90 research outputs found

    Dietary fat intake as a risk factor for the development of diabetes. Multinational, multicenter study of the Mediterranean Group for the Study of Diabetes (MGDS)

    Get PDF
    In the context of the Multinational MGSD Nutrition Study, three groups of subjects were studied: 204 subjects with recently diagnosed diabetes(RDM),42subjectswithundiagnoseddiabetes(UDM)(AmericanDiabetesAssociation criteria—fasting plasma glucose [FPG] 126 mg/dl), and 55 subjects with impaired fasting glucose(IFG)(FPG 110and126mg/dl).Eachgroupwascomparedwithacontrolgroupof nondiabetic subjects, matched one by one for center, sex, age, and BMI. Nutritional habits were evaluated by a dietary history method, validated against the 3-day diet diary. In RDM, the questionnaire referred to the nutritional habits before the diagnosis of diabetes. Demographic data were collected, and anthropometrical and biochemical measurements were taken. RESULTS— Compared with control subjects, RDM more frequently had a family history of diabetes(49.0vs.14.2%;P0.001),exercisedless(exerciseindex53.5vs.64.4;P0.01),and more frequently had sedentary professions (47.5 vs. 27.4%; P 0.001). Carbohydrates contributed less to their energy intake (53.5 vs. 55.1%; P 0.05), whereas total fat (30.2 0.5 vs. 27.8 0.5%; P 0.001) and animal fat (12.2 0.3 vs. 10.8 0.3%; P 0.01) contributed moreandtheplant-to-animalfatratiowaslower(1.50.1vs.1.80.1;P0.01).UDMmore frequentlyhadafamilyhistoryofdiabetes(38.1vs.19.0%;P0.05)andsedentaryprofessions (58.5vs.34.1%;P0.05),carbohydratescontributedlesstotheirenergyintake(47.61.7vs. 52.81.4%;P0.05),totalfat(34.71.5vs.30.41.2%;P0.05)andanimalfat(14.2 0.9 vs. 10.6 0.7%; P 0.05) contributed more, and the plant-to-animal fat ratio was lower (1.6 0.2 vs. 2.3 0.4; P 0.05). IFG differed only in the prevalence of family history of diabetes (32.7 vs. 16.4%; P 0.05). CONCLUSIONS— Our data support the view that increased animal fat intake is associated with the presence of diabetes

    Highly diastereoselective synthesis of substituted pyrrolidines using a sequence of azomethine ylide cycloaddition and nucleophilic cyclization

    Get PDF
    Abstract: Although cycloadditions of azomethine ylides usually give mixtures of endo/exo adducts, we successfully tuned the mechanistic path of a new reaction cascade to afford substituted pyrrolidines in high yields and diastereomeric purity. This was achieved by forcing the demetalation of tin- or silicon-substituted iminium ions, followed by azomethine ylide cycloaddition and nucleophilic cyclization. Structural complexity is thus built rapidly in a fully controlled one-pot reaction cascade

    Endocytosis of plasma-derived factor V by megakaryocytes occurs via a clathrin-dependent, specific membrane binding event

    Full text link
    Megakaryocytes were analyzed for their ability to endocytose factor V to define the cellular mechanisms regulating this process. In contrast to fibrinogen, factor V was endocytosed by megakaryocytes derived from CD34 + cells or megakaryocyte-like cell lines, but not by platelets. CD41 + ex vivo -derived megakaryocytes endocytosed factor V, as did subpopulations of the megakaryocyte-like cells MEG-01, and CMK. Similar observations were made for fibrinogen. Phorbol diester-induced megakaryocytic differentiation of the cell lines resulted in a substantial increase in endocytosis of both proteins as compared to untreated cells that did not merely reflect their disparate plasma concentrations. Factor IX, which does not associate with platelets or megakaryocytes, was not endocytosed by any of the cells examined. Endocytosis of factor V by megakaryocytes proceeds through a specific and independent mechanism as CHRF-288 cells endocytosed fibrinogen but not factor V, and the presence of other plasma proteins had no effect on the endocytosis of factor V by MEG-01 cells. Furthermore, as the endocytosis of factor V was also demonstrated to occur through a clathrin-dependent mechanism, these combined data demonstrate that endocytosis of factor V by megakaryocytes occurs via a specific, independent, and most probably receptor-mediated, event.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75473/1/j.1538-7836.2005.01190.x.pd

