نتایج جستجو برای: microvesicles

تعداد نتایج: 1745  

2016
A. Fricke P. V. Ullrich A. F. V. Cimniak M. Follo S. Nestel B. Heimrich I. Nazarenko G. B. Stark H. Bannasch D. Braig S. U. Eisenhardt

Background. Synovial sarcoma is an aggressive soft-tissue malignancy. This study examines the presence of the SYT-SSX fusion transcript in synovial sarcoma microvesicles as well as its potential role as a biomarker for synovial sarcoma. Patients and Methods. Microvesicle release of synovial sarcoma cells was examined by transmission electron microscopy. RNA-content was analyzed by qPCR, nested ...

2013
Cheryl CY Li Sally A Eaton Paul E Young Maggie Lee Rupert Shuttleworth David T Humphreys Georges E Grau Valery Combes Mary Bebawy Joyce Gong Susan Brammah Michael E Buckland Catherine M Suter

Interactions between glioma cells and their local environment are critical determinants of brain tumor growth, infiltration and neovascularisation. Communication with host cells and stroma via microvesicles represents one pathway by which tumors can modify their surroundings to achieve a tumor-permissive environment. Here we have taken an unbiased approach to identifying RNAs in glioma-derived ...

Journal: :Blood 1999
H F Heijnen A E Schiel R Fijnheer H J Geuze J J Sixma

Platelet activation leads to secretion of granule contents and to the formation of microvesicles by shedding of membranes from the cell surface. Recently, we have described small internal vesicles in multivesicular bodies (MVBs) and alpha-granules, and suggested that these vesicles are secreted during platelet activation, analogous to the secretion of vesicles termed exosomes by other cell type...

Journal: :Radiation research 2014
K Kumar Jella S Rani L O'Driscoll B McClean H J Byrne F M Lyng

There is much evidence supporting the existence of bystander effects in cells that were never exposed to radiation. Directly irradiated cells and bystander cells can communicate with each other using gap junctional intercellular communication or by releasing soluble factors into the surrounding medium. Exosomes and microvesicles are also known to mediate communication between cells. The main ai...

Journal: :Blood 2009
Swapan K Dasgupta Hanan Abdel-Monem Polly Niravath Anhquyen Le Ricardo V Bellera Kimberly Langlois Shigekazu Nagata Rolando E Rumbaut Perumal Thiagarajan

The transbilayer movement of phosphatidylserine from the inner to the outer leaflet of the membrane bilayer during platelet activation is associated with the release of procoagulant phosphatidylserine-rich small membrane vesicles called platelet-derived microvesicles. We tested the effect of lactadherin, which promotes the phagocytosis of phosphatidylserine-expressing lymphocytes and red blood ...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2014
Yang Zhou Mingxia Xiong Jing Niu Qi Sun Weifang Su Ke Zen Chunsun Dai Junwei Yang

Tubular epithelial cell apoptosis contributes to tubulointerstitial fibrosis but its regulation remains unclear. Here, in fibrotic kidney induced by unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO), we demonstrate that miR-34a is markedly upregulated in tubulointerstitial spaces and microvesicles isolated from obstructed kidney. However, miR-34a is not de novo synthesized by proximal tubular epithelial ce...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2011
David G Meckes Nancy Raab-Traub

Cells secrete various membrane-enclosed microvesicles from their cell surface (shedding microvesicles) and from internal, endosome-derived membranes (exosomes). Intriguingly, these vesicles have many characteristics in common with enveloped viruses, including biophysical properties, biogenesis, and uptake by cells. Recent discoveries describing the microvesicle-mediated intercellular transfer o...

2012
Anders Waldenström Nina Gennebäck Urban Hellman Gunnar Ronquist

BACKGROUND Shedding microvesicles are membrane released vesicles derived directly from the plasma membrane. Exosomes are released membrane vesicles of late endosomal origin that share structural and biochemical characteristics with prostasomes. Microvesicles/exosomes can mediate messages between cells and affect various cell-related processes in their target cells. We describe newly detected mi...

2013
Damien Gheldof Julie Hardij Francesca Cecchet Bernard Chatelain Jean-Michel Dogné François Mullier

INTRODUCTION Patients with cancer have a 7- to 10-fold increased risk of developing venous thromboembolism. Circulating microvesicles could be a useful predictive biomarker for venous thromboembolism in cancer. Validated and standardised techniques that could be used to determine the complete microvesicle phenotype are required. OBJECTIVES These were two-fold: a) to characterise tissue factor...

2005
Nancy A. Swords Paula B. Tracy Kenneth G. Mann

The possibility that platelets release microvesicles on adherence to either von Willebrand factor (vWf) or collagen was examined by flow cytometry analysis of the supernatant above layers of adherent platelets. No microvesicle release was detected as a result of adherence to vWf or to collagen, a known platelet agonist. Approximately 8% of the total platelet mass was released as microvesicles a...

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