16 research outputs found

    Genome-Wide Association Analysis of Oxidative Stress Resistance in Drosophila melanogaster

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    Background: Aerobic organisms are susceptible to damage by reactive oxygen species. Oxidative stress resistance is a quantitative trait with population variation attributable to the interplay between genetic and environmental factors. Drosophila melanogaster provides an ideal system to study the genetics of variation for resistance to oxidative stress. Methods and Findings: We used 167 wild-derived inbred lines of the Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel for a genomewide association study of acute oxidative stress resistance to two oxidizing agents, paraquat and menadione sodium bisulfite. We found significant genetic variation for both stressors. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with variation in oxidative stress resistance were often sex-specific and agent-dependent, with a small subset common for both sexes or treatments. Associated SNPs had moderately large effects, with an inverse relationship between effect size and allele frequency. Linear models with up to 12 SNPs explained 67–79 % and 56–66 % of the phenotypic variance for resistance to paraquat and menadione sodium bisulfite, respectively. Many genes implicated were novel with no known role in oxidative stress resistance. Bioinformatics analyses revealed a cellular network comprising DNA metabolism and neuronal development, consistent with targets of oxidative stress-inducing agents. We confirmed associations of seven candidate genes associated with natural variation in oxidative stress resistance through mutational analysis. Conclusions: We identified novel candidate genes associated with variation in resistance to oxidative stress that hav

    The importance of skin manifestations, serology and nailfold (video)capillaroscopy in morphea and systemic sclerosis: current understanding and new insights

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    Since the field around morphea and systemic sclerosis (SSc) is evolving rapidly, this review approaches conventional as well as more recent clinical developments from a dermatological point of view. Skin manifestations are critical in sub-classifying these diseases ensuring a correct prognosis for these patients. They can be discretely present, and therefore, diagnosis can be challenging sometimes, implicating a thorough dermatological examination is mandatory. Furthermore, a growing amount of dermatologists perform nailfold videocapillaroscopy (NVC), a more recent reliable non-invasive imaging technique used for in vivo assessment of the microcirculation at the nailfold. After all, specific NVC-changes are present in a majority of patients with SSc. This way, dermatologists not only take part in the diagnosis process through clinical investigation but also through the use of a modern state of the art imaging technique that is becoming the golden standard in SSc multidisciplinary workup. In this review, current understandings for NVC in morphea and SSc are revised. So far, the role of NVC in the diagnosis/prognosis/classification of morphea patients has not been thoroughly investigated to make proper conclusions. As for SSc, it is well known that NVC contributes to the diagnosis and can make a fundamental difference especially when obvious clinical SSc signs are absent. This review emphasizes the (somewhat underestimated) role of dermatologists in the process of diagnosis and follow-up, and thus, the difference we can make for our patients and fellow colleagues in the multidisciplinary workup of SSc and morphea
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