keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38646145/molecular-diversity-in-isocitrate-dehydrogenase-wild-type-glioblastoma
#21
REVIEW
Jawad Fares, Yizhou Wan, Richard Mair, Stephen J Price
In the dynamic landscape of glioblastoma, the 2021 World Health Organization Classification of Central Nervous System tumours endeavoured to establish biological homogeneity, yet isocitrate dehydrogenase-wild-type (IDH-wt) glioblastoma persists as a tapestry of clinical and molecular diversity. Intertumoural heterogeneity in IDH-wt glioblastoma presents a formidable challenge in treatment strategies. Recent strides in genetics and molecular biology have enhanced diagnostic precision, revealing distinct subtypes and invasive patterns that influence survival in patients with IDH-wt glioblastoma...
2024: Brain communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38646093/ongoing-cpr-with-an-onboard-physician
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alfredo Echarri Sucunza, Patricia Fernández Del Valle, Jose Antonio Iglesias Vázquez, Youcef Azeli, Jose María Navalpotro Pascual, Juan Valenciano Rodriguez, Cristian Fernández Barreras, Sonia Royo Embid, Carmen Gutiérrez-García, María Isabel Ceniceros Rozalén, Cesar Manuel Guerra García, Carmen Del Pozo Pérez, María José Luque-Hernández, Silvia Sola Muñoz, Ana Belén Forner Canos, María Isabel Herrera Maíllo, Marcos Juanes García, Natividad Ramos García, Belén Muñoz Isabel, Junior Jose García Mendoza, José Antonio Cortés Ramas, Faustino Redondo Revilla, Inmaculada Mateo-Rodríguez, Félix Rivera Sanz, Emily Knox, Antonio Daponte Codina, José Ignacio Ruiz Azpiazu, Fernando Rosell Ortiz
INTRODUCTION: Recent data are not available on ongoing CPR for emergency services with an onboard physician. The aim of the present study was to identify factors associated with the decision to transport patients to hospital with ongoing CPR and examine their survival to hospital discharge with good neurological status. METHODS: An observational study based on a registry of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests attended to by emergency services with an onboard physician...
June 2024: Resuscitation plus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645856/-rapamycin-and-hpph-co-loaded-nanodrug-delivered-via-dissolvable-microneedles-to-treat-port-wine-stains
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ying Hao, Runhao Xu, Mao Chen, Yuwen Chen
OBJECTIVE: Port-wine stains are a kind of dermatological disease of congenital capillary malformation. Based on the biological characteristics of port-wine stains and the advantages of microneedle transdermal administration, we intend to construct a nanodrug co-loaded with rapamycin (RPM), an anti-angiogenesis drug, and photochlor (HPPH), a photosensitizer, and integrate the nanodrug with dissolvable microneedles (MN) to achieve anti-angiogenesis and photodynamic combination therapy for port-wine stains...
March 20, 2024: Sichuan da Xue Xue Bao. Yi Xue Ban, Journal of Sichuan University. Medical Science Edition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645802/neutron-diffraction-from-a-microgravity-grown-crystal-reveals-the-active-site-hydrogens-of-the-internal-aldimine-form-of-tryptophan-synthase
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria N Drago, Juliette M Devos, Matthew P Blakeley, V Trevor Forsyth, Jerry M Parks, Andrey Kovalevsky, Timothy C Mueser
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP), the biologically active form of vitamin B6 , is an essential cofactor in many biosynthetic pathways. The emergence of PLP-dependent enzymes as drug targets and biocatalysts, such as tryptophan synthase (TS), has underlined the demand to understand PLP-dependent catalysis and reaction specificity. The ability of neutron diffraction to resolve the positions of hydrogen atoms makes it an ideal technique to understand how the electrostatic environment and selective protonation of PLP regulates PLP-dependent activities...
February 21, 2024: Cell reports. Physical science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645690/individualized-positive-end-expiratory-pressure-reduces-driving-pressure-in-obese-patients-during-laparoscopic-surgery-under-pneumoperitoneum-a-randomized-clinical-trial
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tiago Batista Xavier, Leonardo Vicente Coelho, Daniel Antonio Lopes Ferreira, José Manuel Cota Y Raposeiras, Marcelo Sampaio Duran, Leticia Almeida Silva, Gabriel Casulari da Motta-Ribeiro, Luciana Moisés Camilo, Alysson Roncally Silva Carvalho, Pedro Leme Silva
INTRODUCTION: During pneumoperitoneum (PNP), airway driving pressure (ΔPRS ) increases due to the stiffness of the chest wall and cephalic shift of the diaphragm, which favors atelectasis. In addition, depending on the mechanical power (MP) formulas, they may lead to different interpretations. METHODS: Patients >18 years of age with body mass index >35 kg/m2 were included in a single-center randomized controlled trial during their admission for bariatric surgery by abdominal laparoscopy...
