1,617 research outputs found

    Screening of the activity of quercetin-biapigenin and their poly(Δ-caprolactone)-loaded nanoparticles in HepG2 cells

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    Hypericum perforatum extracts have been used for their antidepressive effects. A selected fraction (HP) containing quercetin and biapigenin proved to be neuroprotective. Liver is the organ primary responsible for compound metabolization and extremely susceptibility to toxic effects. This study aims to determine the hepatotoxic/protective activity of HP and HP PCL-loaded nanoparticles.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    An economic evaluation of Wolbachia deployments for dengue control in Vietnam

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    INTRODUCTION: Dengue is a major public health challenge and a growing problem due to climate change. The release of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes infected with the intracellular bacterium Wolbachia is a novel form of vector control against dengue. However, there remains a need to evaluate the benefits of such an intervention at a large scale. In this paper, we evaluate the potential economic impact and cost-effectiveness of scaled Wolbachia deployments as a form of dengue control in Vietnam-targeted at the highest burden urban areas. METHODS: Ten settings within Vietnam were identified as priority locations for potential future Wolbachia deployments (using a population replacement strategy). The effectiveness of Wolbachia deployments in reducing the incidence of symptomatic dengue cases was assumed to be 75%. We assumed that the intervention would maintain this effectiveness for at least 20 years (but tested this assumption in the sensitivity analysis). A cost-utility analysis and cost-benefit analysis were conducted. RESULTS: From the health sector perspective, the Wolbachia intervention was projected to cost US$420 per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) averted. From the societal perspective, the overall cost-effectiveness ratio was negative, i.e. the economic benefits outweighed the costs. These results are contingent on the long-term effectiveness of Wolbachia releases being sustained for 20 years. However, the intervention was still classed as cost-effective across the majority of the settings when assuming only 10 years of benefits. CONCLUSION: Overall, we found that targeting high burden cities with Wolbachia deployments would be a cost-effective intervention in Vietnam and generate notable broader benefits besides health gains

    Bone turnover markers for early detection of fracture healing disturbances: A review of the scientific literature

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    Imaging techniques are the standard method for assessment of fracture healing processes. However, these methods are perhaps not entirely reliable for early detection of complications, the most frequent of these being delayed union and non-union. A prompt diagnosis of such disorders could prevent prolonged patient distress and disability. Efforts should be directed towards the development of new technologies for improving accuracy in diagnosing complications following bone fractures. The variation in the levels of bone turnover markers (BTMs) have been assessed with regard to there ability to predict impaired fracture healing at an early stage, nevertheless the conclusions of some studies are not consensual. In this article the authors have revised the potential of BTMs as early predictors of prognosis in adult patients presenting traumatic bone fractures but who did not suffer from osteopenia or postmenopausal osteoporosis. The available information from the different studies performed in this field was systematized in order to highlight the most promising BTMs for the assessment of fracture healing outcome

    The first minutes in the life of a peroxisomal matrix protein

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    In the field of intracellular protein sorting, peroxisomes are most famous by their capacity to import oligomeric proteins. The data supporting this remarkable property are abundant and, understandably, have inspired a variety of hypothetical models on how newly synthesized (cytosolic) proteins reach the peroxisome matrix. However, there is also accumulating evidence suggesting that many peroxisomal oligomeric proteins actually arrive at the peroxisome still as monomers. In support of this idea, recent data suggest that PEX5, the shuttling receptor for peroxisomal matrix proteins, is also a chaperone/holdase, binding newly synthesized peroxisomal proteins in the cytosol and blocking their oligomerization. Here we review the data behind these two different perspectives and discuss their mechanistic implications on this protein sorting pathway. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Peroxisomes edited by Ralf Erdmann.This work was supported by national funds through FCT – Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e a Tecnologia/MEC-MinistĂ©rio da Educação e CiĂȘncia and when applicable co-funded by FEDER funds within the partnership agreement PT2020 related with the research unit number 4293; and by the project FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-019731 (PTDC/BIABCM/118577/2010) funded by national funds through FCT and co-funded by Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional (FEDER) through the Operation- alCompetitiveness Programme(COMPETE).A. F.D., T.F., T.A.R. and C. P. G. were supported by FCT, Programa Operacional Potencial Humano (POPH) do Quadro de ReferĂȘncia EstratĂ©gico Nacional (QREN), and Fundo Social Europeu (FSE)

