137 research outputs found

    The influence of scavengers on VOC emissions in particleboards made from pine and poplar

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    This paper studies the performance of scavengers on Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) emissions from wood-based composites. Particleboards made from maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait.) and European poplar (Populus spp.) were produced with a UF resin doped with melamine and two scavengers, sodium metabisulfite and urea. VOC emission was measured according to EN ISO 16000. Particleboards made from pine present much higher total VOC (TVOC) emissions than boards made from poplar. Pine emits a higher amount of terpenes, but also aldehydes, acids and terpenoids, while poplar emits mainly acetic acid. Sodium metabisulfite showed an excellent ability to reduce aldehydes emission, which represents nearly 50 % of total emission of particleboards made from pine. When sodium metabisulfite was applied to particleboards made from poplar, reduction of TVOCs was not significant due to the low contribution of aldehydes to TVOCs. Urea presents a low reduction in TVOCs for both wood species

    Activation of tumor suppressor protein PP2A inhibits KRAS-driven tumor growth

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    Targeted cancer therapies, which act on specific cancer-associated molecular targets, are predominantly inhibitors of oncogenic kinases. While these drugs have achieved some clinical success, the inactivation of kinase signaling via stimulation of endogenous phosphatases has received minimal attention as an alternative targeted approach. Here, we have demonstrated that activation of the tumor suppressor protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), a negative regulator of multiple oncogenic signaling proteins, is a promising therapeutic approach for the treatment of cancers. Our group previously developed a series of orally bioavailable small molecule activators of PP2A, termed SMAPs. We now report that SMAP treatment inhibited the growth of KRAS-mutant lung cancers in mouse xenografts and transgenic models. Mechanistically, we found that SMAPs act by binding to the PP2A Aα scaffold subunit to drive conformational changes in PP2A. These results show that PP2A can be activated in cancer cells to inhibit proliferation. Our strategy of reactivating endogenous PP2A may be applicable to the treatment of other diseases and represents an advancement toward the development of small molecule activators of tumor suppressor proteins

    AutoClickChem: Click Chemistry in Silico

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    Academic researchers and many in industry often lack the financial resources available to scientists working in “big pharma.” High costs include those associated with high-throughput screening and chemical synthesis. In order to address these challenges, many researchers have in part turned to alternate methodologies. Virtual screening, for example, often substitutes for high-throughput screening, and click chemistry ensures that chemical synthesis is fast, cheap, and comparatively easy. Though both in silico screening and click chemistry seek to make drug discovery more feasible, it is not yet routine to couple these two methodologies. We here present a novel computer algorithm, called AutoClickChem, capable of performing many click-chemistry reactions in silico. AutoClickChem can be used to produce large combinatorial libraries of compound models for use in virtual screens. As the compounds of these libraries are constructed according to the reactions of click chemistry, they can be easily synthesized for subsequent testing in biochemical assays. Additionally, in silico modeling of click-chemistry products may prove useful in rational drug design and drug optimization. AutoClickChem is based on the pymolecule toolbox, a framework that may facilitate the development of future python-based programs that require the manipulation of molecular models. Both the pymolecule toolbox and AutoClickChem are released under the GNU General Public License version 3 and are available for download from http://autoclickchem.ucsd.edu

    γ-H2AX Kinetics as a Novel Approach to High Content Screening for Small Molecule Radiosensitizers

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    Persistence of γ-H2AX after ionizing radiation (IR) or drug therapy is a robust reporter of unrepaired DNA double strand breaks in treated cells.DU-145 prostate cancer cells were treated with a chemical library ±IR and assayed for persistence of γ-H2AX using an automated 96-well immunocytochemistry assay at 4 hours after treatment. Hits that resulted in persistence of γ-H2AX foci were tested for effects on cell survival. The molecular targets of hits were validated by molecular, genetic and biochemical assays and in vivo activity was tested in a validated Drosophila cancer model.We identified 2 compounds, MS0019266 and MS0017509, which markedly increased persistence of γ-H2AX, apoptosis and radiosensitization in DU-145 cells. Chemical evaluation demonstrated that both compounds exhibited structurally similar and biochemical assays confirmed that these compounds inhibit ribonucleotide reductase. DNA microarray analysis and immunoblotting demonstrates that MS0019266 significantly decreased polo-like kinase 1 gene and protein expression. MS0019266 demonstrated in vivo antitumor activity without significant whole organism toxicity.MS0019266 and MS0017509 are promising compounds that may be candidates for further development as radiosensitizing compounds as inhibitors of ribonucleotide reductase

    Metabolic Rift or Metabolic Shift? Dialectics, Nature, and the World-Historical Method