2024: Frontiers in Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645620/dissociable-neural-mechanisms-for-human-inference-processing-predicted-by-static-and-contextual-language-models
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Takahisa Uchida, Nicolas Lair, Hiroshi Ishiguro, Peter Ford Dominey
Language models (LMs) continue to reveal non-trivial relations to human language performance and the underlying neurophysiology. Recent research has characterized how word embeddings from an LM can be used to generate integrated discourse representations in order to perform inference on events. The current research investigates how such event knowledge may be coded in distinct manners in different classes of LMs and how this maps onto different forms of human inference processing. To do so, we investigate inference on events using two well-documented human experimental protocols from Metusalem et al...
2024: Neurobiology of language
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645473/generation-and-reactivity-of-unsymmetrical-strained-heterocyclic-allenes
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew V Kelleghan, Arismel Tena Meza, Neil K Garg
Strained cyclic allenes are short-lived intermediates that confine a functional group with a preferred linear geometry, an allene, into a small ring, inducing strain-driven reactivity. Nitrogen-containing variants, or azacyclic allenes, have proved valuable for the assembly of complex nitrogen-containing compounds. Whereas 3,4-azacyclic allenes, which bear a symmetrical core, have been the focus of multiple studies, their unsymmetrical 2,3-azacyclic counterparts have remained underexplored. In the present study, we report density functional theory studies investigating the structure of such unsymmetrical azacyclic allenes and experimental efforts to access and engage them in strain-promoted cycloadditions under mild conditions...
March 2024: Nat Synth
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645411/effects-of-aging-on-the-biomechanical-properties-of-the-lung-extracellular-matrix-dependence-on-tissular-stretch
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Ulldemolins, Maria Narciso, Héctor Sanz-Fraile, Jorge Otero, Ramon Farré, Núria Gavara, Isaac Almendros
Introduction: Aging induces functional and structural changes in the lung, characterized by a decline in elasticity and diminished pulmonary remodeling and regenerative capacity. Emerging evidence suggests that most biomechanical alterations in the lung result from changes in the composition of the lung extracellular matrix (ECM), potentially modulating the behavior of pulmonary cells and increasing the susceptibility to chronic lung diseases. Therefore, it is crucial to investigate the mechanical properties of the aged lung...
2024: Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645360/universal-glycosyltransferase-continuous-assay-for-uniform-kinetics-and-inhibition-database-development-and-mechanistic-studies-illustrated-on-st3gal1-c1galt1-and-fut1
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abdullateef Nashed, Kevin J Naidoo
Chemical systems glycobiology requires experimental and computational tools to make possible big data analytics benefiting genomics and proteomics. The impediment to tool development is that the nature of glycan construction and mutation is not template driven but rests on cooperative glycosyltransferase (GT) catalytic synthesis. What is needed is the collation of kinetics and inhibition data in a standardized form to make possible analytics of glycan and glycoconjugate synthesis, mechanism extraction, and pattern recognition...
April 16, 2024: ACS Omega
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645276/restoring-cellular-copper-homeostasis-in-alzheimer-disease-a-novel-peptide-shuttle-is-internalized-by-an-atp-dependent-endocytosis-pathway-involving-rab5-and-rab14-endosomes
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Okafor, Olivia Champomier, Laurent Raibaut, Sebahat Ozkan, Naima El Kholti, Stéphane Ory, Sylvette Chasserot-Golaz, Stéphane Gasman, Christelle Hureau, Peter Faller, Nicolas Vitale
CPPs, or Cell-Penetrating Peptides, offer invaluable utility in disease treatment due to their ability to transport various therapeutic molecules across cellular membranes. Their unique characteristics, such as biocompatibility and low immunogenicity, make them ideal candidates for delivering drugs, genes, or imaging agents directly into cells. This targeted delivery enhances treatment efficacy while minimizing systemic side effects. CPPs exhibit versatility, crossing biological barriers and reaching intracellular targets that conventional drugs struggle to access...
