172 research outputs found

    The mTOR Inhibitor RAD001 Sensitizes Tumor Cells to DNA-Damaged Induced Apoptosis through Inhibition of p21 Translation

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    SummaryAlthough DNA damaging agents have revolutionized chemotherapy against solid tumors, a narrow therapeutic window combined with severe side effects has limited their broader use. Here we show that RAD001 (everolimus), a rapamycin derivative, dramatically enhances cisplatin-induced apoptosis in wild-type p53, but not mutant p53 tumor cells. The use of isogenic tumor cell lines expressing either wild-type mTOR cDNA or a mutant that does not bind RAD001 demonstrates that the effects of RAD001 are through inhibition of mTOR function. We further show that RAD001 sensitizes cells to cisplatin by inhibiting p53-induced p21 expression. Unexpectedly, this effect is attributed to a small but significant inhibition of p21 translation combined with its short half-life. These findings provide the molecular rationale for combining DNA damaging agents with RAD001, showing that a general effect on a major anabolic process may dramatically enhance the efficacy of an established drug protocol in the treatment of cancer patients with solid tumors

    Recommendations for Child Care Centers

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    Design guide for planning, programming and designing different types of child care facilities. Includes 115 patterns for the policy, planning and design of large centers, neighborhood centers and family day-care homes. Based on current research information. Highly illustrated with photographs and sketches. Received an Award for Applied Research from Progressive Architecture, 1980, and received the 1980 UWM Foundation Research Award. Reprinted 1981, with new photographs in 1984, 1988 and in 1991. Revised edition 1994.https://dc.uwm.edu/caupr_mono/1032/thumbnail.jp

    Syrosingopine sensitizes cancer cells to killing by metformin

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    We report that the anticancer activity of the widely used diabetic drug metformin is strongly potentiated by syrosingopine. Synthetic lethality elicited by combining the two drugs is synergistic and specific to transformed cells. This effect is unrelated to syrosingopine's known role as an inhibitor of the vesicular monoamine transporters. Syrosingopine binds to the glycolytic enzyme α-enolase in vitro, and the expression of the γ-enolase isoform correlates with nonresponsiveness to the drug combination. Syrosingopine sensitized cancer cells to metformin and its more potent derivative phenformin far below the individual toxic threshold of each compound. Thus, combining syrosingopine and codrugs is a promising therapeutic strategy for clinical application for the treatment of cancer

    Olfactory testing does not predict β-amyloid, MRI measures of neurodegeneration or vascular pathology in the British 1946 birth cohort.

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    OBJECTIVE: To explore the value of olfactory identification deficits as a predictor of cerebral β-amyloid status and other markers of brain health in cognitively normal adults aged ~ 70 years. METHODS: Cross-sectional observational cohort study. 389 largely healthy and cognitively normal older adults were recruited from the MRC National Survey of Health and Development (1946 British Birth cohort) and investigated for olfactory identification deficits, as measured by the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test. Outcome measures were imaging markers of brain health derived from 3 T MRI scanning (cortical thickness, entorhinal cortex thickness, white matter hyperintensity volumes); 18F florbetapir amyloid-PET scanning; and cognitive testing results. Participants were assessed at a single centre between March 2015 and January 2018. RESULTS: Mean (± SD) age was 70.6 (± 0.7) years, 50.8% were female. 64.5% had hyposmia and 2.6% anosmia. Olfaction showed no association with β-amyloid status, hippocampal volume, entorhinal cortex thickness, AD signature cortical thickness, white matter hyperintensity volume, or cognition. CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: In the early 70s, olfactory function is not a reliable predictor of a range of imaging and cognitive measures of preclinical AD. Olfactory identification deficits are not likely to be a useful means of identifying asymptomatic amyloidosis. Further studies are required to assess if change in olfaction may be a proximity marker for the development of cognitive impairment

    Amyloid ? influences the relationship between cortical thickness and vascular load.

