9,468 research outputs found
Bardet-Biedl syndrome proteins control cilia length through regulation of actin polymerisation.
Primary cilia are cellular appendages important for signal transduction and sensing the environment. Bardet-Biedl syndrome proteins form a complex that is important for several cytoskeleton-related processes such as ciliogenesis, cell migration and division. However, the mechanisms by which BBS proteins may regulate the cytoskeleton remain unclear. We discovered that Bbs4 and Bbs6 deficient renal medullary cells display a characteristic behaviour comprising poor migration, adhesion and division with an inability to form lamellipodial and filopodial extensions. Moreover, fewer mutant cells were ciliated (48% ± 6 for wild-type cells vs 23% ± 7 for Bbs4 null cells; P-value < 0.0001) and their cilia were shorter (2.55 ÎĽm ± 0.41 for wild-type cells vs 2.16 ÎĽm ± 0.23 for Bbs4 null cells; P-value < 0.0001). Whilst the microtubular cytoskeleton and cortical actin were intact, actin stress fibre formation was severely disrupted, forming abnormal apical stress fibre aggregates. Furthermore, we observed over-abundant focal adhesions in Bbs4, Bbs6 and Bbs8-deficient cells. In view of these findings and the role of RhoA in regulation of actin filament polymerisation, we showed that RhoA-GTP levels were highly upregulated in the absence of Bbs proteins. Upon treatment of Bbs4-deficient cells with chemical inhibitors of RhoA, we were able to restore cilia length and number as well as the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton. Together these findings indicate that Bbs proteins play a central role in the regulation of the actin cytoskeleton and control cilia length through alteration of RhoA levels
P2X receptors as targets for the treatment of status epilepticus.
Prolonged seizures are amongst the most common neurological emergencies. Status epilepticus is a state of continuous seizures that is life-threatening and prompt termination of status epilepticus is critical to protect the brain from permanent damage. Frontline treatment comprises parenteral administration of anticonvulsants such as lorazepam that facilitate Îł-amino butyric acid (GABA) transmission. Because status epilepticus can become refractory to anticonvulsants in a significant proportion of patients, drugs which act on different neurotransmitter systems may represent potential adjunctive treatments. P2X receptors are a class of ligand-gated ion channel activated by ATP that contributes to neuro- and glio-transmission. P2X receptors are expressed by both neurons and glia in various brain regions, including the hippocampus. Electrophysiology, pharmacology and genetic studies suggest certain P2X receptors are activated during pathologic brain activity. Expression of several members of the family including P2X2, P2X4, and P2X7 receptors has been reported to be altered in the hippocampus following status epilepticus. Recent studies have shown that ligands of the P2X7 receptor can have potent effects on seizure severity during status epilepticus and mice lacking this receptor display altered seizures in response to chemoconvulsants. Antagonists of the P2X7 receptor also modulate neuronal death, microglial responses and neuroinflammatory signaling. Recent work also found altered neuronal injury and inflammation after status epilepticus in mice lacking the P2X4 receptor. In summary, members of the P2X receptor family may serve important roles in the pathophysiology of status epilepticus and represent novel targets for seizure control and neuroprotection
Primary Care Behavioral Health Partnerships Advancing & Transforming Health Sciences (PCBH PATHS)
Purpose: Primary Care Behavioral Health Partnerships Advancing & Transforming Health Sciences (PCBH PATHS) is a workforce development pipeline project aimed at permanently augmenting UTRGV’s institutional capacity to address shortage of an Integrated Behavioral Health (IBH) competent workforce locally, regionally and nationally. Our initiative, aligned with UTRGV strategic priorities and key initiatives, will integrate basic(model specific strategy and operational elements), mid-level (role identity and profession specific behavioral competencies specific to each health profession), and advanced (behavioral medicine clinical skills) applications of the evidence based PCBH model of delivery. A PCBH focused delivery system (clinical and educational), in which primary care providers (PCPs) and behavioral health consultants (BHCs) are trained to provide routine, population-based, biopsychosocial care in the Rio Grande Valley (RGV) can increase parity for mental health access, minimize toxic effects of culturally bound stigma, reduce fragmentation of physical-mental health and stave off the effect of an expanding opioid use disorder (OUD) crisis.
Description: The PCBH PATHS initiative is designed to impact 2,004 clinician learners, with 1,106 PCP trainees (FM, IM, Ob/Gyn FNP, PA, MS), 818 mental health provider (MHP) trainees, and 80 PCP/MHP practitioners in the RGV by 2024. Over the past four years, the evidence-based PCBH model has been implemented in FM and Ob/Gyn Residency programs clinically, to increase access to whole-health focused services for patients, and educationally, to increase physician competencies in PCBH to provide high quality whole-person care consistently. This initiative strengthens our existing commitment to expand the PCBH model across University of Texas Health Rio Grande Valley (UT Health RGV) primary and specialty care clinics to address physical and behavioral health disparities (e.g., diabetes, depression, pain management, opioid, and substance use issues) for a predominantly Latino population along the US-MX border.
Partners: In partnership with all primary care provider training programs at UTRGV (PA, NP, Residents) and mental health provider training programs led by the Department of Counseling, this collaborative project will use institutional expertise and infrastructure capacity to integrate PCBH model focused education to augment existing training programs.