    A cell-free organelle-based in vitro system for studying the peroxisomal protein import machinery

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    Here we describe a protocol to dissect the peroxisomal matrix protein import pathway using a cell-free in vitro system. The system relies on a postnuclear supernatant (PNS), which is prepared from rat/mouse liver, to act as a source of peroxisomes and cytosolic components. A typical in vitro assay comprises the following steps: (i) incubation of the PNS with an in vitro-synthesized 35 S-labeled reporter protein; (ii) treatment of the organelle suspension with a protease that degrades reporter proteins that have not associated with peroxisomes; and (iii) SDS-PAGE/autoradiography analysis. To study transport of proteins into peroxisomes, it is possible to use organelle-resident proteins that contain a peroxisomal targeting signal (PTS) as reporters in the assay. In addition, a receptor (PEX5L/S or PEX5L.PEX7) can be used to report the dynamics of shuttling proteins that mediate the import process. Thus, different but complementary perspectives on the mechanism of this pathway can be obtained. We also describe strategies to fortify the system with recombinant proteins to increase import yields and block specific parts of the machinery at a number of steps. The system recapitulates all the steps of the pathway, including mono-ubiquitination of PEX5L/S at the peroxisome membrane and its ATP-dependent export back into the cytosol by PEX1/PEX6. An in vitro import(/export) experiment can be completed in 24 h.We thank M. Fransen, Katholieke Universiteit-Leuven, for critical comments on the manuscript and for the plasmid encoding histidine-tagged PEX19. We thank P. van Veldhoven, Katholieke Universiteit-Leuven, and P. Maciel, Universidade do Minho, for the expression plasmids encoding prePHYH and GST-Ub, respectively. This work was funded by FEDER—Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional through the COMPETE 2020—Operacional Programme for Competitiveness and Internationalization (POCI), Portugal 2020, Portugal’s FCT—Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e a Tecnologia/ MinistĂ©rio da CiĂȘncia, Tecnologia e Inovação in the framework of the projects ‘The molecular mechanism of protein import into peroxisomes’ (FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-019731-PTDC/BIA-BCM/118577/2010), ‘Institute for Research and Innovation in Health Sciences’ (POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007274) and ‘The molecular mechanisms of peroxisome biogenesis’ (PTDC /BEX-BC M/2311/2014) and Norte 2020—Programa Operacional Regional do Norte, under the application of the ‘Porto Neurosciences and Neurologic Disease Research Initiative at i3S (NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000008)’, awarded to J.E.A. T.A.R., T.F., A.F.D. and C.P.G. were supported by Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e a Tecnologia, Programa Operacional Potencial Humano do QREN and Fundo Social Europeu

    A scalar field instability of rotating and charged black holes in (4+1)-dimensional Anti-de Sitter space-time

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    We study the stability of static as well as of rotating and charged black holes in (4+1)-dimensional Anti-de Sitter space-time which possess spherical horizon topology. We observe a non-linear instability related to the condensation of a charged, tachyonic scalar field and construct "hairy" black hole solutions of the full system of coupled Einstein, Maxwell and scalar field equations. We observe that the limiting solution for small horizon radius is either a hairy soliton solution or a singular solution that is not a regular extremal solution. Within the context of the gauge/gravity duality the condensation of the scalar field describes a holographic conductor/superconductor phase transition on the surface of a sphere.Comment: 16 pages including 8 figures, v2: discussion on soliton solutions extended; v3: matches version accepted for publication in JHE
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