87 research outputs found

    Benchmark performance of low-cost Sb2Se3 photocathodes for unassisted solar overall water splitting

    Get PDF
    Determining cost-effective semiconductors exhibiting desirable properties for commercial photoelectrochemical water splitting remains a challenge. Herein, we report a Sb2Se3 semiconductor that satisfies most requirements for an ideal high-performance photoelectrode, including a small band gap and favourable cost, optoelectronic properties, processability, and photocorrosion stability. Strong anisotropy, a major issue for Sb2Se3, is resolved by suppressing growth kinetics via close space sublimation to obtain high-quality compact thin films with favourable crystallographic orientation. The Sb2Se3 photocathode exhibits a high photocurrent density of almost 30mAcm(-2) at 0V against the reversible hydrogen electrode, the highest value so far. We demonstrate unassisted solar overall water splitting by combining the optimised Sb2Se3 photocathode with a BiVO4 photoanode, achieving a solar-to-hydrogen efficiency of 1.5% with stability over 10h under simulated 1 sun conditions employing a broad range of solar fluxes. Low-cost Sb2Se3 can thus be an attractive breakthrough material for commercial solar fuel production. While photoelectrochemical water splitting offers an integrated means to convert sunlight to a renewable fuel, cost-effective light-absorbers are rare. Here, authors report Sb2Se3 photocathodes for high-performance photoelectrochemical water splitting devices

    Increasing Trends of Leptospirosis in Northern India: A Clinico-Epidemiological Study

    Get PDF
    Leptospirosis is often not suspected by physicians in patients with acute febrile illnesses reporting from supposedly “non-endemic areas,” including north India. Clinical manifestations are protean, and complications can affect most organ systems, including liver, kidneys, lungs, and the central nervous system. Timely diagnosis and specific therapy can reduce severity of illness and, in turn, mortality. In this study conducted at a tertiary care center in north India, we find how a much-neglected disease entity has emerged as a major cause of acute febrile illness in a so called “non-endemic area.” Incidence is increasing yearly. The majority of patients were from a rural background, and were farmers or farm labourers. Poor hygiene, contact with animals, rat infestation of houses, and contact with stagnant dirty water are the major determinants of disease. Apart from the usual symptoms of intermittent fever with chill and rigor, hepatosplenomegaly, renal decompensation, muscle pain and tenderness, and conjunctival suffusion, signs and symptoms indicating involvement of the respiratory and central nervous systems were also commonly observed. Severe complications resulting in mortality do occur and is especially due to late suspicion among primary level physicians, and the resulting inappropriate therapy

    The effects of timing of fine needle aspiration biopsies on gene expression profiles in breast cancers

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>DNA microarray analysis has great potential to become an important clinical tool to individualize prognostication and treatment for breast cancer patients. However, with any emerging technology, there are many variables one must consider before bringing the technology to the bedside. There are already concerted efforts to standardize protocols and to improve reproducibility of DNA microarray. Our study examines one variable that is often overlooked, the timing of tissue acquisition, which may have a significant impact on the outcomes of DNA microarray analyses especially in studies that compare microarray data based on biospecimens taken <it>in vivo </it>and <it>ex vivo</it>.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>From 16 patients, we obtained paired fine needle aspiration biopsies (FNABs) of breast cancers taken before (PRE) and after (POST) their surgeries and compared the microarray data to determine the genes that were differentially expressed between the FNABs taken at the two time points. qRT-PCR was used to validate our findings. To examine effects of longer exposure to hypoxia on gene expression, we also compared the gene expression profiles of 10 breast cancers from clinical tissue bank.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using hierarchical clustering analysis, 12 genes were found to be differentially expressed between the FNABs taken before and after surgical removal. Remarkably, most of the genes were linked to FOS in an early hypoxia pathway. The gene expression of FOS also increased with longer exposure to hypoxia.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our study demonstrated that the timing of fine needle aspiration biopsies can be a confounding factor in microarray data analyses in breast cancer. We have shown that FOS-related genes, which have been implicated in early hypoxia as well as the development of breast cancers, were differentially expressed before and after surgery. Therefore, it is important that future studies take timing of tissue acquisition into account.</p

    First RNA-seq approach to study fruit set and parthenocarpy in zucchini (Cucurbita pepo L.)