Looking Ahead: By year 2024, PCBH PATHS will impact 2004 clinician learners, demonstrated by: Ten programs aligning PCBH PATHS to existing courses for a PCBH certificate PCP trainee programs adopting policies to require Medication Assisted Treatment(MAT)-Waiver for graduation An educational research database for tracking % of PCP/MHP graduates completing the PCBH PATHS certificate; % of PCBH PATHS grads practicing in a Medically Underserved Community (MUC); % of grads practicing MAT; % of PCBH PATHS grads intending to practice / champion PCBH•6 PCBH sustained clinics: Demonstrated cost-savings through prospective, case-control design Sustaining wellness committees and practices as part of PCBH PATHS implementation 8 durable, HRSA-priority deliverables, for replicating PCBH PATHS at other institution
Active galactic nuclei synapses: X-ray versus optical classifications using artificial neural networks
(Abridged) Many classes of active galactic nuclei (AGN) have been defined
entirely throughout optical wavelengths while the X-ray spectra have been very
useful to investigate their inner regions. However, optical and X-ray results
show many discrepancies that have not been fully understood yet. The aim of
this paper is to study the "synapses" between the X-ray and optical
classifications.
For the first time, the new EFLUXER task allowed us to analyse broad band
X-ray spectra of emission line nuclei (ELN) without any prior spectral fitting
using artificial neural networks (ANNs). Our sample comprises 162 XMM-Newton/pn
spectra of 90 local ELN in the Palomar sample. It includes starbursts (SB),
transition objects (T2), LINERs (L1.8 and L2), and Seyferts (S1, S1.8, and S2).
The ANNs are 90% efficient at classifying the trained classes S1, S1.8, and
SB. The S1 and S1.8 classes show a wide range of S1- and S1.8-like components.
We suggest that this is related to a large degree of obscuration at X-rays. The
S1, S1.8, S2, L1.8, L2/T2/SB-AGN (SB with indications of AGN), and SB classes
have similar average X-ray spectra within each class, but these average spectra
can be distinguished from class to class. The S2 (L1.8) class is linked to the
S1.8 (S1) class with larger SB-like component than the S1.8 (S1) class. The L2,
T2, and SB-AGN classes conform a class in the X-rays similar to the S2 class
albeit with larger fractions of SB-like component. This SB-like component is
the contribution of the star-formation in the host galaxy, which is large when
the AGN is weak. An AGN-like component seems to be present in the vast majority
of the ELN, attending to the non-negligible fraction of S1-like or S1.8-like
component. This trained ANN could be used to infer optical properties from
X-ray spectra in surveys like eRosita.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Appendix B only
in the full version of the paper here:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3484086/AGNSynapsis_OGM_online.pd
Bioremoval of Phenol from Aqueous Solutions Using Native Caribbean Seaweed
Among several Puerto Rican algae, Sargassum sp. (SG) and Chaetomorpha (CM) showed the highest phenol adsorption capacity from aqueous solutions and were used in optimized adsorption batch experiments at room temperature. The effects of pH, adsorbent dose, phenol concentration, salinity and presence of interfering substances were evaluated. Initial solution pH exhibited a strong effect, mainly on the phenol aqueous chemistry; showing the maximum adsorption at pH 10. Sorption isotherm results were modelled according to the Langmuir, Tempkin and Freundlich equations. Isotherm modelling indicated a maximum adsorption capacity (qmax) of 82.10 and 17.7 mg of phenol per gram of SG and CM, respectively. Salinity and presence of detergent in the matrix solution showed a positive effect on the adsorption, suggesting that adsorption of phenol was mostly driven by polar forces and not by ionic exchange. On the other hand, presence of heavy metals like copper, lead and cobalt had a negative effect on the adsorption. According to these results, the potential formation of hydrogen bonds between the algae and phenol is proposed as the main adsorption mechanism. These results provide further insight into the adsorption mechanism of phenol and their use as inexpensive adsorbents for the treatment of phenol-containing wastewaters
Phase signal analysis for high-sensitive temperature fiber-optic external Fabry-Perot-cavity sensor
We experimentally demonstrate a highly temperature-sensitive external Fabry-Perot cavity. The interferometric structure is composed of an air-microcavity; its fabrication uses a microcapillary and UV polymer. A temperature sensitivity close to 5.7 nm/â—¦C is achieved with suitable linearity (0.9896) and minimal hysteresis; a phase analysis technique is proposed and applied to overcome the trade-off between sensitivity and range of operation. This technique provides a competitive sensitivity (0.84 rad/â—¦C), good linearity (0.9934), and a range of operation from 25â—¦C to 41â—¦C.</p
Bluetooth Mesh Analysis, Issues, and Challenges
BLE is a widely used short-range technology which has gained a relevant position inside the Internet-of-Things (IoT) paradigm development thanks to its simplicity, low-power consumption, low-cost and robustness. New enhancements over BLE have focused on supporting mesh network topology. Compared to other mesh networks, BLE mesh has only considered a managed flooding protocol in its first version. Managed flooding may generally seem inefficient in many contexts, but it is a high desirable option when data transmission is urgent, the network is small or its configuration changes in a very dynamic way. Knowing the interest to many application contexts, this paper analyses the impact of tweaking several features over the reliability and efficiency of the mesh network. These features are configured and controlled in different layers: message repetition schemes, the transmission randomization, the election of a scheme based on an acknowledged or unacknowledged transmission, etc. In order to estimate the real performance of a mesh network deployment, this paper evaluates the effects of the interaction of the chosen parameters, their appropriate adjustment in relation with the characteristics of real implementations and the true overhead related to the whole protocol stack. The paper identifies configuration challenges, proposes network tuning criteria and outlines possible standard improvements. For this purpose, a detailed assessment on the implementation and execution of real devices has been performed with their chipset limitations
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