11 research outputs found

    Modulation of microglia by Wolfberry on the survival of retinal ganglion cells in a rat ocular hypertension model

    Get PDF
    The active component of Wolfberry (Lycium barbarum), lycium barbarum polysaccharides (LBP), has been shown to be neuroprotective to retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) against ocular hypertension (OH). Aiming to study whether this neuroprotection is mediated via modulating immune cells in the retina, we used multiphoton confocal microscopy to investigate morphological changes of microglia in whole-mounted retinas. Retinas under OH displayed slightly activated microglia. One to 100Ā mg/kg LBP exerted the best neuroprotection and elicited moderately activated microglia in the inner retina with ramified appearance but thicker and focally enlarged processes. Intravitreous injection of lipopolysaccharide decreased the survival of RGCs at 4Ā weeks, and the activated microglia exhibited amoeboid appearance as fully activated phenotype. When activation of microglia was attenuated by intravitreous injection of macrophage/microglia inhibitory factor, protective effect of 10Ā mg/kg LBP was attenuated. The results implicated that neuroprotective effects of LBP were partly due to modulating the activation of microglia

    The use of race, ethnicity and ancestry in human genetic research

    Get PDF
    Post-Human Genome Project progress has enabled a new wave of population genetic research, and intensified controversy over the use of race/ethnicity in this work. At the same time, the development of methods for inferring genetic ancestry offers more empirical means of assigning group labels. Here, we provide a systematic analysis of the use of race/ethnicity and ancestry in current genetic research. We base our analysis on key published recommendations for the use and reporting of race/ethnicity which advise that researchers: explain why the terms/categories were used and how they were measured, carefully define them, and apply them consistently. We studied 170 population genetic research articles from high impact journals, published 2008ā€“2009. A comparative perspective was obtained by aligning study metrics with similar research from articles published 2001ā€“2004. Our analysis indicates a marked improvement in compliance with some of the recommendations/guidelines for the use of race/ethnicity over time, while showing that important shortfalls still remain: no article using ā€˜raceā€™, ā€˜ethnicityā€™ or ā€˜ancestryā€™ defined or discussed the meaning of these concepts in context; a third of articles still do not provide a rationale for their use, with those using ā€˜ancestryā€™ being the least likely to do so. Further, no article discussed potential socio-ethical implications of the reported research. As such, there remains a clear imperative for highlighting the importance of consistent and comprehensive reporting on human populations to the genetics/genomics community globally, to generate explicit guidelines for the uses of ancestry and genetic ancestry, and importantly, to ensure that guidelines are followed

    Consensus Paper: The Role of the Cerebellum in Perceptual Processes

    Full text link

    é‡‘å±žę°§åŒ–ē‰©ēŗ³ē±³ęę–™ēš„č®¾č®”äøŽåˆęˆē­–ē•„

    Full text link
    corecore