80 research outputs found
The complement receptor C5aR controls acute inflammation and astrogliosis following spinal cord injury
This study investigated the role of the complement activation fragment C5a in secondary pathology following contusive spinal cord injury (SCI). C5ar(-/-) mice, which lack the signaling receptor for C5a, displayed signs of improved locomotor recovery and reduced inflammation during the first week of SCI compared with wild-type mice. Intriguingly, the early signs of improved recovery in C5ar(-/-) mice deteriorated from day 14 onward, with absence of C5aR ultimately leading to poorer functional outcomes, larger lesion volumes, reduced myelin content, and more widespread inflammation at 35 d SCI. Pharmacological blockade of C5aR with a selective antagonist (C5aR-A) during the first 7 d after SCI improved recovery compared with vehicle-treated mice, and this phenotype was sustained up to 35 d after injury. Consistent with observations made in C5ar(-/-) mice, these improvements were, however, lost if C5aR-A administration was continued into the more chronic phase of SCI. Signaling through the C5a-C5aR axis thus appears injurious in the acute period but serves a protective and/or reparative role in the post-acute phase of SCI. Further experiments in bone marrow chimeric mice suggested that the dual and opposing roles of C5aR on SCI outcomes primarily relate to its expression on CNS-resident cells and not infiltrating leukocytes. Additional in vivo and in vitro studies provided direct evidence that C5aR signaling is required during the postacute phase for astrocyte hyperplasia, hypertrophy, and glial scar formation. Collectively, these findings highlight the complexity of the inflammatory response to SCI and emphasize the importance of optimizing the timing of therapeutic interventions
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Longitudinal decline in semantic versus letter fluency, but not their ratio, marks incident Alzheimer’s disease in Latinx Spanish-speaking older individuals
Objective: To compare longitudinal verbal fluency performance among Latinx Spanish speakers who develop Alzheimer’s disease to those who do not develop dementia in absolute number of words produced on each task and their ratio to combine both scores.
Method: Participants included 833 Latinx Spanish-speaking older adults from a community-based prospective cohort in Manhattan. We performed growth curve modeling to investigate the trajectories of letter and semantic fluency, and their ratio (i.e., ‘semantic index’), between individuals who developed Alzheimer’s disease and those who did not (i.e., controls). The semantic index quantifies the proportion of words generated for semantic fluency in relation to the total verbal fluency performance.
Results: Letter fluency performance did not decline in controls; we observed a linear decline in those who developed Alzheimer’s disease. Semantic fluency declined in both groups and showed an increased rate of change over time in the incident Alzheimer’s disease group; in comparison, the control group had a linear and slower decline. There were no group differences in the longitudinal trajectory (intercept and slope) of the semantic index.
Conclusion: A decline in letter fluency and a more rapid and accelerating decline over time in semantic fluency distinguished people who developed Alzheimer’s disease from controls. Using the semantic index was not a superior marker of incident Alzheimer’s disease compared to examining the two fluency scores individually. Results suggest the differential decline in verbal fluency tasks, when evaluated appropriately, may be useful for early identification of Alzheimer’s disease in Latinx Spanish speakers, a historically understudied population.
Keywords: category fluency, phonemic fluency, language, dementia, Hispani
White matter microstructure associations to amyloid burden in adults with Down syndrome.
INTRODUCTION: Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) are at an increased risk of developing Alzheimer's Disease (AD). One of the early underlying mechanisms in AD pathology is the accumulation of amyloid protein plaques, which are deposited in extracellular gray matter and signify the first stage in the cascade of neurodegenerative events. AD-related neurodegeneration is also evidenced as microstructural changes in white matter. In this work, we explored the correlation of white matter microstructure with amyloid load to assess amyloid-related neurodegeneration in a cohort of adults with DS. METHODS: In this study of 96 adults with DS, the relation of white matter microstructure using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and amyloid plaque burden using [11C]PiB PET were examined. The amyloid load (AβL) derived from [11C]PiB was used as a global measure of amyloid burden. AβL and DTI measures were compared using tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) and corrected for imaging site and chronological age. RESULTS: TBSS of the DTI maps showed widespread age-by-amyloid interaction with both fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD). Further, diffuse negative association of FA and positive association of MD with amyloid were observed. DISCUSSION: These findings are consistent with the white matter microstructural changes associated with AD disease progression in late onset AD in non-DS populations
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Relative contribution of white matter hyperintensity to amyloid and neurodegeneration in cognitive decline over time or clinical diagnoses in a diverse, community‐based cohort of older adults
Background: The 2018 NIA‐AA Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research framework moves towards a multiple biomarker approach to explain AD development and progression more fully. This research framework has the flexibility to incorporate various biomarkers into a full or partial amyloid‐tau‐neurodegeneration (A/T/N) profile. The objective of this study was to determine the relative contribution of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) to amyloid and neurodegeneration on cognition in a diverse, community‐based cohort of older adults.
