National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Monitoring of mutant huntingtin influence on autophagy in human neural stem cells
Zezulová, Kristýna ; Vodička, Petr (advisor) ; Kohoutek, Jiří (referee)
Huntington's disease is an inherited neurodegenerative disease caused by a mutation in the huntingtin gene. Its expressed product, mutated huntingtin protein, aggregates in the cell and affects wide range of cellular processes, including proteostasis mechanisms. Autophagy, classified among the mechanisms of cellular degradation and recycling of proteins and other cellular components, is one of the processes disrupted by the presence of mutated huntingtin. The goal of the project was to prepare a tandem genetic construct (fusion protein LC3-EGFP-mCherry) using chemically competent bacteria by molecular cloning methods, transfect it into prepared human lines carrying both normal and mutated huntingtin, and thus modify the lines to transiently, and if possible also constantly express this sensor of autophagy activity. Such modified lines allow monitoring the effect of the presence of normal and mutated HTT on the course of autophagy and also provide experimentally suitable conditions for influencing autophagy in these cells using inhibitors and activators from the group of small molecules. Two types of LC3-GFP-mCherry/RFP fusion proteins were successfully prepared by molecular cloning and transiently introduced by lipofection into the control ARPE19 lines. Expression of the constructs in human H9 NSC...
The role of proteostatic mechanisms in neurodegenerative diseases
Zezulová, Kristýna ; Vodička, Petr (advisor) ; Marková, Vendula (referee)
Protein homeostasis (proteostasis) plays an important role in maintaining normal cell function and viability. Neurons are particularly vulnerable to proteostasis dysregulation, resulting in damage, dysfunction, and neuronal death, as manifested in many neurodegenerative diseases. One of them is Huntington disease, hereditary neurodegeneration with autosomal dominant inheritance. Expansion of the CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene is translated into an abnormally long glutamine chain in huntingtin protein, leading to disruption of neuronal proteostasis. The primary affected area of the brain is the striatum of the basal ganglia. Disease is progressive, the onset of symptoms usually occurs in adulthood, and after many years leads to the death of the patient. Despite intensive research, disease pathology is still not fully understood, treatment is still only symptomatic and new studies, together with a deeper understanding, also raise many new questions. Through the complexity of the issue, the study of proteostasis in neurodegeneration can bring not only possible implications for therapy, but also could go deeper into the understanding of stress, memory or aging processes.

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3 Zezulová, Kateřina
1 Zezulová, Klára
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