    Full text link
    [EN] Background: Zucchini fruit set can be limited due to unfavourable environmental conditions in off-seasons crops that caused ineffective pollination/fertilization. Parthenocarpy, the natural or artificial fruit development without fertilization, has been recognized as an important trait to avoid this problem, and is related to auxin signalling. Nevertheless, differences found in transcriptome analysis during early fruit development of zucchini suggest that other complementary pathways could regulate fruit formation in parthenocarpic cultivars of this species. The development of next-generation sequencing technologies (NGS) as RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) opens a new horizon for mapping and quantifying transcriptome to understand the molecular basis of pathways that could regulate parthenocarpy in this species. The aim of the current study was to analyze fruit transcriptome of two cultivars of zucchini, a non-parthenocarpic cultivar and a parthenocarpic cultivar, in an attempt to identify key genes involved in parthenocarpy. Results: RNA-seq analysis of six libraries (unpollinated, pollinated and auxin treated fruit in a non-parthenocarpic and parthenocarpic cultivar) was performed mapping to a new version of C. pepo transcriptome, with a mean of 92% success rate of mapping. In the non-parthenocarpic cultivar, 6479 and 2186 genes were differentially expressed (DEGs) in pollinated fruit and auxin treated fruit, respectively. In the parthenocarpic cultivar, 10,497 in pollinated fruit and 5718 in auxin treated fruit. A comparison between transcriptome of the unpollinated fruit for each cultivar has been performed determining that 6120 genes were differentially expressed. Annotation analysis of these DEGs revealed that cell cycle, regulation of transcription, carbohydrate metabolism and coordination between auxin, ethylene and gibberellin were enriched biological processes during pollinated and parthenocarpic fruit set. Conclusion: This analysis revealed the important role of hormones during fruit set, establishing the activating role of auxins and gibberellins against the inhibitory role of ethylene and different candidate genes that could be useful as markers for parthenocarpic selection in the current breeding programs of zucchini.Research worked is supported by the project RTA2014-00078 from the Spanish Institute of Agronomy Research INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigacion y Tecnologia Agraria y Alimentaria) and also PP.AVA.AVA201601.7, FEDER y FSE (Programa Operativo FSE de Andalucia 2007-2013 "Andalucia se mueve con Europa"). TPV is supported by a FPI scholarship from RTA2011-00044-C02-01/02 project of INIA. The funding agencies were not involved in the design of the study, collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript.Pomares-Viciana, T.; Del Rio-Celestino, M.; Roman, B.; Die, J.; Picó Sirvent, MB.; Gómez, P. (2019). First RNA-seq approach to study fruit set and parthenocarpy in zucchini (Cucurbita pepo L.). BMC Plant Biology. 19:1-20. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-019-1632-2S12019Varga A, Bruinsma J. Tomato. In: Monselise SP, editor. CRC Handbook of Fruit Set and Development. Boca Raton: CRC Press; 1986. p. 461–80.Nepi M, Cresti L, Guarnieri M, Pacini E. Effect of relative humidity on water content, viability and carbohydrate profile of Petunia hybrid and Cucurbita pepo pollen. Plant Syst Evol. 2010;284:57–64.Gustafson FG. Parthenocarpy: natural and artificial. Bot Rev. 1942;8:599–654.Robinson RW, Reiners S. Parthenocarpy in summer squash. Hortscience. 1999;34:715–7.Pomares-Viciana T, Die J, Del Río-Celestino M, Román B, Gómez P. Auxin signalling regulation during induced and parthenocarpic fruit set in zucchini. Mol Breeding. 2017;37:56.Ozga JA, Reinecke DM. Hormonal interactions in fruit development. J Plant Growth Regul. 