Method: A subset of cognitively healthy participants (n=155; age=69‐99yrs; 65% women, 30%/44%/26% Non‐Hispanic White/Non‐Hispanic Black/Hispanic) from the Washington Heights‐Inwood Columbia Aging Project underwent baseline Florbetaben PET (amyloid SUVR), T1‐weighted (cortical thickness[mm]) and T2‐weighted FLAIR MRI (WMH volume[cm3]), as well as subsequent neuropsychological assessments and consensus diagnoses every 1.5 years (up to 6 visits). Linear mixed effects models were used to test for change over time in language, memory, executive function, and visuospatial ability, while cox proportional hazard models were used to test for risk of developing MCI or AD. Biomarkers of interest included amyloid, cortical thickness, and WMH, adjusted for demographics (sex/gender, race/ethnicity, education). Interactions between biomarkers and time (e.g., slope differences) were evaluated as significant below 0.1.
Result: In A/N/V models, higher amyloid was associated with faster rates of decline in language (B [95%CI]: ‐0.08 [‐0.13, ‐0.02]), memory (‐0.13 [‐0.21, ‐0.05]), and visuospatial ability (‐0.05 [‐0.12, 0.01]), higher WMH was associated with faster rates of decline in executive function (‐0.05 [‐0.11, 0.009]) and visuospatial ability (‐0.02 [‐0.05, 0.005]), and lower cortical thickness was associated with lower executive function scores (1.6 [0.10, 3.0]). Individuals were more likely to develop MCI or AD with higher amyloid (Hazard Ratio=4.2, [1.1, 15.9]), but not with higher WMH (1.2 [0.83, 1.7]) or lower cortical thickness (0.03 [4E‐4, 2]).
Conclusion: In this imaging subsample of older community‐dwelling adults, cognitive decline is differentially associated by domain with amyloid or vascular burden, while broader, multi‐domain cognitive impairment necessary for MCI or AD diagnoses is associated with amyloid, one of the hallmark AD pathologies. Results support the use of complementary information from biomarker profiles, including traditional AD, vascular, and neurodegenerative biomarkers, to investigate AD and related dementias
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White matter regions with low microstructure in young adults spatially coincide with white matter hyperintensities in older adults
Microstructural and macrostructural white matter damage occurs frequently with aging, is associated with negative health outcomes, and can be imaged non-invasively as fractional anisotropy (FA) and white matter hyperintensities (WMH), respectively. The extent to which diminished microstructure precedes or results from macrostructural white matter damage is poorly understood. This study evaluated the hypothesis that white matter areas with normatively lower microstructure in young adults are most susceptible to develop WMH in older adults. Forty-nine younger participants (age = 25.8 ± 2.8 years) underwent diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and 557 older participants (age = 73.9 ± 5.7 years) underwent DWI and T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In older adults, WMH had a mostly periventricular distribution with higher frequency in frontal regions. We found lower FA in areas of frank WMH compared to normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) in older adults. Then, to determine if areas of normatively lower white matter microstructure spatially overlap with areas that frequently develop macrostructural damage in older age, we created a WMH frequency map in which each voxel represented the percentage of older adults with a WMH in that voxel. We found lower normative FA in young adults with regions frequently segmented as WMH in older adults. We conclude that low white matter microstructure is observed in areas of white matter macrostructural damage, but white matter microstructure is also normatively low (i.e., at ages 20–30) in regions with high WMH frequency, prior to white matter macrostructural damage
Brain areas with normatively greater cerebral perfusion in early life may be more susceptible to beta amyloid deposition in late life
Background: The amyloid cascade hypothesis characterizes the stereotyped progression of pathological changes in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) beginning with beta amyloid deposition, but does not address the reasons for amyloid deposition. Brain areas with relatively higher neuronal activity, metabolic demand, and production of reactive oxygen species in earlier life may have higher beta amyloid deposition in later life. The aim of this study was to investigate early life patterns of perfusion and late life patterns of amyloid deposition to determine the extent to which normative cerebral perfusion predisposes specific regions to future beta amyloid deposition.
Materials and Methods: One hundred twenty-eight healthy, older human subjects (age: 56–87 years old; 44% women) underwent positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with [ 11 C]PiB for measures of amyloid burden. Cerebral perfusion maps derived from 47 healthy younger adults (age: 22–49; 47%) who had undergone single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging, were averaged to create a normative template, repre- sentative of young, healthy adults. Perfusion and amyloid measures were investigated in 31 cortical regions from the Hammers atlas. We examined the spatial relationship between normative perfusion patterns and amyloid pathophysiology.
