10 research outputs found

    Status Report of the DPHEP Study Group: Towards a Global Effort for Sustainable Data Preservation in High Energy Physics

    Full text link
    Data from high-energy physics (HEP) experiments are collected with significant financial and human effort and are mostly unique. An inter-experimental study group on HEP data preservation and long-term analysis was convened as a panel of the International Committee for Future Accelerators (ICFA). The group was formed by large collider-based experiments and investigated the technical and organisational aspects of HEP data preservation. An intermediate report was released in November 2009 addressing the general issues of data preservation in HEP. This paper includes and extends the intermediate report. It provides an analysis of the research case for data preservation and a detailed description of the various projects at experiment, laboratory and international levels. In addition, the paper provides a concrete proposal for an international organisation in charge of the data management and policies in high-energy physics

    Tubeless video-assisted thoracic surgery for pulmonary ground-glass nodules: expert consensus and protocol (Guangzhou)

    Get PDF

    Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis with lung involvement

    No full text
    Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP) is a rare disease caused by human papillomavirus. Aggressive forms of RRP require repeated cytoreductive surgery to restore airway patency. Tracheal disease is even less common and lung parenchyma is involved in less than 1% of patients. We present reports of three cases of RRP with progressive lung disease in adult patients. Keywords: Respiratory papillomatosis, Airways, Pulmonary parenchyma, Cavitatio

    Pericentromeric satellite lncRNAs are induced in cancer-associated fibroblasts and regulate their functions in lung tumorigenesis

    No full text
    Abstract The abnormal tumor microenvironment (TME) often dictates the therapeutic response of cancer to chemo- and immuno-therapy. Aberrant expression of pericentromeric satellite repeats has been reported for epithelial cancers, including lung cancer. However, the transcription of tandemly repetitive elements in stromal cells of the TME has been unappreciated, limiting the optimal use of satellite transcripts as biomarkers or anti-cancer targets. We found that transcription of pericentromeric satellite DNA (satDNA) in mouse and human lung adenocarcinoma was observed in cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). In vivo, lung fibroblasts expressed pericentromeric satellite repeats HS2/HS3 specifically in tumors. In vitro, transcription of satDNA was induced in lung fibroblasts in response to TGFβ, IL1α, matrix stiffness, direct contact with tumor cells and treatment with chemotherapeutic drugs. Single-cell transcriptome analysis of human lung adenocarcinoma confirmed that CAFs were the cell type with the highest number of satellite transcripts. Human HS2/HS3 pericentromeric transcripts were detected in the nucleus, cytoplasm, extracellularly and co-localized with extracellular vesicles in situ in human biopsies and activated fibroblasts in vitro. The transcripts were transmitted into recipient cells and entered their nuclei. Knock-down of satellite transcripts in human lung fibroblasts attenuated cellular senescence and blocked the formation of an inflammatory CAFs phenotype which resulted in the inhibition of their pro-tumorigenic functions. In sum, our data suggest that satellite long non-coding (lnc) RNAs are induced in CAFs, regulate expression of inflammatory genes and can be secreted from the cells, which potentially might present a new element of cell-cell communication in the TME
    corecore