23 research outputs found

    Treatment with penicillin G and hydrocortisone reduces ALS-associated symptoms: a case series of three patients [version 1; referees: 2 approved]

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    Three male Caucasian patients with ALS were admitted to the hospital due to progressive dysphagia and dysarthria. During two 21-day courses of penicillin G and hydrocortisone, these patientsā€™ dysphagia and dysarthria resolved. The patientā€™s other ALS-associated symptoms also improved, including respiratory function, coordination, walking, and muscle strength. This is the first report of a treatment with a protocol for treating dysphagia, dysarthria, respiratory depression and other ALS-related symptoms. Furthermore, the observations are consistent with the recent hypothesis that the successful treatment of ALS symptoms with this treatment course in six patients with syphilitic ALS was not directly due to the treatment of syphilis; but that the administered penicillin G and/or hydrocortisone treated these patientsā€™ ALS symptoms due the off-target pharmacological activity of penicillin G and/or hydrocortisone. This report therefore underscores the need to evaluate the efficacy of this treatment course in a clinical trial

    Eur. J. Neurosci.

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    Characterization of the PEG layer of sterically stabilized liposomes: a SAXS study

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    Synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering analysis of the bilayer structure of a pharmacologically relevant sterically stabilized liposome system is presented. Describing the electron density profile of the bilayer with the superposition of Gaussian functions, the contribution of the poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) layers to the total electron density was identified. The changes in the thickness of the PEG layer as well as the distribution of the PEG chains among the outer and inner leaflets of the bilayers were followed by changing the molar ratio of the PEG-lipid and the molar weight of the PEG molecule

    Insertional Mutagenesis Identifies a STAT3/Arid1b/Ī²-catenin Pathway Driving Neurofibroma Initiation

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    To identify genes and signaling pathways that initiate Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) neurofibromas, we used unbiased insertional mutagenesis screening, mouse models, and molecular analyses.Ā We mapped an Nf1-Stat3-Arid1b/Ī²-catenin pathway that becomes active in the context of Nf1 loss. Genetic deletion of Stat3 in Schwann cell progenitors (SCPs) and Schwann cells (SCs) prevents neurofibroma formation, decreasing SCP self-renewal and Ī²-catenin activity. Ī²-catenin expression rescues effects of Stat3 loss in SCPs. Importantly, P-STAT3 and Ī²-catenin expression correlate in human neurofibromas. Mechanistically, P-Stat3 represses Gsk3Ī² and the SWI/SNF gene Arid1b to increase Ī²-catenin. Knockdown of Arid1b or Gsk3Ī² in Stat3fl/fl;Nf1fl/fl;DhhCre SCPs rescues neurofibroma formation after inĀ vivo transplantation. Stat3 represses Arid1b through histone modification in a Brg1-dependent manner, indicating that epigenetic modification plays a role in early tumorigenesis. Our data map a neural tumorigenesis pathway and support testing JAK/STAT and Wnt/Ī²-catenin pathway inhibitors in neurofibroma therapeutic trials
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