National Repository of Grey Literature 8 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Molecular mechanisms and components controlling the Wnt signaling pathway output
Krausová, Michaela ; Kořínek, Vladimír (advisor) ; Drbal, Karel (referee) ; Bryja, Vítězslav (referee)
Beyond its essential roles in embryonic development, the Wnt-mediated signal transduction cascade is critically implicated in homeostasis of adult tissues. In the gastrointestinal epithelium, the threshold of active Wnt signaling is kept in a physiological range by a spectrum of regulatory networks and loops, thereby balancing the opposing processes of cell fate determination, proliferation and stem cell self-renewal. Furthermore, compelling evidence undoubtedly link an aberrant Wnt activity to the onset of bowel cancer. Understanding the principle causes and effects secondary to excessive Wnt signaling can provide valuable insights into the pathology of the malignant transformation of the colorectum. The proposed thesis attempts to focus on novel modes of the Wnt pathway modulation; both general and context-specific nuances of the Wnt level adjustment are thereby delineated. The results are presented in three distinct research publications and one review article. The first study examines the contribution of the distinct post-translational modifications, which the Wnt proteins undergo, to their proper processing, secretion and signaling activity. First, we investigated the sequential order and mutual interdependence of cysteine and serine-linked fatty acylation and N-linked glycosylation of murine...
The analysis of cancer invasion plasticity in a 3D environment
Škarková, Aneta ; Brábek, Jan (advisor) ; Anděra, Ladislav (referee) ; Bryja, Vítězslav (referee)
iii Abstract Cells have evolved multiple mechanisms of cellular motility ranging from the migration of large cell cohorts to specialized migration of individual cells. The wide range of invasion modes has been exploited by cancer cells to their advantage, which has rendered the metastatic process so difficult to defeat. To allow for a better understanding of cancer invasion plasticity, we have employed studies on cancer cells that adopt the proteolytically active, adhesion-dependent, elongated mesenchymal invasion mode, the protease-independent, low adhesion, rounded amoeboid invasion mode, or combination of both. To study invasion plasticity directly, we have established two model systems of the mesenchymal- amoeboid transition (MAT) that allow for regulated induction of MAT in 3D in vitro environments. Using these systems, MAT was induced in HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells and the acquisition of a motile, invasive amoeboid phenotype was confirmed. We then observed the mesenchymal and amoeboid invasion strategies within 3D collagen in more detail using a digital holographic microscope. Further, HT1080 cells before and after MAT were subject to high throughput proteomic and transcriptomic studies. Comparison of gene expression and protein levels of mesenchymal and amoeboid cells disclosed an inflammatory-like...
Bmp signaling in the evolution of chordate axial patterning
Kozmikova, Iryna ; Kozmík, Zbyněk (advisor) ; Bryja, Vítězslav (referee) ; Markoš, Anton (referee)
Formation of a dorsoventral axis is a key event in the early development of most animal embryos. In vertebrates, early separation of cell fate domains precedes specification of ectoderm to neural and non-neural as well as mesoderm to dorsal and ventral during development. Maintaining such division with the establishment of an exact border between the domains is required for the formation of highly differentiated structures such as neural tube and chorda. In the cephalochordate amphioxus, genes encoding Chordin, Bmps and transcription factors downstream of Bmp signaling such as Vent are expressed in patterns reminiscent of those of their vertebrate orthologues. However, the key question is whether the conservation of expression patterns of network constituents implies conservation of functional network interactions, and if so, how an increased functional complexity can evolve. Here, we therefore investigated the role of Bmp signaling in axial patterning and cell fate determination in amphioxus, the basal chordate possessing a centralized nervous system and dorsal mesoderm. Using heterologous systems, namely by reporter gene assays in mammalian cell lines and by transgenesis in medaka fish, we have compared the gene regulatory network implicated in dorsoventral patterning of the basal chordate...
Molecular mechanisms and components controlling the Wnt signaling pathway output
Krausová, Michaela ; Kořínek, Vladimír (advisor) ; Drbal, Karel (referee) ; Bryja, Vítězslav (referee)
Beyond its essential roles in embryonic development, the Wnt-mediated signal transduction cascade is critically implicated in homeostasis of adult tissues. In the gastrointestinal epithelium, the threshold of active Wnt signaling is kept in a physiological range by a spectrum of regulatory networks and loops, thereby balancing the opposing processes of cell fate determination, proliferation and stem cell self-renewal. Furthermore, compelling evidence undoubtedly link an aberrant Wnt activity to the onset of bowel cancer. Understanding the principle causes and effects secondary to excessive Wnt signaling can provide valuable insights into the pathology of the malignant transformation of the colorectum. The proposed thesis attempts to focus on novel modes of the Wnt pathway modulation; both general and context-specific nuances of the Wnt level adjustment are thereby delineated. The results are presented in three distinct research publications and one review article. The first study examines the contribution of the distinct post-translational modifications, which the Wnt proteins undergo, to their proper processing, secretion and signaling activity. First, we investigated the sequential order and mutual interdependence of cysteine and serine-linked fatty acylation and N-linked glycosylation of murine...

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1 Bryja, Vítězslav
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