    The Na+/H+ Exchanger Controls Deoxycholic Acid-Induced Apoptosis by a H+-Activated, Na+-Dependent Ionic Shift in Esophageal Cells

    Get PDF
    Apoptosis resistance is a hallmark of cancer cells. Typically, bile acids induce apoptosis. However during gastrointestinal (GI) tumorigenesis the cancer cells develop resistance to bile acid-induced cell death. To understand how bile acids induce apoptosis resistance we first need to identify the molecular pathways that initiate apoptosis in response to bile acid exposure. In this study we examined the mechanism of deoxycholic acid (DCA)-induced apoptosis, specifically the role of Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE) and Na+ influx in esophageal cells. In vitro studies revealed that the exposure of esophageal cells (JH-EsoAd1, CP-A) to DCA (0.2 mM -0.5 mM) caused lysosomal membrane perturbation and transient cytoplasmic acidification. Fluorescence microscopy in conjunction with atomic absorption spectrophotometry demonstrated that this effect on lysosomes correlated with influx of Na+, subsequent loss of intracellular K+, an increase of Ca2+ and apoptosis. However, ethylisopropyl-amiloride (EIPA), a selective inhibitor of NHE, prevented Na+, K+ and Ca2+ changes and caspase 3/7 activation induced by DCA. Ouabain and amphotericin B, two drugs that increase intracellular Na+ levels, induced similar changes as DCA (ion imbalance, caspase3/7 activation). On the contrary, DCA-induced cell death was inhibited by medium with low a Na+ concentrations. In the same experiments, we exposed rat ileum ex-vivo to DCA with or without EIPA. Severe tissue damage and caspase-3 activation was observed after DCA treatment, but EIPA almost fully prevented this response. In summary, NHE-mediated Na+ influx is a critical step leading to DCA-induced apoptosis. Cells tolerate acidification but evade DCA-induced apoptosis if NHE is inhibited. Our data suggests that suppression of NHE by endogenous or exogenous inhibitors may lead to apoptosis resistance during GI tumorigenesis

    Coal-derived liquid asphaltenes diffusion and adsorption in supported hydrotreating catalysts

    No full text
    RAFFINAGE+LRO:JST:CGE:MTFHindered diffusion and adsorption phenomena of coal asphaltenes inside the porous network of hydrotreating catalysts are discussed in this paper. After solvent extraction from a coal-derived liquid and solubilization in THF, asphaltenes were contacted with a series of mesoporous hydrotreating catalysts and adsorption-diffusion phenomena recorded by UV-Vis spectroscopy measurements. The effect of the porosity of various NiMo(P) catalysts supported on monomodal mesoporous or bimodal (meso-macro) alumina carrier was investigated. The parameters estimations have been performed, discussed and those obtained with the bimodal (meso-macro) alumina catalyst have been compared to petroleum asphaltenes data [31]. The range of studied concentrations corresponds to cluster formation domain. The results evidence that coal asphaltenes aggregates are smaller, have lower molecular weight and exhibit a much higher diffusion coefficient than petroleum asphaltene aggregates. These results bring important insights for the interpretation of the performance of the catalysts during coal-derived liquid upgrading. Concerning adsorption phenomena, the adsorption constants of coal asphaltenes and petroleum asphaltenes have been found equivalent. The adsorption saturation concentration of coal asphaltenes is higher than that of petroleum asphaltenes. The effective diffusion coefficients obtained at ambient temperature were correlated to the catalytic performances observed during coal-derived liquid hydrotreatment. It points out that the conversion of coal-derived liquid into the porous network of our catalyst is a hindered phenomenon, and that pore size distribution of the support has a great influence on the hydroliquefaction efficiency. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Hypertextual navigation operationalizing generic clinical practice guidelines for patient-specific therapeutic decisions.

    No full text
    Despite the proliferation of implemented clinical practice guidelines, there is still little evidence of physicians compliance to formal standards. The ONCODOC project proposes a framework for elaborating generic decision support guidelines in a document-based paradigm with a knowledge-based approach. It has been first applied to assist clinicians in the treatment of breast cancer patients. Therapeutic expertise has been encoded as a decision tree. The decision process is driven by the clinician who interactively browses a hypertext version of the decision tree. During the navigation, he incrementally assigns values to decision parameters on the basis of his free interpretation of his patient's condition and thus builds a clinical context leading to patient-specific therapeutic recommendations. These guidelines are distributed on a hospital intranet and are evaluated at the point of care in an oncology department
    • …
    corecore