601 research outputs found

    Internal standard-based analysis of microarray data2—Analysis of functional associations between HVE-genes

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    In this work we apply the Internal Standard-based analytical approach that we described in an earlier communication and here we demonstrate experimental results on functional associations among the hypervariably-expressed genes (HVE-genes). Our working assumption was that those genetic components, which initiate the disease, involve HVE-genes for which the level of expression is undistinguishable among healthy individuals and individuals with pathology. We show that analysis of the functional associations of the HVE-genes is indeed suitable to revealing disease-specific differences. We show also that another possible exploit of HVE-genes for characterization of pathological alterations is by using multivariate classification methods. This in turn offers important clues on naturally occurring dynamic processes in the organism and is further used for dynamic discrimination of groups of compared samples. We conclude that our approach can uncover principally new collective differences that cannot be discerned by individual gene analysi

    Protein kinase activity of phosphoinositide 3-kinase regulates cytokine-dependent cell survival

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    Extent: 14 p.The dual specificity protein/lipid kinase, phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), promotes growth factor-mediated cell survival and is frequently deregulated in cancer. However, in contrast to canonical lipid-kinase functions, the role of PI3K protein kinase activity in regulating cell survival is unknown. We have employed a novel approach to purify and pharmacologically profile protein kinases from primary human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells that phosphorylate serine residues in the cytoplasmic portion of cytokine receptors to promote hemopoietic cell survival. We have isolated a kinase activity that is able to directly phosphorylate Ser585 in the cytoplasmic domain of the interleukin 3 (IL-3) and granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptors and shown it to be PI3K. Physiological concentrations of cytokine in the picomolar range were sufficient for activating the protein kinase activity of PI3K leading to Ser585 phosphorylation and hemopoietic cell survival but did not activate PI3K lipid kinase signaling or promote proliferation. Blockade of PI3K lipid signaling by expression of the pleckstrin homology of Akt1 had no significant impact on the ability of picomolar concentrations of cytokine to promote hemopoietic cell survival. Furthermore, inducible expression of a mutant form of PI3K that is defective in lipid kinase activity but retains protein kinase activity was able to promote Ser585 phosphorylation and hemopoietic cell survival in the absence of cytokine. Blockade of p110α by RNA interference or multiple independent PI3K inhibitors not only blocked Ser585 phosphorylation in cytokine-dependent cells and primary human AML blasts, but also resulted in a block in survival signaling and cell death. Our findings demonstrate a new role for the protein kinase activity of PI3K in phosphorylating the cytoplasmic tail of the GM-CSF and IL-3 receptors to selectively regulate cell survival highlighting the importance of targeting such pathways in cancer.Daniel Thomas, Jason A. Powell, Benjamin D. Green, Emma F. Barry, Yuefang Ma, Joanna Woodcock, Stephen Fitter, Andrew C.W. Zannettino, Stuart M. Pitson, Timothy P. Hughes, Angel F. Lopez, Peter R. Shepherd, Andrew H. Wei, Paul G. Ekert and Mark A. Guthridg

    B-Cell and Monocyte Contribution to Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Identified by Cell-Type-Specific Differential Expression Analysis in RNA-Seq Data

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    Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease characterized by complex interplay among immune cell types. SLE activity is experimentally assessed by several blood tests, including gene expression profiling of heterogeneous populations of cells in peripheral blood. To better understand the contribution of different cell types in SLE pathogenesis, we applied the two methods in cell-type-specific differential expression analysis, csSAM and DSection, to identify cell-type-specific gene expression differences in heterogeneous gene expression measures obtained using RNA-seq technology. We identified B-cell-, monocyte-, and neutrophil-specific gene expression differences. Immunoglobulin-coding gene expression was altered in B-cells, while a ribosomal signature was prominent in monocytes. On the contrary, genes differentially expressed in the heterogeneous mixture of cells did not show any functional enrichment. Our results identify antigen binding and structural constituents of ribosomes as functions altered by B-cell- and monocyte-specific gene expression differences, respectively. Finally, these results position both csSAM and DSection methods as viable techniques for celltype-specific differential expression analysis, which may help uncover pathogenic, cell-type-specific processes in SLE

    Measuring the value of placements to employers: A cost-benefit approach

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    This article explores the concept and measurement of placement value, underexplored in theory and practice to date. The article makes a theoretical contribution to the placement value discourse by examining and articulating the placement value concept. It also offers a practical contribution by exploring a piloted tool to evaluate employer placement value, developed as part of a project funded by the Higher Education Funding Council for England. It examines the immaturity of the placement value concept against contemporary value discourse, including service- and goods-dominant logic frameworks (exploring value-in-use and value-in-exchange) and calls for greater attention to be paid to placement value to support the sustainable provision of placements.N/

