3 research outputs found

    Vitamin D Deficiency Cause Gender Specific Alterations of Renal Arterial Function in a Rodent Model

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    Vitamin D deficiency shows positive correlation to cardiovascular risk, which might be influenced by gender specific features. Our goal was to examine the effect of Vitamin D supplementation and Vitamin D deficiency in male and female rats on an important hypertension target organ, the renal artery. Female and male Wistar rats were fed with Vitamin D reduced chow for eight weeks to induce hypovitaminosis. Another group of animals received normal chow with further supplementation to reach optimal serum vitamin levels. Isolated renal arteries of Vitamin D deficient female rats showed increased phenylephrine-induced contraction. In all experimental groups, both indomethacin and selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibition (NS398) decreased the phenylephrine-induced contraction. Angiotensin II-induced contraction was pronounced in Vitamin D supplemented males. In both Vitamin D deficient groups, acetylcholine-induced relaxation was impaired. In the female Vitamin D supplemented group NS398, in males the indomethacin caused reduced acetylcholine-induced relaxation. Increased elastic fiber density was observed in Vitamin D deficient females. The intensity of eNOS immunostaining was decreased in Vitamin D deficient females. The density of AT1R staining was the highest in the male Vitamin D deficient group. Although Vitamin D deficiency induced renal vascular dysfunction in both sexes, female rats developed more extensive impairment that was accompanied by enzymatic and structural changes

    Next-Generation Sequencing–Based Genomic Profiling of Children with Acute Myeloid Leukemia

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    Pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) represents a major cause of childhood leukemic mortality, with only a limited number of studies investigating the molecular landscape of the disease. Here, we present an integrative analysis of cytogenetic and molecular profiles of 75 patients with pediatric AML from a multicentric, real-world patient cohort treated according to AML Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster protocols. Targeted next-generation sequencing of 54 genes revealed 17 genes that were recurrently mutated in >5% of patients. Considerable differences were observed in the mutational profiles compared with previous studies, as BCORL1, CUX1, KDM6A, PHF6, and STAG2 mutations were detected at a higher frequency than previously reported, whereas KIT, NRAS, and KRAS were less frequently mutated. Our study identified novel recurrent mutations at diagnosis in the BCORL1 gene in 9% of the patients. Tumor suppressor gene (PHF6, TP53, and WT1) mutations were found to be associated with induction failure and shorter event-free survival, suggesting important roles of these alterations in resistance to therapy and disease progression. Comparison of the mutational landscape at diagnosis and relapse revealed an enrichment of mutations in tumor suppressor genes (16.2% versus 44.4%) and transcription factors (35.1% versus 55.6%) at relapse. Our findings shed further light on the heterogeneity of pediatric AML and identify previously unappreciated alterations that may lead to improved molecular characterization and risk stratification of pediatric AML
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