115 research outputs found
Promoter region methylation does not account for the frequent loss of expression of the Fas gene in colorectal carcinoma
Expression of the apoptosis-promoting Fas gene is frequently reduced or lost during the development of colorectal carcinoma. However, loss of heterozygosity at the Fas locus or Fas gene rearrangements do not account for the loss of expression of Fas, raising the possibility that methylation of the Fas promoter may inhibit gene expression in colorectal carcinomas. We have examined the Fas promoter region CpG island for evidence of hypermethylation in colorectal tumours. Forty-seven specimens of colorectal adenoma and carcinoma, as well as six samples of normal colonic mucosa, were examined by Southern blotting for methylation at Hpa II and Cfo I sites in this region. No methylation was detected in any of the specimens, suggesting that hypermethylation is not primarily responsible for the loss of expression of the Fas gene during colorectal tumorigenesis. Β© 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
Down-regulation of Fas gene expression in colon cancer is not a result of allelic loss or gene rearrangement.
Expression of Fas, an apoptosis-inducing receptor, in colonic epithelium is progressively reduced during malignant transformation. We have examined the human Fas gene for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and gross rearrangements in colon tumours and matched normal mucosa. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers were designed to span a DraI restriction fragment length polymorphic site in the gene. Heterozygosity was detected in normal DNA samples by PCR amplification of the polymorphic site and restriction enzyme digestion. Thirty-eight of 88 patients (43%) with colon carcinomas were informative for the assay, and LOH was detected in 6 of the 38 (16%) corresponding tumours. Tumours from three patients with LOH did not express detectable Fas mRNA, and Fas expression was reduced or absent in 7 of 11 tumours from informative patients without LOH. Southern blotting of tumour DNA samples was used to detect rearrangement of the Fas gene, but no altered hybridization patterns were observed in 64 tumours analysed. These findings indicate that disruption of the Fas gene is not primarily responsible for the loss of Fas protein expression reported in colon cancer. We have also shown that loss of Fas gene transcription is common in these tumours, which may be due to epigenetic gene silencing
Controlling disease outbreaks in wildlife using limited culling: modelling classical swine fever incursions in wild pigs in Australia
Disease modelling is one approach for providing new insights into wildlife disease epidemiology. This paper describes a spatio-temporal, stochastic, susceptible- exposed-infected-recovered process model that simulates the potential spread of classical swine fever through a documented, large and free living wild pig population following a simulated incursion. The study area (300 000 km2) was in northern Australia. Published data on wild pig ecology from Australia, and international Classical Swine Fever data was used to parameterise the model. Sensitivity analyses revealed that herd density (best estimate 1-3 pigs km-2), daily herd movement distances (best estimate approximately 1 km), probability of infection transmission between herds (best estimate 0.75) and disease related herd mortality (best estimate 42%) were highly influential on epidemic size but that extraordinary movements of pigs and the yearly home range size of a pig herd were not. CSF generally established (98% of simulations) following a single point introduction. CSF spread at approximately 9 km2 per day with low incidence rates (< 2 herds per day) in an epidemic wave along contiguous habitat for several years, before dying out (when the epidemic arrived at the end of a contiguous sub-population or at a low density wild pig area). The low incidence rate indicates that surveillance for wildlife disease epidemics caused by short lived infections will be most efficient when surveillance is based on detection and investigation of clinical events, although this may not always be practical. Epidemics could be contained and eradicated with culling (aerial shooting) or vaccination when these were adequately implemented. It was apparent that the spatial structure, ecology and behaviour of wild populations must be accounted for during disease management in wildlife. An important finding was that it may only be necessary to cull or vaccinate relatively small proportions of a population to successfully contain and eradicate some wildlife disease epidemics
Type II Endoleak after Endovascular Aneurysm Repair: natural history and treatment outcomes
Published online April 2017Abstract not availableLiana Kumar, Prue Cowled, Margaret Boult, Stuart Howell, and Robert Fitridg
