115 research outputs found
The Role of the Mucus Barrier in Digestion
Mucus forms a protective layer across a variety of epithelial surfaces. In the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, the barrier has to permit the uptake of nutrients, while excluding potential hazards, such as pathogenic bacteria. In this short review article, we look at recent literature on the structure, location, and properties of the mammalian intestinal secreted mucins and the mucus layer they form over a wide range of length scales. In particular, we look at the structure of the gel-forming glycoprotein MUC2, the primary intestinal secreted mucin, and the influence this has on the properties of the mucus layer. We show that, even at the level of the protein backbone, MUC2 is highly heterogeneous and that this is reflected in the networks it forms. It is evident that a combination of charge and pore size determines what can diffuse through the layer to the underlying gut epithelium. This information is important for the targeted delivery of bioactive molecules, including nutrients and pharmaceuticals, and for understanding how GI health is maintained
Sex differences in basal hypothalamic anorectic and orexigenic gene expression and the effect of quantitative and qualitative food restriction
Abstract Background Research into energy balance and growth has infrequently considered genetic sex, yet there is sexual dimorphism for growth across the animal kingdom. We test the hypothesis that in the chicken, there is a sex difference in arcuate nucleus neuropeptide gene expression, since previous research indicates hypothalamic AGRP expression is correlated with growth potential and that males grow faster than females. Because growth has been heavily selected in some chicken lines, food restriction is necessary to improve reproductive performance and welfare, but this increases hunger. Dietary dilution has been proposed to ameliorate this undesirable effect. We aimed to distinguish the effects of gut fullness from nutritional feedback on hypothalamic gene expression and its interaction with sex. Methods Twelve-week-old male and female fast-growing chickens were either released from restriction and fed ad libitum or a restricted diet plus 15% w/w ispaghula husk, a non-nutritive bulking agent, for 2 days. A control group remained on quantitative restriction. Hypothalamic arcuate nucleus neuropeptides were measured using real-time PCR. To confirm observed sex differences, the experiment was repeated using only ad libitum and restricted fed fast-growing chickens and in a genetically distinct breed of ad libitum fed male and female chickens. Linear mixed models (Genstat 18) were used for statistical analysis with transformation where appropriate. Results There were pronounced sex differences: expression of the orexigenic genes AGRP (P < 0.001) and NPY (P < 0.002) was higher in males of the fast-growing strain. In genetically distinct chickens, males had higher AGRP mRNA (P = 0.002) expression than females, suggesting sex difference was not restricted to a fast-growing strain. AGRP (P < 0.001) expression was significantly decreased in ad libitum fed birds but was high and indistinguishable between birds on a quantitative versus qualitative restricted diet. Inversely, gene expression of the anorectic genes POMC and CART was significantly higher in ad libitum fed birds but no consistent sex differences were observed. Conclusion Expression of orexigenic peptides in the avian hypothalamus are significantly different between sexes. This could be useful starting point of investigating further if AGRP is an indicator of growth potential. Results also demonstrate that gut fill alone does not reduce orexigenic gene expression
Increasing incidence of adult idiopathic inflammatory myopathies in the City of Salford, UK: A 10-year epidemiological study
Objectives. The aim was to identify and characterize all incident adult cases of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) between 1 January 2007 and 31 December 2016 in the City of Salford, UK. / Methods. Adults first diagnosed with IIM within the study period were identified by: a Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust (SRFT) inpatient episode IIM-specific ICD-10 coding search; all new patient appointments to SRFT neuromuscular outpatient clinics; and all Salford residents enrolled within the UKMYONET study. All patients with definite IIM by the 2017 EULAR/ACR classification criteria were included, as were probable cases if consensus expert opinion agreed. Cases were excluded if < 18 years of age at disease onset, if they did not meet probable criteria or when probable but expert opinion concluded a non-IIM diagnosis. / Results. The multimodal case ascertainment identified 1156 cases which, after review and application of exclusion criteria, resulted in 32 incident cases during the study period. Twenty-three of 32 were female, with a mean age of 58.1 years. The mean incidence of adult IIM was 17.6/1 000 000 person years, and higher for females than for males (25.2 vs 10.0/1 000 000 person years, respectively). A significant incidence increase over time was apparent (13.6 vs 21.4/1 000 000 person years; P=0.032). Using EULAR/ACR classification criteria, the largest IIM subtype (21/32) was PM, followed by DM (8/32), IBM (2/32) and amyopathic DM (1/32). Expert opinion subtype differed from EULAR/ACR classification criteria in 19/32 cases. / Conclusion. The incidence of adult IIM in Salford is 17.6/1 000 000 person years, higher in females, and is increasing over time. Disagreement exists between EULAR/ACR-derived and expert opinionderived IIM subtype assignments
Frequency, mutual exclusivity and clinical associations of myositis autoantibodies in a combined European cohort of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy patients
Objectives: To determine prevalence and co-existence of myositis specific autoantibodies (MSAs) and myositis
associated autoantibodies (MAAs) and associated clinical characteristics in a large cohort of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM) patients.