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    INTRODUCTION: Cortical thickness has been proposed as a biomarker of Alzheimer's disease (AD)- related neurodegeneration, but the nature of its relationship with amyloid beta (A?) deposition and white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) in cognitively normal adults is unclear. METHODS: We investigated the influences of A? status (negative/positive) and WMHV on cortical thickness in 408 cognitively normal adults aged 69.2 to 71.9 years who underwent 18F-Florbetapir positron emission tomography (PET) and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Two previously defined Alzheimer's disease (AD) cortical signature regions and the major cortical lobes were selected as regions of interest (ROIs) for cortical thickness. RESULTS: Higher WMHV, but not A? status, predicted lower cortical thickness across all participants, in all ROIs. Conversely, when A?-positive participants were considered alone, higher WMHV predicted higher cortical thickness in a temporal AD-signature region. DISCUSSION: WMHV may differentially influence cortical thickness depending on the presence or absence of A?, potentially reflecting different pathological mechanisms

    Phase 1/2a trial of intravenous BAL101553, a novel controller of the spindle assembly checkpoint, in advanced solid tumours

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    Background: BAL101553 (lisavanbulin), the lysine prodrug of BAL27862 (avanbulin), exhibits broad anti-proliferative activity in human cancer models refractory to clinically relevant microtubule-targeting agents. Methods: This two-part, open-label, phase 1/2a study aimed to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) of 2-h infusion of BAL101553 in adults with advanced or recurrent solid tumours. The MTD was determined using a modified accelerated titration design in phase I. Patients received BAL101553 at the MTD and at lower doses in the phase 2a expansion to characterise safety and efficacy and to determine the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D). Results: Seventy-three patients received BAL101553 at doses of 15–80 mg/m2 (phase 1, n = 24; phase 2a, n = 49). The MTD was 60 mg/m2; DLTs observed at doses ≥60 mg/m2 were reversible Grade 2–3 gait disturbance with Grade 2 peripheral sensory neuropathy. In phase 2a, asymptomatic myocardial injury was observed at doses ≥45 mg/m2. The RP2D for 2-h intravenous infusion was 30 mg/m2. The overall disease control rate was 26.3% in the efficacy population. Conclusions: The RP2D for 2-h infusion of BAL101553 was well tolerated. Dose-limiting neurological and myocardial side effects were consistent with the agent’s vascular-disrupting properties. Clinical trial registration: EudraCT: 2010-024237-23

    Development of a longitudinal integrated clerkship at an academic medical center

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    In 2005, medical educators at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), began developing the Parnassus Integrated Student Clinical Experiences (PISCES) program, a year-long longitudinal integrated clerkship at its academic medical center. The principles guiding this new clerkship were continuity with faculty preceptors, patients, and peers; a developmentally progressive curriculum with an emphasis on interdisciplinary teaching; and exposure to undiagnosed illness in acute and chronic care settings. Innovative elements included quarterly student evaluation sessions with all preceptors together, peer-to-peer evaluation, and oversight advising with an assigned faculty member. PISCES launched with eight medical students for the 2007/2008 academic year and expanded to 15 students for 2008/2009. Compared to UCSF's traditional core clerkships, evaluations from PISCES indicated significantly higher student satisfaction with faculty teaching, formal didactics, direct observation of clinical skills, and feedback. Student performance on discipline-specific examinations and United States Medical Licensing Examination step 2 CK was equivalent to and on standardized patient examinations was slightly superior to that of traditional peers. Participants' career interests ranged from primary care to surgical subspecialties. These results demonstrate that a longitudinal integrated clerkship can be implemented successfully at a tertiary care academic medical center

    Neuroimaging, clinical and life course correlates of normal-appearing white matter integrity in 70-year-olds

