39 research outputs found
Differences in intracellular protein levels in monocytes and CD4+ lymphocytes between bipolar depressed patients and healthy controls: A pilot study with tyramine-based signal-amplified flow cytometry
Highlights To measure 18 intracellular proteins in blood cells of bipolar depressed patients and healthy controls; TFour proteins in monocytes and 2 proteins in CD4+ T Cells were significantly lower in patients than in healthy controls; The studied proteins are involved in prolactin, leptin, BDNF, and interleukin-3 signal pathways; Studying intracellular proteins with enhanced flow cytometry may find biomarkers differentiating bipolar disorder from healthy controls. Abstract Background Molecular biomarkers for bipolar disorder (BD) that distinguish it from other manifestations of depressive symptoms remain unknown. The aim of this study was to determine if a very sensitive tyramine-based signal-amplification technology for flow cytometry (CellPrintâ˘) could facilitate the identification of cell-specific analyte expression profiles of peripheral blood cells for bipolar depression (BPD) versus healthy controls (HCs). Methods The diagnosis of psychiatric disorders was ascertained with Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview for DSM-5. Expression levels for eighteen protein analytes previously shown to be related to bipolar disorder were assessed with CellPrint⢠in CD4+ T cells and monocytes of bipolar patients and HCs. Implementation of protein-protein interaction (PPI) network and pathway analysis was subsequently used to identify new analytes and pathways for subsequent interrogations. Results Fourteen drug-naĂŻve or -free patients with bipolar I or II depression and 17 healthy controls (HCs) were enrolled. The most distinguishable changes in analyte expression based on t-tests included GSK3β, HMGB1, IRS2, phospho-GSK3ιβ, phospho-RELA, and TSPO in CD4+ T cells and calmodulin, GSK3β, IRS2, and phospho-HS1 in monocytes. Subsequent PPI and pathway analysis indicated that prolactin, leptin, BDNF, and interleukin-3 signal pathways were significantly different between bipolar patients and HCs. Limitation The sample size of the study was small and 2 patients were on medications. Conclusion In this pilot study, CellPrint⢠was able to detect differences in cell-specific protein levels between BPD patients and HCs. A subsequent study including samples from patients with BPD, major depressive disorder, and HCs is warranted
Fashionably Late? Building up the Milky Way's Inner Halo
Using a sample of 248 metal-poor stars (RR Lyraes, red giants and RHB stars)
which is remarkable for the accuracy of its 6-D kinematical data, we find a new
component for the local halo which has an axial ratio c/a ~ 0.2, a similar
flattening to the thick disk. It has a small prograde rotation but is supported
by velocity anisotropy, and contains more intermediate-metallicity stars (with
-1.5 < [Fe/H] < -1.0) than the rest of our sample. We suggest that this
component was formed quite late, during or after the formation of the disk. It
formed either from the gas that was accreted by the last major mergers
experienced by the Galaxy, or by dynamical friction of massive infalling
satellite(s) with the halo and possibly the stellar disk or thick disk. The
remainder of the stars in our sample exhibit a clumpy distribution in energy
and angular momentum, suggesting that the early, chaotic conditions under which
the inner halo formed were not violent enough to erase the record of their
origins. The clumpy structure suggests that a relatively small number of
progenitors were responsible for building up the inner halo, in line with
theoretical expectations. We find a difference in mean binding energy between
the RR Lyrae variables and the red giants in our sample, suggesting that more
of the RR Lyraes in the sample belong to the outer halo, and that the outer
halo may be somewhat younger, as first suggested by Searle and Zinn (1978). We
also find that the RR Lyrae mean rotation is more negative than the red giants,
which is consistent with the recent result of Carollo et al.(2007) that the
outer halo has a retrograde rotation and with the difference in kinematics seen
between RR Lyraes and BHB stars by Kinman et al.(2007).Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, this version accepted by Ap
Validation of layâadministered mental health assessments in a large Army National Guard cohort
To report the reliability and validity of key mental health assessments in an ongoing study of the Ohio Army National Guard (OHARNG). The 2616 OHARNG soldiers received hourâlong structured telephone surveys including the postâtraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) checklist (PCVâC) and Patient Health Questionnaire â 9 (PHQâ9). A subset ( N â=â500) participated in two hour clinical reappraisals, using the ClinicianâAdministered PTSD Scale (CAPS) and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID). The telephone survey assessment for PTSD and for any depressive disorder were both highly specific [92% (standard error, SE 0.01), 83% (SE 0.02)] with moderate sensitivity [54% (SE 0.09), 51% (SE 0.05)]. Other psychopathologies assessed included alcohol abuse [sensitivity 40%, (SE 0.04) and specificity 80% (SE 0.02)] and alcohol dependence [sensitivity, 60% (SE 0.05) and specificity 81% (SE 0.02)].The baseline prevalence estimates from the telephone study suggest alcohol abuse and dependence may be higher in this sample than the general population. Validity and reliability statistics suggest specific, but moderately sensitive instruments. Copyright Š 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd .Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/106694/1/mpr1416.pd
Three-Year Latent Class Trajectories of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Symptoms in a Clinical Sample Not Selected for ADHD
This study aims to examine trajectories of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms in the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAMS) sample