Methods: Adult patients with confirmed IIM recruited to the EuroMyositis registry (n = 1637) from four centres
were investigated for the presence of MSAs/MAAs by radiolabelled-immunoprecipitation, with confirmation of
anti-MDA5 and anti-NXP2 by ELISA. Clinical associations for each autoantibody were calculated for 1483 patients with a single or no known autoantibody by global linear regression modelling.
Results: MSAs/MAAs were found in 61.5% of patients, with 84.7% of autoantibody positive patients having a
sole specificity, and only three cases (0.2%) having more than one MSA. The most frequently detected autoantibody was anti-Jo-1 (18.7%), with a further 21 specificities each found in 0.2–7.9% of patients.
Autoantibodies to Mi-2, SAE, TIF1, NXP2, MDA5, PMScl and the non-Jo-1 tRNA-synthetases were strongly associated (p < 0.001) with cutaneous involvement. Anti-TIF1 and anti-Mi-2 positive patients had an increased
risk of malignancy (OR 4.67 and 2.50 respectively), and anti-SRP patients had a greater likelihood of cardiac
involvement (OR 4.15). Interstitial lung disease was strongly associated with the anti-tRNA synthetases, antiMDA5, and anti-U1RNP/Sm. Overlap disease was strongly associated with anti-PMScl, anti-Ku, anti-U1RNP/Sm
and anti-Ro60. Absence of MSA/MAA was negatively associated with extra-muscular manifestations.
Conclusions: Myositis autoantibodies are present in the majority of patients with IIM and identify distinct clinical
subsets. Furthermore, MSAs are nearly always mutually exclusive endorsing their credentials as valuable disease
biomarkers
ALDURONIC ACID METABOLISM BY BACTERIA
In a previous study (Payne and Carlson, 1957), the metabolism of glucuronic acid and galac-turonic acid by whole cells was found to proceed in a variety of enteric bacteria and plant patho-gens as the result of substrate induced enzymes. Glucuronate utilization by dried cells of Serratia marcescens resulted in the production of an unidentified reducing acid which could be isolated by paper chromatography from incubation mix-tures (Payne, 1956). This compound was utilized by cells which had been adapted to uronic acids, suggesting that it was a normal intermediate in glucuronate utilization. In a preliminary report (Payne and McRorie, 1958), it was demonstrated that similar intermediates are produced by cell-free extracts of several organisms when incubated with either glucuronate or galacturonate. The intermediates from the metabolism of these alduronic acids were identified as the correspond-ing keturonic acids, D-fructuronic acid (2-keto-D-glucuronic acid or 5-keto-L-gulonic acid) from glucuronate and D-tagaturonic acid (2-keto-D-galacturonic acid or 5-keto-L-galactonic acid) from galacturonate, respectively. Extracts of adapted organisms contain enzymes, keturonic reductases, which further metabolize these intermediates in the presence of reduced pyridine nucleotides to the corre-sponding hexonic acids, L-gulonic acid from D-fructuronate and L-galactonic acid from D-tagaturonate, respectively. This paper describes the occurrence of these enzymes in a number of microorganisms which are capable of adapting to the utilization of uronic acids and delineates some of the properties of the enzyme systems
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