357 research outputs found
Differences in Involucrin Immunolabeling Within Cornified Cell Envelopes in Normal and Psoriatic Epidermis
Epidermal keratinocytes form a cornified cell envelope (CE) beneath the plasma membrane during the late stages of differentiation, This CE is stabilized by cross linking of several precursor proteins, including involucrin, In psoriasis, the expression pattern of the precursor proteins is known to be deranged; involucrin expression is increased and loricrin expression is decreased. However, these changes have not been previously evaluated ultrastructurally. In the present study, we performed light and electron microscopic immunohistochemistry in conjunction with conventional transmission electron microscopy to assess the nature of involucrin involvement in normal and psoriatic CEs. In normal epidermis, CEs were observed from the deepest cornified cells or, when present, from the transitional cells, increasing In thickness and changing electron densities with maturation. In psoriatic epidermis, CE formation started earlier, one to several cells below the cornified layer. Psoriatic CEs were generally thinner and showed a constant high electron density. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that the normal CE was involucrin positive only at a very early stage, whereas psoriatic CE showed persistent involucrin immunoreactivity. These results suggest that in normal skin, involucrin is the major constituent of the CE only In its early stages of assembly. In contrast, CE formation seems to be initiated prematurely in psoriatic skin, where involucrin remains the major constituent of the CE during maturation
Regulation of Beta-Adrenergic Adenylate Cyclase Responsiveness of Pig Skin Epidermis by Suboptimal Concentrations of Epinephrine
Although receptor-specific refractoriness has been suggested to be one of the regulatory mechanisms of epidermal adenylate cyclase systems, its physiologic significance has been a subject of controversy because of the requirement of unusually high concentrations of agonists to induce refractoriness. In order to determine whether the epidermal adenylate cyclase system is regulated through a refractoriness mechanism by suboptimal concentrations of receptor agonists, this study was undertaken using pig skin epidermal adenylate cyclase systems.Pretreatment of pig skin with 0.1-1 μM epinephrine in vitro resulted in the reduction of the maximal epinephrine response (epinephrine-induced cyclic AMP accumulations) to various degrees without alterations in either low or high Km, cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities. Repeated pretreatments were shown to be more effective in inducing refractoriness than a single pretreatment. Apparently there was no change in the Km value for epinephrine, suggesting that the decrease in epinephrine response represents a reduction in the number but not in the affinity of functional beta-adrenergic adenylate cyclase receptor sites. This refractoriness by low concentrations of catecholamine pretreatment was specific to the beta-adrenergic system, since there was no reduction in histamine response after the epinephrine pretreatment.These results indicate that the epidermal beta-adrenergic adenylate cyclase system is regulated by much lower concentrations of catecholamine than were previously described. It was suggested that physiologic fluctuations of plasma catecholamine levels might have a profound effect on epidermal beta-adrenergic adenylate cyclase responsiveness, resulting in the alteration of the minimal catecholamine level required for the successive activation of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, which is the predominant target of cyclic AMP in epidermis
Theoretical Analysis on the Efficiency of Interleaved Comparisons
This study presents a theoretical analysis on the efficiency of interleaving,
an efficient online evaluation method for rankings. Although interleaving has
already been applied to production systems, the source of its high efficiency
has not been clarified in the literature. Therefore, this study presents a
theoretical analysis on the efficiency of interleaving methods. We begin by
designing a simple interleaving method similar to ordinary interleaving
methods. Then, we explore a condition under which the interleaving method is
more efficient than A/B testing and find that this is the case when users leave
the ranking depending on the item's relevance, a typical assumption made in
click models. Finally, we perform experiments based on numerical analysis and
user simulation, demonstrating that the theoretical results are consistent with
the empirical results.Comment: The 45th European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR2023
Cyclic Amp Accumulation in Psoriatic Skin: Differential Responses to Histamine, Amp, and Epinephrine by the Uninvolved and Involved Epidermis
Using the uninvolved and involved skin from psoriatic patients, we investigated the effects of histamine and AMP (or adenosine) in vitro on the intracellular cyclic AMP levels. Both agents activated adenylate cyclase of the uninvolved and involved resulting in the accumulation of cyclic AMP. Without a cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor, these responses were biphasic and the maximal accumulation was observed in 5min. With the PDE inhibitor both responses were markedly potentiated and high levels of cyclic AMP were observed for more than 20mm. The response to histamine by the involved skin was much greater than that by the uninvolved. The degree of the response to adenosine was approximately equal. In accordance with our previous work, the response to epinephrine by the involved skin was much less than that by the uninvolved. Thus adenylate cyclases of involved skin from psoriatic patients exhibit a markedly diminished response to epinephrine while at the same time exhibiting a markedly enhanced response to histamine. This precludes the possibility that the unresponsiveness to epinephrine can be due to a generalized inability of the epidermal psoriatic plaque cell to make a functioning cell membrane