    Genetic association of CD247 (CD3ζ) with SLE in a large-scale multiethnic study

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    A classic T-cell phenotype in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the downregulation and replacement of the CD3ζ chain that alters T-cell receptor signaling. However, genetic associations with SLE in the human CD247 locus that encodes CD3ζ are not well established and require replication in independent cohorts. Our aim was therefore to examine, localize and validate CD247-SLE association in a large multiethnic population. We typed 44 contiguous CD247 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 8922 SLE patients and 8077 controls from four ethnically distinct populations. The strongest associations were found in the Asian population (11 SNPs in intron 1, 4.99 × 10(-4) < P < 4.15 × 10(-2)), where we further identified a five-marker haplotype (rs12141731-rs2949655-rs16859085-rs12144621-rs858554; G-G-A-G-A; P(hap) = 2.12 × 10(-5)) that exceeded the most associated single SNP rs858554 (minor allele frequency in controls = 13%; P = 4.99 × 10(-4), odds ratio = 1.32) in significance. Imputation and subsequent association analysis showed evidence of association (P < 0.05) at 27 additional SNPs within intron 1. Cross-ethnic meta-analysis, assuming an additive genetic model adjusted for population proportions, showed five SNPs with significant P-values (1.40 × 10(-3) < P< 3.97 × 10(-2)), with one (rs704848) remaining significant after Bonferroni correction (P(meta) = 2.66 × 10(-2)). Our study independently confirms and extends the association of SLE with CD247, which is shared by various autoimmune disorders and supports a common T-cell-mediated mechanism.National Institutes of Health grants: (UL1RR025741, K24AR002138, P602AR30692, P01AR49084, UL1TR000165, P01AI083194, RO1AR43814, P60AR053308, UL1TR000004, AR43727, R21AI070304, RO1AR057172, UL1RR025014, R01AR051545-03, UL1RR029882, P60AR062755, P30AR53483, U19AI082714, P30GM103510, U01AI101934, AI063274, AR056360, AI083194, R37AI024717, P01083194, P01AR049084, PR094002); Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine; University of Alabama Birmingham; National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases; University of California Los Angeles; University of California San Francisco; Hopkins University; University of Colorado School of Medicine; University of Southern California; Seattle Children's Research Institute Arthritis Foundation; Medical University of South Carolina; Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation; Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center; US Departments of Defense grant: (PR094002); Veterans Affairs; Alliance for Lupus Research; Kirkland Scholar Award; Korea Healthcare technology R & D project: (A121983); Ministry for Health and Welfare; Republic of Korea; Swedish Research Council; Instituto de Salud Carlos III grant: (PS09/00129); European Union FEDER funds; Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia fellowships: (SFRH/BPD/29354/2006, SFRH/BPD/34648/2007)

    Efficacy and safety of intravenous lincosamide therapy in methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus bacteremia

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    Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteremia has a high case-fatality rate, but currently recommended antimicrobial therapies have many shortcomings. The efficacy and safety of lincosamide therapy for MRSA bacteremia is incompletely defined. A retrospective audit was done of the management of all adults with MRSA bacteremia at an Australian tertiary referral hospital between 1 January 2007 and 31 December 2020. A total of 176 patients were included. The case-fatality rate declined from 14/57 (25%) in the first half of the study to 12/119 (10%) in the second half (P = 0.01). Of the 172 patients receiving antibiotics, 62 (36%) received a lincosamide- predominant regimen (lincosamide monotherapy for >50% of the intravenous course). The patients receiving lincosamide-predominant intravenous therapy had lower in-hospital mortality (odds ratio [OR], 0.07; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.01 to 0.53; P= 0.01) and a lower incidence of renal complications (OR [95% CI], 0.34 [0.1520.75]; P = 0.008) than patients receiving an alternative regimen. In multivariate analysis that also considered age, disease severity, comorbidity, infectious diseases consultation, source control, and the year of admission, patients receiving a lincosamide-predominant regimen were still less likely to die in the hospital than those receiving an alternative regimen (OR [95% CI], 0.05 [0.00 to 0.65]; P = 0.02). Lincosamides appear to have utility, at least as stepdown therapy, in the treatment of MRSA bacteremia, particularly in young, clinically stable patients with few comorbidities in whom endocarditis has been excluded. Prospective studies will help define their optimal role

    Variants at multiple loci implicated in both innate and adaptive immune responses are associated with Sjögren’s syndrome

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    Sjögren’s syndrome is a common autoimmune disease (~0.7% of European Americans) typically presenting as keratoconjunctivitis sicca and xerostomia. In addition to strong association within the HLA region at 6p21 (Pmeta=7.65×10−114), we establish associations with IRF5-TNPO3 (Pmeta=2.73×10−19), STAT4 (Pmeta=6.80×10−15), IL12A (Pmeta =1.17×10−10), FAM167A-BLK (Pmeta=4.97×10−10), DDX6-CXCR5 (Pmeta=1.10×10−8), and TNIP1 (Pmeta=3.30×10−8). Suggestive associations with Pmeta<5×10−5 were observed with 29 regions including TNFAIP3, PTTG1, PRDM1, DGKQ, FCGR2A, IRAK1BP1, ITSN2, and PHIP amongst others. These results highlight the importance of genes involved in both innate and adaptive immunity in Sjögren’s syndrome

    Transancestral mapping and genetic load in systemic lupus erythematosus

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    Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease with marked gender and ethnic disparities. We report a large transancestral association study of SLE using Immunochip genotype data from 27,574 individuals of European (EA), African (AA) and Hispanic Amerindian (HA) ancestry. We identify 58 distinct non-HLA regions in EA, 9 in AA and 16 in HA (∼50% of these regions have multiple independent associations); these include 24 novel SLE regions (P<5 × 10-8), refined association signals in established regions, extended associations to additional ancestries, and a disentangled complex HLA multigenic effect. The risk allele count (genetic load) exhibits an accelerating pattern of SLE risk, leading us to posit a cumulative hit hypothesis for autoimmune disease. Comparing results across the three ancestries identifies both ancestry-dependent and ancestry-independent contributions to SLE risk. Our results are consistent with the unique and complex histories of the populations sampled, and collectively help clarify the genetic architecture and ethnic disparities in SLE.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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