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    Abstract In the flowering of Red-Green Thought over the past two decades, metabolic rift thinking is surely one of its most colorful varieties. The metabolic rift has captured the imagination of critical environmental scholars, becoming a shorthand for capitalism’s troubled relations in the web of life. This article pursues an entwined critique and reconstruction: of metabolic rift thinking and the possibilities for a post-Cartesian perspective on historical change, the world-ecology conversation. Far from dismissing metabolic rift thinking, my intention is to affirm its dialectical core. At stake is not merely the mode of explanation within environmental sociology. The impasse of metabolic rift thinking is suggestive of wider problems across the environmental social sciences, now confronted by a double challenge. One of course is the widespread—and reasonable—sense of urgency to evolve modes of thought appropriate to an era of deepening biospheric instability. The second is the widely recognized—but inadequately internalized—understanding that humans are part of nature

    Inhibition of the Nuclear Import of Cubitus Interruptus by Roadkill in the Presence of Strong Hedgehog Signal

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    Hedgehog (Hh) signalling plays an important role in various developmental processes by activating the Cubitus interruptus (Ci)/Glioblastoma (Gli) family of transcription factors. In the process of proper pattern formation, Ci activity is regulated by multiple mechanisms, including processing, trafficking, and degradation. However, it remains elusive how Ci distinctly recognizes the strong and moderate Hh signals. Roadkill (Rdx) induces Ci degradation in the anterior region of the Drosophila wing disc. Here, we report that Rdx inhibited Ci activity by two different mechanisms. In the region abutting the anterior/posterior boundary, which receives strong Hh signal, Rdx inhibited the nuclear import of Ci by releasing importin α3 from Ci. In this region, Rdx negatively regulated the expression of transcription factor Knot/Collier. In farther anterior regions receiving moderate levels of Hh signal, Rdx induced Ci degradation, as reported previously. Thus, two different mechanisms by which Rdx negatively regulates Ci may play an important role in the fine-tuning of Hh responses

    Use of anticoagulants and antiplatelet agents in stable outpatients with coronary artery disease and atrial fibrillation. International CLARIFY registry

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    Hantaviren und Nagetiere in Deutschland: Das Netzwerk „Nagetier-übertragene Pathogene”

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    ZusammenfassungHantavirus-Infektionen sind in Deutschland seit etwa 25 Jahren bekannt. Die durchschnittliche Antikörperprävalenz in der Bevölkerung liegt bei ca. 1 bis 2%. Nach Einführung der Meldepflicht im Jahr 2001 sind jährlich durchschnittlich etwa 70 bis 240 Fälle gemeldet worden. Im Jahr 2005 und insbesondere im Jahr 2007 ist jedoch ein deutlicher Anstieg der Zahl der gemeldeten Fälle registriert worden. Die am meisten betroffenen Regionen lagen in den Bundesländern Baden-Württemberg, Bayern, Nordrhein-Westfalen und Niedersachsen. Im Gegensatz zur gut dokumentierten Situation beim Menschen ist die Kenntnis der geografischen Verbreitung und Häufigkeit von Hantavirus-Infektionen in den Nagetier-Reservoiren und deren Schwankungen sehr begrenzt. Aus diesem Grund wurde in Deutschland das Netzwerk „Nagetier-übertragene Pathogene“ etabliert, das interdisziplinäre Untersuchungen zur Nagetier-Populationsdynamik, Prävalenz und Evolution von Hantaviren und anderen Nagetier-assoziierten Zoonoseerregern und den zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen sowie deren Auswirkungen auf die Häufigkeit humaner Infektionen erlaubt. Ein Monitoring von Hantaviren in Nagetieren wurde in Endemiegebieten (Baden-Württemberg, Bayern, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Niedersachsen) und Regionen mit einer geringen Zahl humaner Fälle (Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Brandenburg, Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt, Thüringen, Schleswig-Holstein, Hessen, Rheinland-Pfalz) initiiert. Insgesamt wurde eine breite geographische Verbreitung des Puumalavirus (PUUV) in Rötelmäusen und des Tulavirus in Microtus-Mäusen dokumentiert. Dobrava-Belgrad-Virus-positive Apodemus-Mäuse wurden bisher ausschließlich in Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern und Niedersachsen gefunden. In den Hantavirus-Ausbruchsgebieten in Baden-Württemberg, Bayern, Nordrhein-Westfalen und Niedersachsen wurde bei Rötelmäusen eine hohe PUUV-Prävalenz beobachtet. Initiale Longitudinalstudien in Nordrhein-Westfalen (Stadt Köln), Bayern (Niederbayern) und Niedersachsen (ländliche Region bei Osnabrück) zeigten ein stabiles Vorkommen des PUUV in den Rötelmaus-Populationen. Neben den Untersuchungen zu Hantaviren ist auch mit Studien zum Vorkommen von anderen Nagetier-assoziierten Zoonoseerregern begonnen worden. Die begonnenen Longitudinalstudien werden Schlussfolgerungen zur Evolution von Hantaviren und anderen Nagetierassoziierten Erregern und zu Veränderungen in deren Häufigkeit und Verbreitung ermöglichen. Diese Untersuchungen werden zukünftig eine verbesserte Risikoabschätzung für die Gefährdung der Bevölkerung ermöglichen, die auch die möglichen zukünftigen Klimawandel-bedingten Veränderungen in der Epidemiologie Nagetier-assoziierter Zoonoseerreger berücksichtigt
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