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    We investigate associations between normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) microstructural integrity in cognitively normal ∼70-year-olds and concurrently measured brain health and cognition, demographics, genetics and life course cardiovascular health. Participants born in the same week in March 1946 (British 1946 Birth cohort) underwent PET-MRI around age 70. Mean standardized NAWM integrity metrics (fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), neurite density index (NDI) and orientation dispersion index (ODI)) were derived from diffusion MRI. Linear regression was used to test associations between NAWM metrics and (1) concurrent measures, including whole brain volume, white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV), PET amyloid and cognition; (2) the influence of demographic and genetic predictors, including sex, childhood cognition, education, socioeconomic position, and genetic risk for Alzheimer’s Disease (APOE-ε4); (3) systolic and diastolic blood pressure and cardiovascular health (FHS-CVS) across adulthood. Sex interactions were tested. Statistical significance included false discovery rate correction (5%). 362 participants met inclusion criteria (mean age 70 years, 49% female). Higher WMHV was associated with lower FA (b=-0.09 [95%CI:-0.11, -0.06] p<0.01), NDI (b=-0.17 [-0.22, -0.12] p<0.01), and higher MD (b=0.14 [-0.10, -0.17] p<0.01); amyloid (in men) was associated with lower FA (b=-0.04 [-0.08, -0.01] p=0.03) and higher MD (b=0.06 [0.01,0.11] p=0.02). FHS-CVS in later-life (age 69) was associated with NAWM [lower FA (b=-0.06 [-0.09, -0.02] p<0.01), NDI (b=-0.10 [-0.17, -0.03] p<0.01), and higher MD (b=0.09 [0.04,0.14] p<0.01). Significant sex interactions (p<0.05) emerged for midlife cardiovascular health (age 53) and NAWM at 70: marginal effect plots demonstrated, in women only, NAWM was associated with higher midlife FHS-CVS (lower FA and NDI), midlife systolic (lower FA, NDI, and higher MD), and diastolic (lower FA and NDI) blood pressure, and greater blood pressure change between 43 and 53 years (lower FA and NDI), independently of WMHV. In summary, poorer NAWM microstructural integrity in ∼70-year-olds was associated with measures of cerebral small vessel disease, amyloid (in males) and later-life cardiovascular health, demonstrating how NAWM can provide additional information to overt white matter disease. Our findings further show that greater midlife cardiovascular risk and higher blood pressure were associated with poorer NAWM microstructural integrity in females only, suggesting that women’s brains may be more susceptible to the effects of midlife blood pressure and cardiovascular health

    Associations of β-Amyloid and Vascular Burden With Rates of Neurodegeneration in Cognitively Normal Members of the 1946 British Birth Cohort

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    OBJECTIVE: To quantify the independent and interactive associations of amyloid-β (Aβ) and white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) - a marker of presumed cerebrovascular disease (CVD) - with rates of neurodegeneration, and to examine the contributions of APOE ε4 and vascular risk measured at different stages of adulthood in cognitively normal members of the 1946 British birth cohort. METHODS: Participants underwent brain MRI and florbetapir-Aβ positron emission tomography as part of Insight 46, an observational population-based study. Changes in whole brain, ventricular and hippocampal volume were directly measured from baseline and repeat volumetric T1 MRI using the Boundary Shift Integral. Linear regression was used to test associations with: baseline Aβ deposition; baseline WMHV; APOE ε4; and office-based Framingham heart study-cardiovascular risk scores (FHS-CVS) and systolic blood pressure (BP) at ages 36, 53 and 69 years. RESULTS: 346 cognitively normal participants (mean [SD] age at baseline scan 70.5 [0.6] years; 48% female) had high-quality T1 MRI data from both time-points (mean [SD] scan interval 2.4 [0.2] years). Being Aβ positive at baseline was associated with 0.87 ml/year faster whole brain atrophy (95% CI 0.03, 1.72), 0.39 ml/year greater ventricular expansion (95% CI 0.16, 0.64) and 0.016 ml/year faster hippocampal atrophy (95% CI 0.004, 0.027), while each 10 ml additional WMHV at baseline was associated with 1.07 ml/year faster whole brain atrophy (95% CI 0.47, 1.67), 0.31 ml/year greater ventricular expansion (95% CI 0.13, 0.60) and 0.014 ml/year faster hippocampal atrophy (95% CI 0.006, 0.022). These contributions were independent and there was no evidence that Aβ and WMHV interacted in their effects. There were no independent associations of APOE ε4 with rates of neurodegeneration after adjusting for Aβ status and WMHV, and no clear relationships between FHS-CVS or systolic BP and rates of neurodegeneration when assessed across the whole sample, nor any evidence that they acted synergistically with Aβ. CONCLUSIONS: Aβ and presumed CVD have distinct and additive effects on rates of neurodegeneration in cognitively normal elderly. These findings have implications for the use of MRI measures as biomarkers of neurodegeneration and emphasize the importance of risk management and early intervention targeting both pathways
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