Strains of B. longum subsp. longum/infantis can protect against the lethal infection of E. coli O157-H7 by preventing Shiga toxin production in the caecum and/or Shiga toxin transfer from the intestinal lumen to the bloodstream [47]. In our study, profiles of four volunteers at day 64 presented similarity coefficients 90 in comparison with reference period and those of three other volunteers were 80 corresponding to mean values during reference period. Among them, three microbiota were stable and could be considered as resistant to the AMC treatment and four as resilient. In conclusion, this study showed that a 5-day AMC treatment reduced the mean 16S rRNA 12926553 gene copy numbers of total bacteria and of Bifidobacterium populations. Even if both returned to baseline values at day 8, qualitative methods showed that AMC can have an impact on species composition and decreased the diversity of Bifidobacterium populations. Two months post exposure, resilience could not be observed neither for Bifidobacterium, nor for total bacteria, in most of the subjects. The physiological impact of such long-term modification remains to be assessed.Author ContributionsConceived and designed the experiments: IM AS PP. Performed the experiments: IM CL FM. Analyzed the data: IM PP. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: IM AS. Wrote the paper: IM.
The p53 tumor suppressor protein plays a central role to preserve genomic integrity [1] with effect on cell fate [2]. p53 is involved in many cellular pathways, and when this protein becomes activated in Nafarelin response to stress signals [3] it can promote a transient cell cycle arrest, cell death (apoptosis) or permanent cell cycle arrest (senescence) [4]. p53 often is lost or mutated in cancers [5]. Both apoptosis and cellular senescence prevent the propagation of damaged DNA [6] with consequent reduction of the risk of cancer. However, both of these processes favor tissue atrophy and aging phenotype [7]. Therefore, p53 can exert both beneficial and deleterious effects depending on a delicate DprE1-IN-2 biological activity balance between tumor suppressor and longevity. The interaction among p53 and oxidative stress is intriguing, since this latter is well known to be associated with several agerelated diseases [8,9]. Under normal conditions, p53 protein levels are low and regulated by IKK but prominently by Mdm2, an ubiquitin ligase responsible for p53 degradation. Cellular stress reduces the interaction between p53 and Mdm2 leading to accumulation of the former [10], and several reactive oxygen (ROS) and nitrogen species (RNS) also modify p53 and its activity [11]. Moreover, the activation of p53 leads to the generation of ROS as well [12,13]. Thus, there is an intricate link between pand ROS, even though specific mechanisms of 15755315 their interplay are still unclear. Several results show that cellular redox status is under control of p53, and p53 may exert opposite effects in ROS regulation depending on its levels [11]. Physiological levels of p53 maintain ROS at basal levels through transactivation of antioxidant genes such as SESN1 (mammalian sestrin homologue), SESN2, and glutathione peroxidase-1 (GPx1) [14]. In addition, constitutive levels of p53 link energy metabolism to ROS formation by regulating the expression of essential metabolic enzymes that are able to balance energy metabolism among mitochondrial respiration, glycolysis, and the pentose phosphate shunt [11], and mitochondrial respiration is a major source of ROS [15,16]. High levels.Strains of B. longum subsp. longum/infantis can protect against the lethal infection of E. coli O157-H7 by preventing Shiga toxin production in the caecum and/or Shiga toxin transfer from the intestinal lumen to the bloodstream [47]. In our study, profiles of four volunteers at day 64 presented similarity coefficients 90 in comparison with reference period and those of three other volunteers were 80 corresponding to mean values during reference period. Among them, three microbiota were stable and could be considered as resistant to the AMC treatment and four as resilient. In conclusion, this study showed that a 5-day AMC treatment reduced the mean 16S rRNA 12926553 gene copy numbers of total bacteria and of Bifidobacterium populations. Even if both returned to baseline values at day 8, qualitative methods showed that AMC can have an impact on species composition and decreased the diversity of Bifidobacterium populations. Two months post exposure, resilience could not be observed neither for Bifidobacterium, nor for total bacteria, in most of the subjects. The physiological impact of such long-term modification remains to be assessed.Author ContributionsConceived and designed the experiments: IM AS PP. Performed the experiments: IM CL FM. Analyzed the data: IM PP. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: IM AS. Wrote the paper: IM.
The p53 tumor suppressor protein plays a central role to preserve genomic integrity [1] with effect on cell fate [2]. p53 is involved in many cellular pathways, and when this protein becomes activated in response to stress signals [3] it can promote a transient cell cycle arrest, cell death (apoptosis) or permanent cell cycle arrest (senescence) [4]. p53 often is lost or mutated in cancers [5]. Both apoptosis and cellular senescence prevent the propagation of damaged DNA [6] with consequent reduction of the risk of cancer. However, both of these processes favor tissue atrophy and aging phenotype [7]. Therefore, p53 can exert both beneficial and deleterious effects depending on a delicate balance between tumor suppressor and longevity. The interaction among p53 and oxidative stress is intriguing, since this latter is well known to be associated with several agerelated diseases [8,9]. Under normal conditions, p53 protein levels are low and regulated by IKK but prominently by Mdm2, an ubiquitin ligase responsible for p53 degradation. Cellular stress reduces the interaction between p53 and Mdm2 leading to accumulation of the former [10], and several reactive oxygen (ROS) and nitrogen species (RNS) also modify p53 and its activity [11]. Moreover, the activation of p53 leads to the generation of ROS as well [12,13]. Thus, there is an intricate link between pand ROS, even though specific mechanisms of 15755315 their interplay are still unclear. Several results show that cellular redox status is under control of p53, and p53 may exert opposite effects in ROS regulation depending on its levels [11]. Physiological levels of p53 maintain ROS at basal levels through transactivation of antioxidant genes such as SESN1 (mammalian sestrin homologue), SESN2, and glutathione peroxidase-1 (GPx1) [14]. In addition, constitutive levels of p53 link energy metabolism to ROS formation by regulating the expression of essential metabolic enzymes that are able to balance energy metabolism among mitochondrial respiration, glycolysis, and the pentose phosphate shunt [11], and mitochondrial respiration is a major source of ROS [15,16]. High levels.