12 results on '"Capulas E"'
Search Results
2. Cell cycle arrest and cell death as responses to ionising radiation
- Author
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Winters, ZE, Ongkeko, WM, Capulas, E, Clingen, P, Arlett, C, Wang, SW, Toda, T, and Norbury, C
- Published
- 2016
3. Molecular methods for the detection of mutations
- Author
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Monteiro, C., primary, Marcelino, L.A., additional, Conde, A.R., additional, Saraiva, C., additional, Giphart-Gassler, M., additional, De Nooij-van Dalen, A.G., additional, Van Buuren-van Seggelen, V., additional, Van der Keur, M., additional, May, C.A., additional, Cole, J., additional, Lehmann, A.R., additional, Steinsgrimsdottir, H., additional, Beare, D., additional, Capulas, E., additional, and Armour, J.A.L., additional
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Biomonitoring human exposure to environmental carcinogenic chemicals
- Author
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Farmer, P.B., primary, Sepai, O., additional, Lawrence, R., additional, Autrup, H., additional, Nielsen, P.Sabro, additional, Vestergård, A.B., additional, Waters, R., additional, Leuratti, C., additional, Jones, N.J., additional, Stone, J., additional, Baan, R.A., additional, van Delft, J.H.M., additional, Steenwinkel, M.J.S.T., additional, Kyrtopoulos, S.A., additional, Souliotis, V.L., additional, Theodorakopoulos, N., additional, Bacalis, N.C., additional, Natarajan, A.T., additional, Tates, A.D., additional, Haugen, A., additional, Andreassen, Å., additional, Øvrebø, S., additional, Shuker, D.E.G., additional, Amaning, K.S., additional, Schouft, A., additional, Ellul, A., additional, Garner, R.C., additional, Dingley, K.H., additional, Abbondandolo, A., additional, Merlo, F., additional, Cole, J., additional, Aldrich, K., additional, Beare, D., additional, Capulas, E., additional, Rowley, G., additional, Waugh, A.P.W., additional, Povey, A.C., additional, Haque, K., additional, Kirsch-Volders, M., additional, Van Hummelen, P., additional, and Castelain, P, additional
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Hypersensitivity of ataxia telangiectasia fibroblasts to ionizing radiation is associated with a repair deficiency of DNA double-strand breaks.
- Author
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Foray, N., Priestley, A., Alsbeih, G., Badie, C., Capulas, E. P., Arlett, C. F., and Malaise, E. P.
- Subjects
DNA repair ,IRRADIATION ,FIBROBLASTS ,CELL lines - Abstract
Abstract. We have studied the intrinsic radiosensitivity, repair of potentially lethal damage (PLD) and the repair rate of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) in 11 nontransformed human fibroblast cell lines, four of which were homozygous for the A-T mutation and two that were heterozygous (A-TH). All the experiments were done on cells in plateau phase of growth (97-99% of cells in G0/G1). With a dose of 30 Gy delivered at 4 C, the A-T cell lines had faster repair rates of up to 6 h, after which the repair curve crossed that of the control so that the residual damage at 24 h was higher in the A-T cells. Irradiation at 37 C at low dose rate (1 cGy.min -1) produced even more marked differences between the A-T cells and controls: the residual DSB level was always higher in A-T cells than controls at doses of 5-40 Gy, due to defective repair of a small fraction of DSB in A-T cells. The two protocols showed DSB repair rates for the A-TH cell lines that were intermediate between those of the A-T and control cells. There was a quantitative relationship between the residual DSB after irradiation at 37 C and the intrinsic radiosensitivity, and with the extent of PLD repair. There were very few apoptotic cells in the non-transformed control and A-T cell lines, both before and after irradiation. In combination, these results support the contention that the defective repair of DSB is a mechanism of the hypersensitivity linked to the A-T mutation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Apoptosis and cytokine release induced by ionizing or ultraviolet B radiation in primary and immortalized human keratinocytes.
- Author
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Petit-Frère, C, Capulas, E, Lyon, D A, Norbury, C J, Lowe, J E, Clingen, P H, Riballo, E, Green, M H, and Arlett, C F
- Abstract
We have compared the induction of apoptosis and cytokine release by UVB and gamma-radiation in primary (untransformed) and in two immortalized human epithelial/keratinocyte cell lines, HaCaT and KB (KB is now known to be a subline of the ubiquitous keratin-forming tumour cell line HeLa and we therefore designate it HeLa-KB). In both the primary and the immortalized cell lines apoptosis and release of the inflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 are induced rapidly following UVB irradiation. In contrast, only the immortalized cells undergo apoptosis and release interleukin-6 after gamma-irradiation and here the onset of apoptosis and cytokine release are delayed. The same distinction between primary and immortalized cells was observed when double-strand breaks were induced with the anticancer drug mitoxantrone, which stabilizes topoisomerase II-cleavable complexes. We suggest that immortalization may sensitize keratinocytes to the apoptogenic effect of ionizing radiation or mitoxantrone by deregulating normal cell cycle checkpoints. In both human keratinocytes and fibroblasts, cell killing, as assayed by loss of colony-forming ability, is not coupled to apoptosis. Immortalization increases resistance to gamma-radiation killing but sensitizes to apoptosis. In contrast, although immortalization also sensitizes to UVB-induced apoptosis, it does not affect UVB-induced cell killing. Apoptosis unambiguously indicates death at the single cell level but clonal cell survival integrates all the cellular and genetic processes which prevent or permit a scorable clone to develop.
