198 research outputs found

    Catalytic performance and enantioselectivity of engineered oxidoreductases as biocatalysts

    Get PDF
    The thesis will evaluate the catalytic activity and enantioselectivity of native Old Yellow Enzyme from S.pastoranius in comparison with three engineered enzyme variants. Substrates will be bioactive compounds with a particular emphasis on terpenoids and fragrances

    Detection of gasoline on suspects' hands: study of different sampling alternatives

    Get PDF
    Arsonists may use ignitable liquids to start, accelerate and amplify fires. The sampling of volatiles present on the hands of suspected arsonists is therefore sometimes carried out in the course of the investigation of (possible) deliberate fires. Several collection protocols have been proposed, relying on the concentration of volatiles by the transfer on PVC gloves and further passive headspace extraction with Activated Charcoal Strips (ACS). Previous research findings assessing the use of Activated Carbon Cloth (ACC) – initially developed for the adsorption of gas in military applications – opens the path to new perspectives regarding the extraction and the concentration of ignitable liquid residues in general, and for the sampling on hands in particular. Five alternative methods (four relying on the use of ACC and one on ACS) were considered for the collection of gasoline traces present on the hands and their subsequent analysis by gas chromatography – mass spectrometry. Gasoline was deposited onto the palms of volunteers to study the differences between the collection method using ACS and those using ACC. For the latter, either the volunteer hands were placed in nylon bags with an ACC on the palm or suspended, or, powder-free latex gloves were used, with an ACC on the palm or in a separate extraction, with the glove in a nylon bag and the ACC suspended. The results showed that the background contamination was not distinguishable between ACS and ACC and their sampling ability was comparable. The two methods relying on the deposition of ACC directly on the surface of the palm where gasoline was deposited showed significantly higher collection capacity than other methods, provided that the ACC was in direct contact with the contaminated zone. The results showed that three main factors affected the collection of gasoline on the hands: the distance between the skin and the sorbent (ACC or ACS) in case of direct concentration of volatiles on the sorbent, the exposure time, and the space between the hand and the glove or bag (i.e. the headspace volume). This research opens new perspectives for the sampling of ignitable liquid residues through the use of ACC. It corroborates the perceived potential of ACC for the extraction and concentration of volatile compounds, particularly for fire debris analysis purposes. While the experiments were focused on the collection of gasoline on hands, the results provide valuable information in a more general way for the sampling of fire debris

    First evidence of subclinical renal tubular injury during sickle-cell crisis

    Get PDF
    International audienceBACKGROUND: The pathophysiologic mechanisms classically involved in sickle-cell nephropathy include endothelial dysfunction and vascular occlusion. Arguments demonstrating that ischemia-reperfusion injury-related kidney damage might coincide with vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC) are lacking. METHODS: In this prospective study, we sought to determine whether tubular cells and glomerular permeability might be altered during VOC. Urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) levels and albumin-excretion rates (AER) of 25 patients were evaluated prospectively during 25 VOC episodes and compared to their steady state (ST) values. RESULTS: During VOC, white blood-cell counts (WBC) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were significantly higher than at ST but creatinine levels were comparable. Urine NGAL levels were significantly increased during VOC vs ST (P = 0.007) and remained significant when normalized to urine creatinine (P = 0.004), while AER did not change significantly. The higher urine NGAL concentration was not associated with subsequent (24-48 hour) acute kidney injury. Univariate analysis identified no significant correlations between urine NGAL levels and laboratory parameters during VOC. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrated that subclinical ischemia-reperfusion tubular injury is common during VOC and highlight the importance of hydroelectrolyte monitoring and correction during VOC

    Motrial, first search engine in clinical trial on non pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs)

    Get PDF
    Le nombre de publications d’études cliniques évaluant les interventions non médicamenteuses (INM) augmente exponentiellement depuis 2000. Il encourage les chercheurs à réaliser les revues systématiques et les méta-analyses attendues par les professionnels de santé, les patients et les décideurs pour connaître leur efficacité réelle et leur indication pertinente. Seulement, la diversification des supports de communication médicale et scientifique, les stratégies opportunistes de publication, les informations manquantes dans les publications et la non exhaustivité des bases de données biomédicales rendent la recherche bibliographique complexe et à risque de biais. Pour répondre à ce manque, la Plateforme CEPS propose un moteur de recherche, appelé Motrial, qui permet de collecter, de trier et d’organiser les publications d’études cliniques sur les INM.The number of clinical trial publications assessing non-pharmacological intervention (NPI) has been increasing exponentially since 2000. It encourages researchers to carry out the systematic reviews and meta-analyzes expected by health professionals, patients, and decision-makers to learn about their real effectiveness and their relevant indication. However, the diversification of medical and scientific communication media, opportunistic publishing strategies, missing data in publications and non-exhaustiveness of biomedical databases make bibliographic research complex and at risk of bias. To address this shortcoming, the academic Plateforme CEPS offers a search engine, called Motrial, that collects, sorts and organizes publications of NPI clinical trials

    Prognostic value of prostate circulating cells detection in prostate cancer patients: a prospective study

    Get PDF
    In clinically organ-confined prostate cancer patients, bloodstream tumour cell dissemination generally occurs, and may be enhanced by surgical prostate manipulation. To evaluate cancer-cell seeding impact upon patient recurrence-free survival, 155 patients were prospectively enrolled then followed. Here, 57 patients presented blood prostate cell shedding preoperatively and intraoperatively (group I). Of the 98 preoperatively negative patients, 53 (54%) remained negative (group II) and 45 (46%) became intraoperatively positive (group III). Median biological and clinical recurrence-free time was far shorter in group I (36.2 months, P<0.0001) than in group II (69.6 months) but did not significantly differ in group II and III (69.6 months vs 65.0). Such 5-year follow-up data show that preoperative circulating prostate cells are an independent prognosis factor of recurrence. Moreover, tumour handling induces cancer-cell seeding but surgical blood dissemination does not accelerate cancer evolution

    Prostate Specific Membrane Antigen mRNA in Blood as a Potential Predictor of Biochemical Recurrence after Radical Prostatectomy

    Get PDF
    We investigated whether the detection of prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) in blood preoperatively has predictive value for biochemical recurrence (BCR) after radical prostatectomy in patients with prostate cancer. All 134 patients scheduled to receive radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer were prospectively enrolled. The authors used nested reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay to detect PSMA mRNA-bearing cells in peripheral blood, and analyzed the ability of PSMA mRNA positivity to predict BCR after surgery. PSMA-mRNA was detected in 24 (17.9%) patients by RT-PCR. Over a median follow-up of 20 months (range, 3 to 46 months), BCR developed in 15 patients (11.2%) and median time to BCR was 7 months (range, 3 to 25 months). Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a significant difference between those positive or negative for PSMA in terms of recurrence-free actuarial probability (log rank P=0.0039). Multivariate analysis showed that positivity for PSMA mRNA (HR: 3.697, 95% CI 1.285-10.634, P=0.015) and a biopsy Gleason score of ≥7 (HR: 4.500, 95% CI 1.419-14.274, P=0.011) were independent preoperative predictors of BCR. The presence of PSMA mRNA in peripheral blood can be used to predict BCR after radical prostatectomy
    corecore