Development of an automated measure of iliac artery tortuosity that successfully predicts early graft-related complications associated with endovascular aneurysm repair
Abstract not availableN. Dowson, M. Boult, P. Cowled, T. De Loryn, R. Fitridg
Integrating Survey and Molecular Approaches to Better Understand Wildlife Disease Ecology
Infectious wildlife diseases have enormous global impacts, leading to human pandemics, global biodiversity declines and socio-economic hardship. Understanding how infection persists and is transmitted in wildlife is critical for managing diseases, but our understanding is limited. Our study aim was to better understand how infectious disease persists in wildlife populations by integrating genetics, ecology and epidemiology approaches. Specifically, we aimed to determine whether environmental or host factors were stronger drivers of Salmonella persistence or transmission within a remote and isolated wild pig (Sus scrofa) population. We determined the Salmonella infection status of wild pigs. Salmonella isolates were genotyped and a range of data was collected on putative risk factors for Salmonella transmission. We a priori identified several plausible biological hypotheses for Salmonella prevalence (cross sectional study design) versus transmission (molecular case series study design) and fit the data to these models. There were 543 wild pig Salmonella observations, sampled at 93 unique locations. Salmonella prevalence was 41% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 37-45%). The median Salmonella DICE coefficient (or Salmonella genetic similarity) was 52% (interquartile range [IQR]: 42-62%). Using the traditional cross sectional prevalence study design, the only supported model was based on the hypothesis that abundance of available ecological resources determines Salmonella prevalence in wild pigs. In the molecular study design, spatial proximity and herd membership as well as some individual risk factors (sex, condition score and relative density) determined transmission between pigs. Traditional cross sectional surveys and molecular epidemiological approaches are complementary and together can enhance understanding of disease ecology: abundance of ecological resources critical for wildlife influences Salmonella prevalence, whereas Salmonella transmission is driven by local spatial, social, density and individual factors, rather than resources. This enhanced understanding has implications for the control of diseases in wildlife populations. Attempts to manage wildlife disease using simplistic density approaches do not acknowledge the complexity of disease ecology
Ischemia and reperfusion of the soleus muscle of rats with pentoxifylline
BACKGROUND: Reperfusion of the skeletal muscle worsens existing lesions during ischemia, since the production of reactive oxygen species, associated with intense participation of neutrophils, increases the inflammatory reaction that induces tissue changes. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the morphological and immunohistochemical changes of the skeletal (soleus) muscle of rats submitted to ischemia and reperfusion with pentoxifylline. METHODS: Sixty rats were submitted to ischemia of the pelvic limb for 6 hours induced by clamping the left common iliac artery. After ischemia, group A animals (n = 30) were observed for 4 hours and group B animals (n = 30) for 24 hours. Six animals constituted the sham group. Pentoxifylline was applied only in the reperfusion period A2 (n = 10) and B2 (n = 10), and in ischemia and reperfusion periods in A3 (n = 10) and B3 (n = 10). The soleus muscle was evaluated by histological (fiber disruption, leukocyte infiltrate, necrosis) and immunohistochemical (apoptosis through caspase-3 expression) analysis. The non-parametric tests Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney (p < 0.05) were applied. RESULTS: The changes were more intense in group B1, with fiber disruption mean scores of 2.16Β±0.14; neutrophilic infiltrate of 2.05Β±0.10; and caspase-3 expression in the perivascular area of 4.30Β±0.79; and less intense in group A3, with means of 0.76Β±0.16; 0.92Β±0.10; 0.67Β±0,15, respectively (p < 0.05). Caspase-3 was more expressive in group B1 in the perivascular area, with mean of 4.30Β±0.79 when compared with group B1 in the perinuclear area, with mean of 0.91Β±0.32 (p < 0.05) CONCLUSIONS: The lesions were more intense when observation time was longer after reperfusion, and pentoxifylline attenuated these lesions, above all when used in the beginning of ischemia and reperfusion phases.CONTEXTO: A reperfusΓ£o de mΓΊsculo esquelΓ©tico piora as lesΓ΅es jΓ‘ presentes no perΓodo de isquemia, pois a produção de espΓ©cies reativas de oxigΓͺnio, associadas Γ intensa participação de