- Published
- 2000
7. Co-cultivation of CD4^+ and CD8^+ human T-cells leads to the appearance of CD4 cells expressing CD8 through de novo synthesis of the CD8 @a-subunit - possible role of antigen transfer
- Author
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O'Donovan, M.R., Jones, D.R.E., Robins, R.A., Li, K.F., Shim, H.-K., Zheng, Z., Arlett, C.F., Capulas, E., and Cole, J.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Combined immunodeficiency associated with increased apoptosis of lymphocytes and radiosensitivity fibroblasts
- Author
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Peake J, Waugh A, Le Deist F, Priestley A, Rieux-Laucat F, Foray N, Capulas E, Bk, Singleton, Jp, Villartay, Cant A, Ep, Malaise, Fischer A, Claire Hivroz, and Pa, Jeggo
- Subjects
Male ,DNA, Complementary ,DNA Repair ,Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes ,Apoptosis ,Fibroblasts ,Radiation Tolerance ,Translocation, Genetic ,Gamma Rays ,Child, Preschool ,Chromosome Inversion ,Humans ,Female ,Severe Combined Immunodeficiency ,Lymphocytes ,Child ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 7 ,DNA Damage ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Severe immunodeficiency characterized by lymphopenia was found in two siblings, one of whom was examined in detail. The calcium flux, pattern of tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins, and interleukin 2 (IL-2) production and proliferation in response to mitogens suggested that the peripheral blood T cells activated normally. The peripheral blood T cells were shown to have an activated phenotype with increased expression of CD45RO+ and CD95/Fas. Increased spontaneous apoptosis occurred in unstimulated lymphocyte cultures. The elevated apoptosis was not due to alterations in expression or to mutations in Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L), or Flip, nor could the spontaneous apoptosis be prevented by blocking Fas, suggesting that it was independent of Fas signaling. This is the first inherited combined immunodeficiency associated with impaired lymphocyte survival. Fibroblasts derived from the patient showed appreciable radiosensitivity in clonal assays, but apoptosis was not elevated. Our results show that the fibroblasts represent a new radiosensitive phenotype not associated with cell cycle checkpoint defects, V(D)J recombination defects, or elevated chromosome breakage. We suggest that the affected gene plays a role in an undetermined damage response mechanism that results in elevated spontaneous apoptosis in lymphoid cells and radiosensitivity in fibroblasts.
9. Combined immunodeficiency associated with increased apoptosis of lymphocytes and radiosensitivity of fibroblasts
- Author
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Peake, J., Waugh, A., Le Deist, F., Priestley, A., Frédéric Rieux-Laucat, Foray, N., Capulas, E., Singleton, B. K., Villartay, J. -P, Cant, A., Malaise, E. P., Fischer, A., Hivroz, C., and Jeggo, P. A.
10. Ultraviolet-B-induced apoptosis and cytokine release in xeroderma pigmentosum keratinocytes.
- Author
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Petit-Frère C, Capulas E, Lowe JE, Koulu L, Marttila RJ, Jaspers NG, Clingen PH, Green MH, and Arlett CF
- Subjects
- Apoptosis radiation effects, Cells, Cultured, Cytokines metabolism, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Fibroblasts radiation effects, Humans, In Situ Nick-End Labeling, Infant, Newborn, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Keratinocytes radiation effects, Male, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism, Keratinocytes cytology, Ultraviolet Rays, Xeroderma Pigmentosum pathology
- Abstract
We have assessed the ability of xeroderma pigmentosum and normal keratinocytes grown out from skin biopsies to undergo apoptosis after irradiation with ultraviolet B. Keratinocytes have been studied from xeroderma pigmentosum complementation groups A (three biopsies), C (three biopsies), D (one biopsy), xeroderma pigmentosum variant (two biopsies), and Cockayne syndrome (one biopsy). The three xeroderma pigmentosum group A and the xeroderma pigmentosum group D samples were at least six times more sensitive than normal cells to ultraviolet B-induced apoptosis. The xeroderma pigmentosum variant samples showed intermediate susceptibility. Xeroderma pigmentosum group C samples proved heterogeneous: one showed high sensitivity to apoptosis, whereas two showed near normal susceptibility. The Cockayne syndrome sample showed the high susceptibility of xeroderma pigmentosum groups A and D only at a higher fluence. These results suggest that the relationships between repair deficiency, apoptosis, and susceptibility to skin cancer are not straightforward. Ultraviolet B-induced skin cancer is also thought to be due in part to ultraviolet B-induced impairment of immune responses. The release of the inflammatory cytokines interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha from cultured xeroderma pigmentosum keratinocytes tended to occur at lower fluences than in normals, but was less extensive, and was more readily inhibited at higher fluences of ultraviolet B.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Combined immunodeficiency associated with increased apoptosis of lymphocytes and radiosensitivity fibroblasts.
