153 research outputs found

    Instability and `Sausage-String' Appearance in Blood Vessels during High Blood Pressure

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    A new Rayleigh-type instability is proposed to explain the `sausage-string' pattern of alternating constrictions and dilatations formed in blood vessels under influence of a vasoconstricting agent. Our theory involves the nonlinear elasticity characteristics of the vessel wall, and provides predictions for the conditions under which the cylindrical form of a blood vessel becomes unstable.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures submitted to Physical Review Letter

    Party package travel: alcohol use and related problems in a holiday resort: a mixed methods study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>People travelling abroad tend to increase their use of alcohol and other drugs. In the present study we describe organized party activities in connection with young tourists' drinking, and the differences between young people travelling with and without organized party activities.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We conducted ethnographic observations and a cross-sectional survey in Sunny Beach, Bulgaria.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The behaviour of the guides from two travel agencies strongly promoted heavy drinking, but discouraged illicit drug use. Even after controlling for several potential confounders, young people who travelled with such "party package travel agencies" were more likely to drink 12 or more units when going out. In univariate analyses, they were also more likely to get into fights, but were not more likely to seek medical assistance or medical assistance for an accident or an alcohol-related problem. After controlling for confounders, the association between type of travel agency and getting into fights was no longer significant. Short-term consequences of drinking in the holiday resort did not differ between party package travellers and ordinary package travellers.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>There may be a small impact of party package travels on young people's drinking. Strategies could be developed used to minimise the harm associated with both party package travel and other kinds of travel where heavy substance use is likely to occur.</p

    HER2 cancer vaccine optimization by combining Drosophila S2 insect cell manufacturing with a novel VLP-display technology

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    Breast cancer is a widespread oncology indication affecting more than 1.3 million people worldwide annually, 20%-30% of which are HER2 positive. HER2 is a tyrosine kinase receptor that is frequently overexpressed in several solid-tumor cancers (incl. breast, prostate, gastric, esophageal and osteosarcoma) where it denotes an aggressive phenotype, high metastatic rate, and poor prognosis. In a human context, passive HER2-targeted immunotherapy using monoclonal antibodies (mAb, e.g. Trastuzumab and Pertuzumab) has proven to be an effective treatment modality, which has dramatically improved clinical outcomes. Unfortunately, mAb therapy is very expensive and the repeated injections of high doses can be associated with severe side-effects that reduce efficacy. Vaccines are highly cost-effective, but overall progress in development of anti-cancer vaccines based on cancer-associated antigens (e.g. HER2) has been hampered by inherent immune-tolerogenic mechanisms rendering the immune system incapable of reacting against the body’s own cells/proteins (i.e. self-antigens). Consequently, many attempts to develop anti-cancer vaccines have failed in clinical trials due to insufficient immunogenicity. To circumvent this central issue, we have developed a proprietary virus-like particle (VLP)-based vaccine delivery platform. Notably, the VLP-platform is currently the only available technology to effectively facilitate multivalent “virus-like” display of large/complex vaccine antigens. This is key to overcome immune-tolerance and enable induction of therapeutically potent antibody responses directed against cancer-associated self-antigens. In this talk I will discuss the non-viral Drosophila S2 insect cell production system and how it was applied to the production of hHer2/neu antigen, including using advanced production methods such as perfusion for clinical material manufacture. Furthermore, I will present our data from a transgenic mouse model for spontaneous breast cancer development, where high-density display of the HER2 extracellular domain on the surface of virus-like particles (VLPs) enables induction of therapeutically potent anti-HER2 responses. Split-protein tag/catcher conjugation was used to facilitate directional covalent attachment of HER2 to the surface of icosahedral bacteriophage-derived VLPs, thereby harnessing the VLP platform to effectively overcome B-cell tolerance. Vaccine efficacy was demonstrated both in prevention and therapy of mammary carcinomas in HER2 transgenic mice. Thus, the HER2-VLP vaccine shows promise as a new strategy for treatment of HER2-positive cancer. The modular VLP system may also represent an effective tool for development of self-antigen based vaccines against other non-communicable diseases

    Structural Basis for Dityrosine-Mediated Inhibition of α-Synuclein Fibrillization

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    [Image: see text] α-Synuclein (α-Syn) is an intrinsically disordered protein which self-assembles into highly organized β-sheet structures that accumulate in plaques in brains of Parkinson’s disease patients. Oxidative stress influences α-Syn structure and self-assembly; however, the basis for this remains unclear. Here we characterize the chemical and physical effects of mild oxidation on monomeric α-Syn and its aggregation. Using a combination of biophysical methods, small-angle X-ray scattering, and native ion mobility mass spectrometry, we find that oxidation leads to formation of intramolecular dityrosine cross-linkages and a compaction of the α-Syn monomer by a factor of √2. Oxidation-induced compaction is shown to inhibit ordered self-assembly and amyloid formation by steric hindrance, suggesting an important role of mild oxidation in preventing amyloid formation

    Structural Properties of MHC Class II Ligands, Implications for the Prediction of MHC Class II Epitopes

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    Major Histocompatibility class II (MHC-II) molecules sample peptides from the extracellular space allowing the immune system to detect the presence of foreign microbes from this compartment. Prediction of MHC class II ligands is complicated by the open binding cleft of the MHC class II molecule, allowing binding of peptides extending out of the binding groove. Furthermore, only a few HLA-DR alleles have been characterized with a sufficient number of peptides (100–200 peptides per allele) to derive accurate description of their binding motif. Little work has been performed characterizing structural properties of MHC class II ligands. Here, we perform one such large-scale analysis. A large set of SYFPEITHI MHC class II ligands covering more than 20 different HLA-DR molecules was analyzed in terms of their secondary structure and surface exposure characteristics in the context of the native structure of the corresponding source protein. We demonstrated that MHC class II ligands are significantly more exposed and have significantly more coil content than other peptides in the same protein with similar predicted binding affinity. We next exploited this observation to derive an improved prediction method for MHC class II ligands by integrating prediction of MHC- peptide binding with prediction of surface exposure and protein secondary structure. This combined prediction method was shown to significantly outperform the state-of-the-art MHC class II peptide binding prediction method when used to identify MHC class II ligands. We also tried to integrate N- and O-glycosylation in our prediction methods but this additional information was found not to improve prediction performance. In summary, these findings strongly suggest that local structural properties influence antigen processing and/or the accessibility of peptides to the MHC class II molecule

    The Critical Turning Points Database : Concept, Methodology and Dataset of an International Transformative Social Innovation Comparison (TRANSIT Working Paper # 10, July 12th 2017)

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    [Abstract] This working paper presents the TRANSIT open-access online database on Critical Turning Points (CTP) in Transformative Social Innovation. It specifies the contents of the database, comprising qualitative accounts of more than 450 ‘critical’ episodes in the evolution of social innovation initiatives in 27 different countries. Providing the theoretical-methodological context to these data, the paper also describes the theoretical background of the CTP concept and the methodology though which the CTP accounts have been reconstructed through interviews with members of SI initiatives. The paper concludes with reflections on the open access CTP database as a knowledge infrastructure, discussing its significance in terms of mapping, dissemination and framing of social innovation.This project has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 61316
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