monocytes in a concentration-dependent manner with no inhibition of interleukin-6. The rank order of agonist potency is characteristic of neither A1 nor A2 receptors and suggests the involvement of another receptor subtype.

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Intravenous treatment of male rats with recombinant human interleukin-6 (rhIL6) at 50, 100 and 200 micrograms/kg (corresponding to 4, 8 and 16 x 10(4) U/animal, respectively) reduced the activities of hepatic microsomal cytochrome P450-dependent monoxygenases to varying degrees. Ethylmorphine-N-demethylase activity fell to 53% of control values, an effect similar to that induced by 2.5 mg/kg Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS).

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Among the multiple biological activities of nitric oxide (NO) an immunoregulatory role consisting of the mediation of macrophage suppressive activity, has recently been evidenced. In the present work, we investigated whether NO was implicated in immunosuppression following burn injury. Thermal injury affecting 20-25% of the total body surface area in Wistar rats, provoked a biphasic depression of spleen cell proliferative responses to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and concanavalin A (Con A).

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Enzyme-inducing drugs such as phenobarbital (PB) increase serum concentrations of an acute-phase protein, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (AGP), in man, dogs, and rats via an unknown mechanism. We studied the effects of PB on components of an acute inflammatory reaction in rats in order to determine if PB acts only on this biological marker of inflammation or is capable of altering the clinical course of inflammatory processes. Local carrageenan injection induces a similar time-dependent plantar edema and increases serum AGP levels in Sprague-Dawley (SD) and Dark Agouti (DA) rats.

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A non-immunological acute inflammatory reaction, induced in rats by intrapleural injection of calcium pyrophosphate microcrystals, decreased natural killer activity of lung intracapillary leucocytes (LICL), and, to a lesser extent, of spleen cells. NK activity was significantly depressed as early as 2 h after pleurisy induction, maximally suppressed at 72 h (when the inflammation had resolved) and returned to near-normal values by day 10. This decrease in NK activity was demonstrated using YAC-I lymphoma cells and syngeneic fibrohistiocytoma (P77) cells, as targets.

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Immune defenses are organized along both 24-h and yearly time scales. Two circadian systems have been isolated in man, which can be desynchronized: (1) the circulation of T, B, or NK lymphocyte subsets in peripheral blood and (2) the density of epitope molecules (CD3, CD4, ..

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Acute non-specific inflammation was induced in rats by injection of isologous serum into the pleural cavity. Pleural and peritoneal cells were collected at various times after pleurisy induction and tested for production of leukotriene B4 (LTB4), prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and prostacyclin (PGI2) after in-vitro stimulation with calcium ionophore A23187. Cells obtained by lavage of pleural and peritoneal cavities of normal rats were used as controls.

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The in vivo effects of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) on the host immune system are still poorly understood. However, through inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis, NSAIDs may exhibit immunomodulating properties. The present work was aimed at evaluating the influence of niflumic acid on immune responses when administered orally for 7 consecutive days to 8-week-old inbred mice.

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The effects of imuthiol (sodium ditiocarb, DTC) on the expression of cytotoxic responses (CTL) and natural killer (NK) activity were evaluated in aged and young euthymic mice, and in nu/nu BALB/c mice. Imuthiol generated CTL and concomitantly reduced NK activity in nu/nu mice, suggesting that the agent can generate T cells in athymic nude animals. Treatment for up to 4 months augmented spleen NK and CTL activities in young or aged euthymic mice, but the generation of CTL in old animals was increased by long-term treatments better than by a single injection.

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