Online Neural Path Guiding with Normalized Anisotropic Spherical Gaussians
The variance reduction speed of physically-based rendering is heavily
affected by the adopted importance sampling technique. In this paper we propose
a novel online framework to learn the spatial-varying density model with a
single small neural network using stochastic ray samples. To achieve this task,
we propose a novel closed-form density model called the normalized anisotropic
spherical gaussian mixture, that can express complex irradiance fields with a
small number of parameters. Our framework learns the distribution in a
progressive manner and does not need any warm-up phases. Due to the compact and
expressive representation of our density model, our framework can be
implemented entirely on the GPU, allowing it produce high quality images with
limited computational resources
Anaplastic Transformation of Follicular Thyroid Carcinoma in Pulmonary Metastasis With Gradually Progressive Intra-tumoral Cavitation: A Case Report
Anaplastic transformation of differentiated thyroid cancer is rare but clinically important because of the dismal prognosis after anaplastic transformation. Therefore, cases and findings of anaplastic transformation must be accumulated, which could ultimately lead to an earlier diagnosis and an improved prognosis. Here, we present a case of anaplastic transformation of follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC) in a pulmonary metastatic lesion associated with gradually progressive tumor cavitation. The patient with FTC was diagnosed with multiple lung metastases three years after surgery for the primary tumor and metastatic neck lymph nodes. Annual treatment with radioactive iodine resulted in disease stability for 10 years. However, one lung metastasis in the left lower lobe gradually enlarged and was associated with intra-tumoral cavitation. The growing lung nodule was resected and pathologically diagnosed as an anaplastic transformation of FTC. Fourteen months after diagnosis, the patient died of pneumothorax caused by pleural dissemination despite multiple treatment interventions. This case highlights pulmonary metastasis with progressive cavitary lesions as a potential early sign of the anaplastic transformation of differentiated thyroid cancer
An Adult Case of Kawasaki Disease in a Pregnant Japanese Woman: A Case Report
Kawasaki disease is an acute febrile disease predominantly seen in young children. We report a case of Kawasaki disease in a 32-year-old pregnant woman. She developed a generalized erythematous skin rash accompanied by high fever. Bilateral conjunctival congestion, tender cervical lymphadenopathy, an edematous lower lip and peripheral edema followed by desquamation were observed. She was successfully treated with aspirin and intravenous gammaglobulin (1 g/kg/day). Her course was not complicated by coronary artery aneurysm and she delivered a healthy baby. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of Kawasaki disease in a pregnant woman. We suggest that Kawasaki disease should be included in the differential diagnosis of a generalized, erythematous skin rash accompanied by high fever in adults
Decreased Deiminated Keratin K1 in Psoriatic Hyperproliferative Epidermis
Citrulline-containing proteins, mainly originating from keratin K1 and formed by enzymatic deimination of arginine residues, have been identified in the cornified layers of human epidermis. We analyzed the localization and nature of the deiminated proteins in psoriatic epidermis. Immunostaining based on chemical modification of citrulline residues showed that the normal and psoriatic uninvolved epidermis contained deiminated proteins diffusely in the cornified cell layer, whereas the involved epidermis had no detectable or markedly reduced levels of deiminated proteins. Immunolabeling with polyclonal antibodies against a synthetic citrulline-containing peptide corresponding to a deiminated sequence of mouse K1 also suggested markedly decreased deiminated K1 in psoriatic involved lesions. Keratin analyses indicated that deiminated K1 present in normal and psoriatic uninvolved epidermis was not detected in the psoriatic involved epidermis. Double staining with a monoclonal antibody, 34βB4, and the polyclonal antibodies demonstrated that epidermis with low suprabasal keratin expression was negative for deiminated K1. In contrast, intralesional acrosyringia showing decreased suprabasal keratin immunoreactivity like that of the surrounding psoriatic epidermis showed strong deiminated K1 staining. This suggests that abnormal keratin deimination is restricted to the psoriatic hyperproliferative epidermis, without affecting sweat ductal epithelia
Giant Cell Tumor of the Temporal Bone with Direct Invasion into the Middle Ear and Skull Base: A Case Report
Giant cell tumor (GCT) is classified as a benign bone tumor, and it is frequently identified at the epiphysis of long bones and relatively rare in the temporal bone. For orthopedists expert at recognizing bone and soft tissue tumors, the diagnosis of GCT is relatively easy; however, since head and neck surgeons experience few cases of GCT, it may be difficult to diagnose when it occurs in the temporal bone. A 32-year-old man complained of left hearing loss, aural fullness, and tinnitus. Examination of the ear revealed a bulging tumor. Audiologic examination demonstrated conductive hearing loss of the left ear. Computer tomograph of the temporal bone showed a soft-tissue-density specification indicating bone destruction at the left temporal bone. The tumor invaded the skull base. Imaging examinations using magnetic resonance imaging revealed a nonhomogenous isosignal intensity area on T1 at the left temporal bone. After intravenous gadolinium, the mass showed unequal enhancement. This patient subsequently underwent surgery to remove the lesion using transmastoid and middle fossa approach. Pathological examinations from specimens of the tumor revealed characteristic of GCT. No clinical or radiological evidence of tumor recurrence was detected for 4 years
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