367 research outputs found
Layer guided-acoustic plate mode biosensors for monitoring MHC-peptide interactions
The transduction signals from the immobilisation of a class I heavy chain, HLA-A2, on a layer guided acoustic plate mode device, followed by binding of beta(2)-microglobulin and subsequent selective binding of a target peptide are reported
Lenvatinib and its use in the treatment of unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common primary malignancy of the liver accounting for approximately 90% of cases. Patients often present at an advanced stage when treatment options are limited. Sorafenib, a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor, has been the first-line treatment in this setting for almost a decade. Several subsequent targeted therapies have failed to demonstrate significant improvement in survival. The results of the REFLECT study suggest that lenvatinib, a multikinase inhibitor, may have promised as a first-line treatment in patients with advanced HCC. This article will review the development of lenvatinib and the evidence behind its potential use in patients with advanced HCC
Age-Related Increases in the Shoulder Strength of High School Wrestlers
This is the publisher's version, also found at http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=4&sid=34ab1967-2aea-457b-b261-e90e7b05e38c%40sessionmgr11&hid=2&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=s3h&AN=20752108The purpose of this investigation was to examine age-related differences in
absolute and relative isokinetic shoulder strength of high school wrestlers. A
total of 122 high school wrestlers (Mage = 16.31 ± 1.18 yrs) volunteered to
be measured for arm flexion and extension strength at the shoulder joint using
a Cybex II dynamometer at 30, 180, and 300°-s"'. The sample was divided
into four age groups: 13.75-15.00 (n=22), 15.08-16.00 (n=27). 16.08-17.00
(n=34), and 17.08-18.83 years (n=39). The results ofthis study indicated
significant increases in absolute and relative arm flexion and extension strength
across age when covaried for BW and FFW. In addition, comparisons with
previously published data indicated differences between muscle groups in the
pattern of strength gains that were dependent upon the speed of muscular
contraction and may have been influenced by fiber type distribution characteristics
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Identification of a 6-cM Minimal Deletion at 11q23.1–23.2 and Exclusion of PPP2R1B Gene as a Deletion Target in Cervical Cancer
Previous functional and deletion mapping studies on cervical cancer (CC) have implicated one or more tumor suppressor genes (TSGs) on chromosome 11 at q13 and q22–24 regions. Of these, the 11q22–24 region exhibits frequent allelic deletions in a variety of solid tumor types, sug- gesting the presence of critical genes for tumor suppression in this region. However, the precise region of deletion on 11q is not clearly defined in CC. In an attempt to accurately map the deleted region, we performed an extensive loss of heterozygosity (LOH) mapping in 58 tumors using 25 polymorphic loci on both the short and long arms. The pattern of LOH identified three sites of deletions, two on 11p (p15.11–p15.3 and p12–13), and one on 11q (q23.1–q23.2). The 11q23.1–q23.2 exhibited highest fre- quency (60.6%) of deletions, suggesting that this could be the site of a candidate TSG in CC. The minimal deletion at 11q23.1–23.2 was re- stricted to a 6-cM region between 123.5 and 129.5 cM genetic distance on chromosome 11, identifying the site of a potential TSG important in the pathogenesis of CC. At least five known genes and 28 UniGene clusters were mapped to the present commonly deleted region. In addition, we have excluded a previously known TSG PPP2R1B at 11q23 as a deletion target in CC. The definition of the minimal deletion and the availability of expressed sequence resources should facilitate the identification of the candidate TSG
The use of high aspect ratio photoresist (SU-8) for super-hydrophobic pattern prototyping
In this work we present a reliable technique for the production of large areas of high aspect-ratio patterns and describe their use as model super-hydrophobic systems. The high thickness and straight sidewalls possible with SU-8 were used to generate dense patterns of small pillars. These photoresist patterns could be used directly, without the need for micromoulding. A method is given allowing resist thickness to be varied over a wide range and a bottom antireflective layer was used to simplify patterning on reflective substrates. This patterning technique allows rapid testing of wetting theories, as pattern size and depth can be varied simply and samples can be produced in sufficient numbers for laboratory use. We show how the static contact angle of water varies with pattern height for one sample-pattern and how static and dynamic contact angles vary with dimension using high aspect-ratio patterns
A study protocol to investigate the relationship between dietary fibre intake and fermentation, colon cell turnover, global protein acetylation and early carcinogenesis: the FACT study
Background: A number of studies, notably EPIC, have shown a descrease in colorectal cancer risk associated with increased fibre consumption. Whilst the underlying mechanisms are likely to be multifactorial, production of the short-chain fatty-acid butyrate fro butyratye is frequently cited as a major potential contributor to the effect. Butyrate inhibits histone deacetylases, which work on a wide range of proteins over and above histones. We therefore hypothesized that alterations in the acetylated proteome may be associated with a cancer risk phenotype in the colorectal mucosa, and that such alterations are candidate biomarkers for effectiveness of fibre interventions in cancer prevention.
Methods an design: There are two principal arms to this study: (i) a cross-sectional study (FACT OBS) of 90 subjects recruited from gastroenterology clinics and; (ii) an intervention trial in 40 subjects with an 8 week high fibre intervention. In both studies the principal goal is to investigate a link between fibre intake, SCFA production and global protein acetylation. The primary measure is level of faecal butyrate, which it is hoped will be elevated by moving subjects to a high fibre diet. Fibre intakes will be estimated in the cross-sectional group using the EPIC Food Frequency Questionnaire. Subsidiary measures of the effect of butyrate on colon mucosal function and precancerous phenotype will include measures of apoptosis, apoptotic regulators cell cycle and cell division.
Discussion: This study will provide a new level of mechanistic data on alterations in the functional proteome in response to the colon microenvironment which may underwrite the observed cancer preventive effect of fibre. The study may yield novel candidate biomarkers of fibre fermentation and colon mucosal function
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Extending in silico mechanism-of-action analysis by annotating targets with pathways: application to cellular cytotoxicity readouts.
BACKGROUND: An in silico mechanism-of-action analysis protocol was developed, comprising molecule bioactivity profiling, annotation of predicted targets with pathways and calculation of enrichment factors to highlight targets and pathways more likely to be implicated in the studied phenotype. RESULTS: The method was applied to a cytotoxicity phenotypic endpoint, with enriched targets/pathways found to be statistically significant when compared with 100 random datasets. Application on a smaller apoptotic set (10 molecules) did not allowed to obtain statistically relevant results, suggesting that the protocol requires modification such as analysis of the most frequently predicted targets/annotated pathways. CONCLUSION: Pathway annotations improved the mechanism-of-action information gained by target prediction alone, allowing a better interpretation of the predictions and providing better mapping of targets onto pathways.This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Future Science in Future Medicinal Chemistry (http://dx.doi.org/10.4155/fmc.14.137)
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