Results: The pattern of increasing perfusion (temporal lobe < parietal lobe < frontal lobe < insula/cingulate gyrus < occipital lobe; F(4,26) = 7.8, p = 0.0003) in young, healthy adults was not exactly identical to but approximated the pattern of increasing amyloid burden (temporal lobe < occipital lobe < frontal lobe < parietal lobe < insula/cingulate gyrus; F(4,26) = 5.0, p = 0.004) in older adults. However, investigating subregions within cortical lobes provided consistent agreement between ranked normative perfusion patterns and expected Thal staging of amyloid progression in AD (Spearman r = 0.39, p = 0.03).
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that brain areas with normatively greater perfusion may be more susceptible to amyloid deposition in later life, possibly due to higher metabolic demand, and associated levels of oxidative stress and inflammation
The Effectiveness of Contract Farming for Raising Income of Smallholder Farmers in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: a Systematic Review
Contract farming is used by an increasing number of firms as a preferred modality to source products from smallholder farmers in low and middle-income countries. Quality requirements of consumers, economies of scale in production or land ownership rights are common incentives for firms to offer contractual arrangements to farmers. Prices and access to key technology, key inputs or support services are the main incentives for farmers to enter into these contracts. There is great heterogeneity in contract farming, with differences in contracts, farmers, products, buyers, and institutional environments. The last decade shows a rapid increase in studies that use quasi-experimental research designs to assess the effects of specific empirical instances of contract farming on smallholders. The objective of this systematic review was to distill generalised inferences from this rapidly growing body of evidence. The review synthesised the studies in order to answer two questions: 1: What is known about the effect size of contract farming on income and food security of smallholder farmers in low- and middle-income countries? 2: Under which enabling or limiting conditions are contract farming arrangements effective for improving income and food security of smallholders
Finishing the euchromatic sequence of the human genome
The sequence of the human genome encodes the genetic instructions for human physiology, as well as rich information about human evolution. In 2001, the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium reported a draft sequence of the euchromatic portion of the human genome. Since then, the international collaboration has worked to convert this draft into a genome sequence with high accuracy and nearly complete coverage. Here, we report the result of this finishing process. The current genome sequence (Build 35) contains 2.85 billion nucleotides interrupted by only 341 gaps. It covers ∼99% of the euchromatic genome and is accurate to an error rate of ∼1 event per 100,000 bases. Many of the remaining euchromatic gaps are associated with segmental duplications and will require focused work with new methods. The near-complete sequence, the first for a vertebrate, greatly improves the precision of biological analyses of the human genome including studies of gene number, birth and death. Notably, the human enome seems to encode only 20,000-25,000 protein-coding genes. The genome sequence reported here should serve as a firm foundation for biomedical research in the decades ahead
Targeted gene sanger sequencing should remain the first-tier genetic test for children suspected to have the five common X-linked inborn errors of immunity
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary Material. Further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.To address inborn errors of immunity (IEI) which were underdiagnosed in resource-limited
regions, our centre developed and offered free genetic testing for the most common IEI by
Sanger sequencing (SS) since 2001. With the establishment of The Asian Primary
Immunodeficiency (APID) Network in 2009, the awareness and definitive diagnosis of
IEI were further improved with collaboration among centres caring for IEI patients from
East and Southeast Asia. We also started to use whole exome sequencing (WES) for
undiagnosed cases and further extended our collaboration with centres from South Asia
and Africa. With the increased use of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), we have shifted
our diagnostic practice from SS to WES. However, SS was still one of the key diagnostic
tools for IEI for the past two decades. Our centre has performed 2,024 IEI SS genetic
tests, with in-house protocol designed specifically for 84 genes, in 1,376 patients with 744
identified to have disease-causing mutations (54.1%). The high diagnostic rate after just
one round of targeted gene SS for each of the 5 common IEI (X-linked
agammaglobulinemia (XLA) 77.4%, Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS) 69.2%, X-linked chronic granulomatous disease (XCGD) 59.5%, X-linked severe combined
immunodeficiency (XSCID) 51.1%, and X-linked hyper-IgM syndrome (HIGM1) 58.1%)
demonstrated targeted gene SS should remain the first-tier genetic test for the 5 common
X-linked IEI.The Hong Kong Society for Relief of Disabled Children and Jeffrey Modell Foundation.http://www.frontiersin.org/Immunologyam2023Paediatrics and Child Healt
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