38 research outputs found

    The Type and the Position of HNF1A Mutation Modulate Age at Diagnosis of Diabetes in Patients with Maturity-Onset Diabetes of the Young (MODY)-3

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    OBJECTIVE—The clinical expression of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY)-3 is highly variable. This may be due to environmental and/or genetic factors, including molecular characteristics of the hepatocyte nuclear factor 1-α (HNF1A) gene mutation. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We analyzed the mutations identified in 356 unrelated MODY3 patients, including 118 novel mutations, and searched for correlations between the genotype and age at diagnosis of diabetes. RESULTS—Missense mutations prevailed in the dimerization and DNA-binding domains (74%), while truncating mutations were predominant in the transactivation domain (62%). The majority (83%) of the mutations were located in exons 1- 6, thus affecting the three HNF1A isoforms. Age at diagnosis of diabetes was lower in patients with truncating mutations than in those with missense mutations (18 vs. 22 years, P = 0.005). Missense mutations affecting the dimerization/DNA-binding domains were associated with a lower age at diagnosis than those affecting the transactivation domain (20 vs. 30 years, P = 10−4). Patients with missense mutations affecting the three isoforms were younger at diagnosis than those with missense mutations involving one or two isoforms (P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS—These data show that part of the variability of the clinical expression in MODY3 patients may be explained by the type and the location of HNF1A mutations. These findings should be considered in studies for the search of additional modifier genetic factors

    The tree that hides the forest : cryptic diversity and phylogenetic relationships in the Palaearctic vector Obsoletus/Scoticus Complex (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) at the European level

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    Correction: Volume: 13 Issue: 1 Article Number: 483 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04349-yBackgroundCulicoides obsoletus is an abundant and widely distributed Holarctic biting midge species, involved in the transmission of bluetongue virus (BTV) and Schmallenberg virus (SBV) to wild and domestic ruminants. Females of this vector species are often reported jointly with two morphologically very close species, C. scoticus and C. montanus, forming the Obsoletus/Scoticus Complex. Recently, cryptic diversity within C. obsoletus was reported in geographically distant sites. Clear delineation of species and characterization of genetic variability is mandatory to revise their taxonomic status and assess the vector role of each taxonomic entity. Our objectives were to characterize and map the cryptic diversity within the Obsoletus/Scoticus Complex.MethodsPortion of the cox1 mitochondrial gene of 3763 individuals belonging to the Obsoletus/Scoticus Complex was sequenced. Populations from 20 countries along a Palaearctic Mediterranean transect covering Scandinavia to Canary islands (North to South) and Canary islands to Turkey (West to East) were included. Genetic diversity based on cox1 barcoding was supported by 16S rDNA mitochondrial gene sequences and a gene coding for ribosomal 28S rDNA. Species delimitation using a multi-marker methodology was used to revise the current taxonomic scheme of the Obsoletus/Scoticus Complex.ResultsOur analysis showed the existence of three phylogenetic clades (C. obsoletus clade O2, C. obsoletus clade dark and one not yet named and identified) within C. obsoletus. These analyses also revealed two intra-specific clades within C. scoticus and raised questions about the taxonomic status of C. montanus.ConclusionsTo our knowledge, our study provides the first genetic characterization of the Obsoletus/Scoticus Complex on a large geographical scale and allows a revision of the current taxonomic classification for an important group of vector species of livestock viruses in the Palaearctic region.Peer reviewe

    Fifth European Dirofilaria and Angiostrongylus Days (FiEDAD) 2016

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    Socio-politically influential intellectuals and their understanding of the national in Serbia after 2000.

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    Тhis study is dedicated to intellectuals who have a strong socio-political influence, and their attitudes towards the national. The national is operationalized here as the common denominator of various visions of a complex phenomenon, which includes elements of understanding the ethnic and national phenomena and relations. My goal was to investigate the attitudes and their varieties of the Serbian intellectual elite towards the national. Although I have referred to the various relevant theoretical standings in the thesis, none of them had served as a starting point or framework of the planned research, because I have sought to ensure that the study is exploratory. Through reviewing in detail the terms of intellectuals, national, nation, nationalism, ethnic relations, etc., the aim of this study was to try to obtain data that are essentially self-reflection and reflection of intellectuals, to illuminate their meaning, relations and construct items that would shed light on the role of intellectuals in social life, especially in that cultural-symbolic field which borders the national. Chapters include the review of key concepts, starting from an intellectual and his understanding in the context of historical and theoretical prism, where I tried to grasp the controversy of the concept itself. Then I focused on the relations between intellectuals and the national, and especially the role of intellectuals in the formation and maintenance of the national. In the end, I tried to observe the results in light of the key theories of intellectual engagement and nationalism. The presented analysis includes the results of the different aspects and ways in which individual subgroups, formed in the process of research, observe the current state of their own, Serbian nation, its achievements, problems and realized and unrealized opportunities, as well as its desirable state and ways to be reached
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