neutrΓ³filos, amplia a reação inflamatΓ³ria que induz alteraçáes teciduais. OBJETIVO: Avaliar as alteraçáes morfolΓ³gicas e imuno-histoquΓmicas de mΓΊsculo esquelΓ©tico (sΓ³leo) de ratos submetidos a isquemia e reperfusΓ£o com pentoxifilina. MΓTODOS: Sessenta ratos foram submetidos a isquemia do membro pΓ©lvico, por 6 horas, pelo clampeamento da artΓ©ria ilΓaca comum esquerda. ApΓ³s isquemia, os animais do grupo A (n = 30) foram observados por 4 horas, e os do grupo B (n = 30), por 24 horas. Seis animais constituΓram o grupo simulado. Administrou-se pentoxifilina apenas no perΓodo de reperfusΓ£o em A2 (n = 10) e B2 (n = 10) e nos perΓodos de isquemia e reperfusΓ£o em A3 (n = 10) e B3 (n = 10). O mΓΊsculo sΓ³leo foi avaliado por anΓ‘lise histolΓ³gica (dissociação de fibras, infiltrado leucocitΓ‘rio, necrose) e imuno-histoquΓmica (apoptose pela expressΓ£o da caspase-3). Foram aplicados os testes nΓ£o-paramΓ©tricos de Kruskal-Wallis e Mann-Whitney (p < 0,05). RESULTADOS: As alteraçáes foram mais intensas no grupo B1, com mΓ©dias de escore da dissociação de fibras musculares de 2,16 Β± 0,14, infiltrado neutrofΓlico de 2,05 Β± 0,10 e expressΓ£o da caspase-3 na Γ‘rea perivascular de 4,30 Β± 0,79; e menos intensas no grupo A3, com respectivas mΓ©dias de 0,76 Β± 0,16, 0,92 Β± 0,10 e 0,67 Β± 0,15 (p < 0,05). A caspase-3 mostrou-se mais expressiva no grupo B1 na Γ‘rea perivascular, com mΓ©dia de 4,30 Β± 0,79, em comparação com o grupo B1 na Γ‘rea perinuclear, com mΓ©dia de 0,91 Β± 0,32 (p < 0,05). CONCLUSΓES: As lesΓ΅es sΓ£o mais intensas quando o tempo de observação Γ© maior apΓ³s a reperfusΓ£o, e a pentoxifilina atenua essas lesΓ΅es, sobretudo quando usada no inΓcio das fases de isquemia e de reperfusΓ£o.SBACVUniversidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul Hospital UniversitΓ‘rioUniversidade Federal de SΓ£o Paulo (UNIFESP) Escola Paulista de MedicinaUFMSUNIFESP-EPM Departamento de PatologiaUFMS Departamento de ClΓnica CirΓΊrgicaUFMS Hospital UniversitΓ‘rio ComissΓ£o de ResidΓͺncia MΓ©dicaUNIFESP, EPM, Depto. de PatologiaSciEL
Umatilla Virus Genome Sequencing and Phylogenetic Analysis: Identification of Stretch Lagoon Orbivirus as a New Member of the Umatilla virus Species
The genus Orbivirus, family Reoviridae, includes 22 species of viruses with genomes composed of ten segments of linear dsRNA that are transmitted between their vertebrate hosts by insects or ticks, or with no identified vectors. Full-genome sequence data are available for representative isolates of the insect borne mammalian orbiviruses (including bluetongue virus), as well as a tick borne avian orbivirus (Great Island virus). However, no sequence data are as yet available for the mosquito borne avian orbiviruses
The Influence of Meteorology on the Spread of Influenza: Survival Analysis of an Equine Influenza (A/H3N8) Outbreak
The influences of relative humidity and ambient temperature on the transmission of influenza A viruses have recently been established under controlled laboratory conditions. The interplay of meteorological factors during an actual influenza epidemic is less clear, and research into the contribution of wind to epidemic spread is scarce. By applying geostatistics and survival analysis to data from a large outbreak of equine influenza (A/H3N8), we quantified the association between hazard of infection and air temperature, relative humidity, rainfall, and wind velocity, whilst controlling for premises-level covariates. The pattern of disease spread in space and time was described using extraction mapping and instantaneous hazard curves. Meteorological conditions at each premises location were estimated by kriging daily meteorological data and analysed as time-lagged time-varying predictors using generalised Cox regression. Meteorological covariates time-lagged by three days were strongly associated with hazard of influenza infection, corresponding closely with the incubation period of equine influenza. Hazard of equine influenza infection was higher when relative humidity was <60% and lowest on days when daily maximum air temperature was 20β25Β°C. Wind speeds >30 km hourβ1 from the direction of nearby infected premises were associated with increased hazard of infection. Through combining detailed influenza outbreak and meteorological data, we provide empirical evidence for the underlying environmental mechanisms that influenced the local spread of an outbreak of influenza A. Our analysis supports, and extends, the findings of studies into influenza A transmission conducted under laboratory conditions. The relationships described are of direct importance for managing disease risk during influenza outbreaks in horses, and more generally, advance our understanding of the transmission of influenza A viruses under field conditions
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