66 research outputs found

    Service Users’ Perceptions of an Outreach Wellbeing Service:A Social Enterprise for Promoting Mental Health

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    Inadequate provision and limited access to mental healthcare has been highlighted with the need to offer more contemporary ways to provide clinically effective interventions. This study aimed to present an insight into service users’ perceptions of an outreach Wellbeing Service (WBS), providing psychological therapy in social settings. Descriptive and thematic analysis was undertaken of 50 returned surveys. Comparison of initial and final mental health measures demonstrated a significant improvement in all outcomes with 96% of participants reporting being helped by attending. Participants were assisted to rebuild social connections in a safe and supportive environment and were facilitated to become more self-determining as their resourcefulness to self-manage was cultivated. Situated within different settings within the community, the WBS offers a workable example of a novel approach to supporting and promoting citizens to become more resilient and lead a more fulfilling and independent life in the community

    Maternal Photoperiodic Programming: Melatonin and Seasonal Synchronization Before Birth

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    This mini-review considers the phenomenon of maternal photoperiodic programming (MPP). In order to match neonatal development to environmental conditions at the time of birth, mammals use melatonin produced by the maternal pineal gland as a transplacental signal representing ambient photoperiod. Melatonin acts via receptors in the fetal pituitary gland, exerting actions on the developing medio-basal hypothalamus. Within this structure, a central role for specialized ependymal cells known as tanycytes has emerged, linking melatonin to control of hypothalamic thyroid metabolism and in turn to pup development. This review summarizes current knowledge of this programming mechanism, and its relevance in an eco-evolutionary context. Maternal photoperiodic programming emerges as a useful paradigm for understanding how in utero programing of hypothalamic function leads to life-long effects on growth, reproduction, health and disease in mammals, including humans

    The PPB Initiative

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    Anti-IL-9 vaccination prevents worm expulsion and blood eosinophilia in Trichuris muris-infected mice

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    Production of neutralizing anti-IL-9 antibodies was induced in mice by immunization with mouse IL-9 coupled to ovalbumin. In the six mouse strains tested, a strong and long-lasting anti-IL-9 response developed with seric inhibitory titers of 10(−3) to 10(−5), as measured in an in vitro IL-9-dependent cell proliferation assay. In vivo, this immunization completely abrogated the increase in mast-cell protease-1 levels as well as the eosinophilia observed in mice after implantation of an IL-9-secreting tumor. We took advantage of this method to assess the role of IL-9 in infections with nematode Trichuris muris, where IL-9 production correlates with the resistant phenotype. C57BL/6 mice, which normally expel the parasite, became susceptible after anti-IL-9 immunization, demonstrating that IL-9 plays a critical role in this model. In addition, neutralization of IL-9 also inhibited parasite-induced blood eosinophilia. Taken together, the present data demonstrate the potency of our strategy to antagonize IL-9 in vivo and shows that this cytokine plays a major role in resistance against T. muris infection

    MHC class II-bound self-peptides can be effectively separated by isoelectric focusing and bind optimally to their MHC class II restriction elements around pH 5.0.

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    More than 90% of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules on antigen-presenting cells (APC) have in their binding site a peptide derived from an extracellular protein ingested by the APC or from a protein of the APC itself. These self-peptides can be eluted from affinity-purified MHC class II molecules by acid elution, and have been studied with a variety of techniques. We show here that the self-peptides eluted from the mouse MHC class II molecules Ad, Ed and Ek bind specifically to MHC class II molecules of the allelic type from which they were derived. The pH optimum for binding is around 5.0, i.e. the same optimum at which synthetic peptides representing sequences of foreign antigens bind to MHC class II molecules. This suggests that the physiological compartment where MHC class II molecules bind self-peptides may be very late in the endocytic pathway. The chemical properties of the eluted and labelled MHC class II peptides were studied by isoelectric focusing. This method was able to separate the peptides very efficiently, and enabled a rapid comparison of peptides eluted from different MHC molecules. The 125I-labelled peptides displayed a broad range of isoelectric points with values predominantly below neutral. This suggests that such peptides bind to MHC in a predominantly non-charged state
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