26 research outputs found

    Gestational Vitamin D deficiency and autism-related traits: The Generation R Study

    Get PDF
    There is intense interest in identifying modifiable risk factors associated with autism-spectrum disorders (ASD). Autism-related traits, which can be assessed in a continuous fashion, share risk factors with ASD, and thus can serve as informative phenotypes in population-based cohort studies. Based on the growing body of research linking gestational Vitamin D deficiency with altered brain development, this common exposure is a candidate modifiable risk factor for ASD and autism-related traits. The association between gestational Vitamin D deficiency and a continuous measure of autism-related traits at ∼6 years (Social Responsiveness Scale; SRS) was determined in a large population-based cohort of mothers and their children (n=4229). 25-hydroxyVitamin D (25OHD) was assessed from maternal mid-gestation sera and from neonatal sera (collected from cord blood). Vitamin D deficiency was defined as 25OHD concentrations less than 25 nmol l-1. Compared with the 25OHD sufficient group (25OHD>50 nmol l-1), those who were 25OHD deficient had significantly higher (more abnormal) SRS scores (mid-gestation n=2866, β=0.06, P<0.001; cord blood n=1712, β=0.03, P=0.01). The findings persisted (a) when we restricted the models to offspring with European ancestry, (b) when we adjusted for sample structure using genetic data, (c) when 25OHD was entered as a continuous measure in the models and (d) when we corrected for the effect of season of blood sampling. Gestational Vitamin D deficiency was associated with autism-related traits in a large population-based sample. Because gestational Vitamin D deficiency is readily preventable with safe, cheap and accessible supplements, this candidate risk factor warrants closer scrutiny

    The Physical Processes of CME/ICME Evolution

    Get PDF
    As observed in Thomson-scattered white light, coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are manifest as large-scale expulsions of plasma magnetically driven from the corona in the most energetic eruptions from the Sun. It remains a tantalizing mystery as to how these erupting magnetic fields evolve to form the complex structures we observe in the solar wind at Earth. Here, we strive to provide a fresh perspective on the post-eruption and interplanetary evolution of CMEs, focusing on the physical processes that define the many complex interactions of the ejected plasma with its surroundings as it departs the corona and propagates through the heliosphere. We summarize the ways CMEs and their interplanetary CMEs (ICMEs) are rotated, reconfigured, deformed, deflected, decelerated and disguised during their journey through the solar wind. This study then leads to consideration of how structures originating in coronal eruptions can be connected to their far removed interplanetary counterparts. Given that ICMEs are the drivers of most geomagnetic storms (and the sole driver of extreme storms), this work provides a guide to the processes that must be considered in making space weather forecasts from remote observations of the corona.Peer reviewe

    The Physical Processes of CME/ICME Evolution

    Get PDF

    Maternal Nutritional Deficiencies and Schizophrenia: Lessons from Animal Models with a Focus on Developmental Vitamin D Deficiency.

    No full text
    In this chapter, we intend to introduce the reader to the vast amount of research implicating maternal nutritional deficits as risk-modifying factors for the later onset of schizophrenia in offspring. This chapter provides an overview of the more prominent nutritional factors for which there is solid epidemiological or clinical evidence. One major aim is to summarize the research that has investigated the neurobiology of such risk relationships through animal models. This chapter will concentrate on studies modeling one particular developmental risk factor: developmental vitamin D deficiency. This is not intended as a manual to reproduce this model because we have already published this in detail elsewhere. Additionally, it is not intended as a detailed review of how vitamin D signaling could affect brain ontogeny or function as this has also been exhaustively covered. Rather, we bring together the evidence from our work on this particular risk factor that has led to our working hypothesis, suggesting that early alterations in the ontogeny of dopamine pathways could be a convergent mechanism operating within many diverse epidemiologically informed developmental risk factors

    Chirality of reduced haloperidol in humans

    No full text
    In vitro, cytosolic human ketone reductases catalyse the stereospecific (i.e. &gt;99%) formation of S(-) reduced haloperidol (RHP) from haloperidol (HP). Whether this situation is reflected in patients taking the drug is unknown. In this study in nine patients taking HP, only 73.2+/-18.2% of the RHP excreted in urine was the S(-) enantiomer. Thus, enzymes other than cytosolic ketone reductases must be responsible for the formation of the minor enantiomer. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V./ECNP

    Heritability of transforming growth factor-beta1 and tumor necrosis factor-receptor type 1 expression and vitamin D levels in healthy adolescent twins

    No full text
    Cytokines and vitamin D both have a role in modulating the immune system, and are also potentially useful biomarkers in mental illnesses such as major depressive disorder (MDD) and schizophrenia. Studying the variability of cytokines and vitamin D in a healthy population sample may add to understanding the association between these biomarkers and mental illness. To assess genetic and environmental contributions to variation in circulating levels of cytokines and vitamin D (25-hydroxy vitamin D: 25(OH)D3), we analyzed data from a healthy adolescent twin cohort (mean age 16.2 years; standard deviation 0.25). Plasma cytokine measures were available for 400 individuals (85 MZ, 115 DZ pairs), dried blood spot sample vitamin D measures were available for 378 individuals (70 MZ, 118 DZ pairs). Heritability estimates were moderate but significant for the cytokines transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), 0.57 (95% CI 0.26–0.80) and tumor necrosis factor-receptor type 1 (TNFR1), 0.50 (95% CI 0.11–0.63) respectively. Measures of 25(OH)D3 were within normal range and heritability was estimated to be high (0.86, 95% CI 0.61–0.94). Assays of other cytokines did not generate meaningful results. These potential biomarkers may be useful in mental illness, with further research warranted in larger sample sizes. They may be particularly important in adolescents with mental illness where diagnostic uncertainty poses a significant clinical challenge.Natalie T. Mills, Margie J. Wright, Anjali K. Henders, Darryl W. Eyles, Bernhard T. Baune, John J. McGrat

    The phosphorylation of Hsp20 enhances its association with amyloid-β to increase protection against neuronal cell death

    Get PDF
    This project was funded by a doctoral training studentship from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Doctoral Training Programme in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Glasgow [grant number BB/F016735/1].Up-regulation of Hsp20 protein levels in response to amyloid fibril formation is considered a key protective response against the onset of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Indeed, the physical interaction between Hsp20 and Aβ is known to prevent Aβ oligomerisation and protects neuronal cells from Aβ mediated toxicity, however, details of the molecular mechanism and regulatory cell signalling events behind this process have remained elusive. Using both conventional MTT end-point assays and novel real time measurement of cell impedance, we show that Hsp20 protects human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells from the neurotoxic effects of Aβ. In an attempt to provide a mechanism for the neuroprotection afforded by Hsp20, we used peptide array, co-immunoprecipitation analysis and NMR techniques to map the interaction between Hsp20 and Aβ and report a binding mode where Hsp20 binds adjacent to the oligomerisation domain of Aβ, preventing aggregation. The Hsp20/Aβ interaction is enhanced by Hsp20 phosphorylation, which serves to increase association with low molecular weight Aβ species and decrease the effective concentration of Hsp20 required to disrupt the formation of amyloid oligomers. Finally, using a novel fluorescent assay for the real time evaluation of morphology-specific Aβ aggregation, we show that phospho-dependency of this effect is more pronounced for fibrils than for globular Aβ forms and that 25mers corresponding to the Hsp20 N-terminal can be used as Aβ aggregate inhibitors. Our report is the first to provide a molecular model for the Hsp20/Aβ complex and the first to suggest that modulation of the cAMP/cGMP pathways could be a novel route to enhance Hsp20-mediated attenuation of Aβ fibril neurotoxicity.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
    corecore