- Author
-
Peake J, Waugh A, Le Deist F, Priestley A, Rieux-Laucat F, Foray N, Capulas E, Singleton BK, de Villartay JP, Cant A, Malaise EP, Fischer A, Hivroz C, and Jeggo PA
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Chromosome Inversion, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 7 ultrastructure, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, DNA, Complementary genetics, Female, Fibroblasts pathology, Gamma Rays, Humans, Lymphocytes pathology, Male, Radiation Tolerance, Severe Combined Immunodeficiency genetics, Signal Transduction physiology, Translocation, Genetic, Apoptosis radiation effects, Fibroblasts radiation effects, Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes pathology, Lymphocytes radiation effects, Severe Combined Immunodeficiency pathology
- Abstract
Severe immunodeficiency characterized by lymphopenia was found in two siblings, one of whom was examined in detail. The calcium flux, pattern of tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins, and interleukin 2 (IL-2) production and proliferation in response to mitogens suggested that the peripheral blood T cells activated normally. The peripheral blood T cells were shown to have an activated phenotype with increased expression of CD45RO+ and CD95/Fas. Increased spontaneous apoptosis occurred in unstimulated lymphocyte cultures. The elevated apoptosis was not due to alterations in expression or to mutations in Bcl-2, Bcl-X(L), or Flip, nor could the spontaneous apoptosis be prevented by blocking Fas, suggesting that it was independent of Fas signaling. This is the first inherited combined immunodeficiency associated with impaired lymphocyte survival. Fibroblasts derived from the patient showed appreciable radiosensitivity in clonal assays, but apoptosis was not elevated. Our results show that the fibroblasts represent a new radiosensitive phenotype not associated with cell cycle checkpoint defects, V(D)J recombination defects, or elevated chromosome breakage. We suggest that the affected gene plays a role in an undetermined damage response mechanism that results in elevated spontaneous apoptosis in lymphoid cells and radiosensitivity in fibroblasts.
- Published
- 1999
12. Biomonitoring of possible human exposure to environmental genotoxic chemicals: lessons from a study following the wreck of the oil tanker Braer.
- Author
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Cole J, Beare DM, Waugh AP, Capulas E, Aldridge KE, Arlett CF, Green MH, Crum JE, Cox D, Garner RC, Dingley KH, Martin EA, Podmore K, Heydon R, and Farmer PB
- Subjects
- Adult, DNA Adducts blood, Environmental Exposure, Hemoglobins analysis, Hemoglobins genetics, Humans, Hydrocarbons, Aromatic metabolism, Hypoxanthine Phosphoribosyltransferase drug effects, Hypoxanthine Phosphoribosyltransferase genetics, Lymphocytes drug effects, Male, Middle Aged, Mutagens toxicity, Mutation, Petroleum toxicity, Phosphorus Radioisotopes, Pilot Projects, Scotland, Accidents, Occupational, Air Pollutants toxicity, Environmental Monitoring methods
- Abstract
In January 1993 the oil tanker Braer ran aground in the Shetland Islands, Scotland. Approximately 80,000 tons of crude oil were released. Exceptionally high winds caused extensive pollution and exposure of the local population to crude oil. We describe the study which was immediately set in place to examine the exposed population for evidence of genotoxic exposure. Blood samples were taken and primary DNA damage was measured in the mononuclear cell fraction by the butanol modification of the 32P-postlabelling method. Mutation was measured at the hprt locus in T lymphocytes. No evidence of genotoxicity was obtained for either end point, but nevertheless, we believe that useful lessons were learnt, which should be incorporated into the design of future studies: (1) A rapid response is essential, and even if sufficient funds are not immediately available, it is still worth attempting to obtain samples quickly and use cryopreservation, also to attempt to estimate exposure. (2) Adequate numbers of volunteers must be sought, together with enough controls, not just to allow meaningful analysis but to overcome loss of samples and failure of things to go according to plan. (3) Points concerning laboratory practice include: (i) samples should be coded, (ii) clearly defined and proven protocols should be used, (iii) irreplaceable samples should not be used for method development, (iv) should a problem become apparent during the study, work on such samples should cease immediately until the problem is solved, (v) all critical experimental components should be pretested against a laboratory standard. (4) The study design should include replicate experiments to monitor experimental variability and reproducibility, as well as internal standards and cryopreserved "in house" samples. Care must be taken that samples from any one exposure group are spread between a number of independent experiments and that each experiment includes samples from a number of exposure groups. (5) A computerised data base should be maintained with full details of experimental variables, donor attributes, and raw data so that any contribution of experimental artefacts to "outlier" results can be monitored. (6) Because of the nature of the statistical variation for many environmental genotoxicity end points, only a large-scale study is likely to be capable of yielding useful information.
- Published
- 1997
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