This study shows the ability of the 815-nm diode-laser system to assist wound closure leading to an acceleration and an improvement of wound healing with indiscernible resulting scar. The mechanisms of this phenomenon are still unclear but further investigations are in progress to attempt to explain them.
We observed that HLA-DR 4 and DR7 alleles are significantly implicated in their susceptibility to the disease and suggest that this susceptibility is more related to atopy than to specific responses to allergens. According to previous studies, we could also submit that in atopic patients with asthma, DR4 alleles at the least, could be more closely associated with atopy than with asthma per se. Conversely, we suggest that some allelic DQA1 and DQB1 sequences might confer protection against the disease.
The increasing interest in stress/heat shock proteins (Hsps) as markers of exposure to environmental stress or disease requires an easily applicable method for Hsp determination in peripheral blood cells. Of these cells, monocytes preferentially express Hsps upon stress. An appropriate fixation/permeabilization procedure was developed, combined with immunofluorescence staining and flow cytometry for the detection of the inducible, cytosolic, 72 kDa Hsp (Hsp70) in human monocytes. Higher relative fluorescence intensity was observed in cells exposed to heat shock (HS), reflecting a higher expression of Hsp70 in these cells as compared with cells kept at 37 degrees C. The heat-inducible increased Hsp70 expression was temperature- and time-dependent. Expression of Hsp70 was not uniform within the monocyte population, indicating the presence of subpopulations expressing variable levels of Hsp70 in response to HS. Simultaneous measurements of intracellular Hsp70 and membrane CD14 expression revealed that the higher Hsp70 inducibility coincided with the higher CD14 expression. Comparisons performed with biometabolic labelling, Western blotting, immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase microscopic analysis, showed a high concordance between these different methods; however, cytometry was more sensitive for Hsp70 detection than Western blotting. Flow cytometric detection of intracellular Hsp70 is a rapid, easy and quantitative method, particularly suited for the determination of protein levels in individual cells from an heterogeneous population such as peripheral mononuclear blood cells, and applicable to cohort studies.
Our data suggest that Hsp70 overexpression in asthma results from complex interactions between environmental exposures and genetic background rather than from specific genetic variations in hsp70 genes.
The source of intraspecies variation in the expression of heat shock proteins (HSPs) remains unresolved but could shed light on differential stress tolerance and disease susceptibility. This study investigated the influence of variable basal HSP synthesis on differential inducibility of HSP synthesis. Basal and heat-induced synthesis of the major HSP families in peripheral blood monocytes from healthy donors (n = 42) were analysed using biometabolic labelling and densitometry. Basal Hsp70/Hsc70 synthesis and percentage induction of Hsp70/Hsc70 synthesis were significantly correlated (r = -0.57, p < 0.0001), and described most accurately by an exponential decay equation (R = 0.68, R2 = 0.46). This regression equation suggests that increasing levels of basal Hsp70/Hsc70 synthesis are accompanied by an exponential decrease in the percentage induction of Hsp70/Hsc70 synthesis. The model fits data from European and non-European population groups independently, although both coefficients in the regression equation were larger for non-Europeans. This implies population group as an additional factor influencing differential HSP expression. The differential inducibility of Hsp70/Hsc70 due to variable basal synthesis of Hsp70/Hsc70 and based upon population group may contribute to differential stress tolerance or disease susceptibility.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.