2024: Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645263/robust-single-nucleus-rna-sequencing-reveals-depot-specific-cell-population-dynamics-in-adipose-tissue-remodeling-during-obesity
#31
Jisun So, Olivia Strobel, Jamie Wann, Kyungchan Kim, Avishek Paul, Dominic J Acri, Luke C Dabin, Jungsu Kim, Hyun Cheol Roh
Single nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq), an alternative to single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), encounters technical challenges in obtaining high-quality nuclei and RNA, persistently hindering its applications. Here, we present a robust technique for isolating nuclei across various tissue types, remarkably enhancing snRNA-seq data quality. Employing this approach, we comprehensively characterize the depot-dependent cellular dynamics of various cell types underlying adipose tissue remodeling during obesity...
April 8, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645246/the-g1-s-transition-in-mammalian-stem-cells-in-vivo-is-autonomously-regulated-by-cell-size
#32
Shicong Xie, Shuyuan Zhang, Gustavo de Medeiros, Prisca Liberali, Jan M Skotheim
Cell growth and division must be coordinated to maintain a stable cell size, but how this coordination is implemented in multicellular tissues remains unclear. In unicellular eukaryotes, autonomous cell size control mechanisms couple cell growth and division with little extracellular input. However, in multicellular tissues we do not know if autonomous cell size control mechanisms operate the same way or whether cell growth and cell cycle progression are separately controlled by cell-extrinsic signals. Here, we address this question by tracking single epidermal stem cells growing in adult mice...
April 11, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645223/the-neuroendocrine-transition-in-prostate-cancer-is-dynamic-and-dependent-on-ascl1
#33
Rodrigo Romero, Tinyi Chu, Tania J González-Robles, Perianne Smith, Yubin Xie, Harmanpreet Kaur, Sara Yoder, Huiyong Zhao, Chenyi Mao, Wenfei Kang, Maria V Pulina, Kayla E Lawrence, Anuradha Gopalan, Samir Zaidi, Kwangmin Yoo, Jungmin Choi, Ning Fan, Olivia Gerstner, Wouter R Karthaus, Elisa DeStanchina, Kelly V Ruggles, Peter M K Westcott, Ronan Chaligné, Dana Pe'er, Charles L Sawyers
Lineage plasticity is a recognized hallmark of cancer progression that can shape therapy outcomes. The underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms mediating lineage plasticity remain poorly understood. Here, we describe a versatile in vivo platform to identify and interrogate the molecular determinants of neuroendocrine lineage transformation at different stages of prostate cancer progression. Adenocarcinomas reliably develop following orthotopic transplantation of primary mouse prostate organoids acutely engineered with human-relevant driver alterations (e...
April 11, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645213/bidirectional-dysregulation-of-synaptic-glutamate-signaling-after-transient-metabolic-failure
#34
Stefan Passlick, Ghanim Ullah, Christian Henneberger
Ischemia leads to a severe dysregulation of glutamate homeostasis and excitotoxic cell damage in the brain. Shorter episodes of energy depletion, for instance during peri-infarct depolarizations, can also acutely perturb glutamate signaling. It is less clear if such episodes of metabolic failure also have persistent effects on glutamate signaling and how the relevant mechanisms such as glutamate release and uptake are differentially affected. We modelled acute and transient metabolic failure by using a chemical ischemia protocol and analyzed its effect on glutamatergic synaptic transmission and extracellular glutamate signals by electrophysiology and multiphoton imaging, respectively, in the hippocampus...
April 12, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645187/rna-structures-within-venezuelan-equine-encephalitis-virus-e1-alter-macrophage-replication-fitness-and-contribute-to-viral-emergence
#35
Sarah E Hickson, Jennifer L Hyde
UNLABELLED: Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) is a mosquito-borne +ssRNA virus belonging to the Togaviridae . VEEV is found throughout Central and South America and is responsible for periodic epidemic/epizootic outbreaks of febrile and encephalitic disease in equines and humans. Endemic/enzootic VEEV is transmitted between Culex mosquitoes and sylvatic rodents, whereas epidemic/epizootic VEEV is transmitted between mosquitoes and equids, which serve as amplification hosts during outbreaks...
April 9, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645172/gras1-non-coding-rna-protects-against-dna-damage-and-cell-death-by-binding-and-stabilizing-nkap
#36
Tong Su, Nhu Trang, Jonathan Zhu, Lingbo Kong, Darin Cheung, Vita Chou, Lauren Ellis, Calvin Huang, Nichelle Camden, Colleen A McHugh
Non-coding RNA (ncRNA) gene products are involved in diverse biological processes including splicing, epigenetic regulation, gene expression, proliferation, and metabolism. The biological mechanisms by which ncRNAs contribute to cell survival remain poorly understood. We found that the Growth Regulator Antisense 1 (GRAS1) long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) transcript promotes growth in multiple human cell types by protecting against DNA damage. Knockdown of GRAS1 induced DNA damage and cell death, along with significant expression changes in DNA damage response, intrinsic apoptotic signaling, and cellular response to environmental stimulus genes...
April 11, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645169/respiratory-viral-infection-promotes-the-awakening-and-outgrowth-of-dormant-metastatic-breast-cancer-cells-in-lungs
#37
Shi B Chia, Bryan J Johnson, Junxiao Hu, Roel Vermeulen, Marc Chadeau-Hyam, Fernando Guntoro, Hugh Montgomery, Meher Preethi Boorgula, Varsha Sreeka, Andrew Goodspeed, Bennett Davenport, Felipe V Pereira, Vadym Zaberezhnyy, Wolfgang E Schleicher, Dexiang Gao, Andreia N Cadar, Michael Papanicolaou, Afshin Beheshti, Stephen B Baylin, James Costello, Jenna M Bartley, Thomas E Morrison, Julio A Aguirre-Ghiso, Mercedes Rincon, James DeGregori
Breast cancer is the second most common cancer globally. Most deaths from breast cancer are due to metastatic disease which often follows long periods of clinical dormancy 1 . Understanding the mechanisms that disrupt the quiescence of dormant disseminated cancer cells (DCC) is crucial for addressing metastatic progression. Infection with respiratory viruses (e.g. influenza or SARS-CoV-2) is common and triggers an inflammatory response locally and systemically 2,3 . Here we show that influenza virus infection leads to loss of the pro-dormancy mesenchymal phenotype in breast DCC in the lung, causing DCC proliferation within days of infection, and a greater than 100-fold expansion of carcinoma cells into metastatic lesions within two weeks...
April 5, 2024: Research Square
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645149/inhibiting-crf-projections-from-the-central-amygdala-to-lateral-hypothalamus-and-amygdala-deletion-of-crf-alters-binge-like-ethanol-drinking-in-a-sex-dependent-manner
#38
Sophie C Bendrath, Hernán G Méndez, Anne M Dankert, Jose Manuel Lerma-Cabrera, Francisca Carvajal, Ana Paula Dornellas-Loper, Sophia Lee, Sofia Neira, Harold Haun, Eric Delpire, Montserrat Navarro, Thomas L Kash, Todd E Thiele
BACKGROUND: Binge alcohol drinking is a dangerous pattern of consumption that can contribute to the development of more severe alcohol use disorders (AUDs). Importantly, the rate and severity of AUDs has historically differed between men and women, suggesting that there may be sex differences in the central mechanisms that modulate alcohol (ethanol) consumption. Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) is a centrally expressed neuropeptide that has been implicated in the modulation of binge-like ethanol intake, and emerging data highlight sex differences in central CRF systems...
April 13, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645104/probiotic-treatment-causes-sex-specific-neuroprotection-after-traumatic-brain-injury-in-mice
#39
Morgan Holcomb, Austin Marshall, Hannah Flinn, Mariana Lozano, Sirena Soriano, Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, Todd J Treangen, Sonia Villapol
Background Recent studies have shed light on the potential role of gut dysbiosis in shaping traumatic brain injury (TBI) outcomes. Changes in the levels and types of Lactobacillus bacteria present might impact the immune system disturbances, neuroinflammatory responses, anxiety and depressive-like behaviors, and compromised neuroprotection mechanisms triggered by TBI. Objective This study aimed to investigate the effects of a daily pan-probiotic (PP) mixture in drinking water containing strains of Lactobacillus plantarum, L...
April 2, 2024: Research Square
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645103/two-ended-recombination-at-a-flp-nickase-broken-replication-fork
#40
Rajula Elango, Namrata Nilavar, Andrew G Li, Erin E Duffey, Yuning Jiang, Daniel Nguyen, Abdulkadir Abakir, Nicholas A Willis, Jonathan Houseley, Ralph Scully
Collision of a replication fork with a DNA nick is thought to generate a one-ended break, fostering genomic instability. Collision of the opposing converging fork with the nick could, in principle, form a second DNA end, enabling conservative repair by homologous recombination (HR). To study mechanisms of nickase-induced HR, we developed the Flp recombinase "step arrest" nickase in mammalian cells. Flp-nickase-induced HR entails two-ended, BRCA2/RAD51-dependent short tract gene conversion (STGC), BRCA2/RAD51-independent long tract gene conversion, and discoordinated two-ended invasions...
April 10, 2024: bioRxiv
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