2003;22:73–81.Kim IS, Okubo H, Fujieda K. Endogenous levels of IAA in relation to parthenocarpy in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L). Sci Hortic. 1992;52:1–8.Olimpieri I, Siligato F, Caccia R, Mariotti L, Ceccarelli N, Soressi GP, et al. Tomato fruit set driven by pollination or by the parthenocarpic fruit allele are mediated by transcriptionally regulated gibberellin biosynthesis. Planta. 2007;226:877–88.Cui L, Zhang T, Li J, Lou Q, Chen J. Cloning and expression analysis of Cs-TIR1/AFB2: the fruit development-related genes of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.). Acta Physiol Plant. 2014;36:139–49.De Jong M, Wolters-Arts J, Feron R, Mariani C, Vriezen WH. The Solanum lycopersicum auxin response factor 7 (SlARF7) regulates auxin signalling during tomato fruit set and development. Plant J. 2009;57:160–70.Wang H, Jones B, Li Z, Frasse P, Delalande C, Regad F, Chaabouni S, Latché A, Pech JC, Bouzayen M. The tomato aux/IAA transcription factor IAA9 is involved in fruit development and leaf morphogenesis. Plant Cell. 2005;17(10):2676–92.Goetz M, Vivian-Smith A, Johnson SD, Koltunow AM. AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 8 is a negative regulator of fruit initiation in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell. 2006;18(8):1873–86.Mazzucato A, Cellini F, Bouzayen M, Zouine M, Mila I, Minoia S et al. A TILLING allele of the tomato aux/IAA9 gene offers new insights into fruit set mechanisms and perspectives for breeding seedless tomatoes. Mol Breeding. 2015; 35(22):1-15.Blanca J, Cañizares J, Roig C, Ziarsolo P, Nuez F, Picó B. Transcriptome characterization and high throughput SSRs and SNPs discovery in Cucurbita pepo (Cucurbitaceae). BMC Genomics. 2011;12:104.Wang Z, Gerstein M, Snyder M. RNA-Seq: a revolutionary tool for transcriptomics. Nat Rev Genet. 2009;10(1):57–63.Da Fonseca RR, Albrechtsen A, Themudo GE, Ramos-Madrigal J, Sibbesen JA, Maretty L, et al. Next-generation biology: sequencing and data analysis approaches for non-model organisms. Mar Genomics. 2016;30:3–13.Conesa A, Madrigal P, Tarazona S, Gomez-Cabrero D, Cervera A, McPherson A, et al. A survey of best practices for RNA-seq data analysis. Genome Biol. 2016;17:13.Li J, Cui ZWJ, Zhang T, Guo Q, Xu J, Li J, et al. Transcriptome comparison of global distinctive features between pollination and parthenocarpic fruit set reveals transcriptional phytohormone cross-talk in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L). Plant Cell Physiol. 2014;55(7):1325–42.Fu L, Niu B, Zhu Z, Wu S, Li W. CD-HIT: accelerated for clustering the next-generation sequencing data. Bioinformatics. 2012;28(23):3150–2.Montero-Pau J, Blanca J, Bombarely A, Ziarsolo P, Esteras C, Martí-Gómez C, et al. De novo assembly of the zucchini genome reveals a whole genome duplication associated with the origin of the Cucurbita genus. Plant Biotechnol J. 2017. https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.12860 .Vriezen WH, Feron R, Maretto F, Keijman J, Mariani C. Changes in tomato ovary transcriptome demonstrate complex hormonal regulation of fruit set. New Phytol. 2008;177:60–76.Tang N, Deng W, Hu G, Hu N, Li Z. Transcriptome profiling reveals the regulatory mechanism underlying pollination dependent and parthenocarpic fruit set mainly mediated by auxin and gibberellin. PLoS One. 2015;10(4):e0125355.Li J, Yan S, Yang W, Li Y, Xia M, Chen Z, et al. Transcriptomic analysis reveals the roles of microtubule-related genes and transcription factors in fruit length regulation in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.). Sci Rep. 2015;26(5):8031.Mironov V, De Veylder L, Van Montagu M, Inze D. Cyclin-dependent kinases and cell division in plants- the nexus. Plant Cell. 1999;11(4):509–22.Perrot-Rechenmann C. Cellular responses to auxin: division versus expansion. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2010;2(5):a001446.De Veylder L, Beeckman T, Beemster GT, Krols L, Terras F, Landrieu I, et al. Functional analysis of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors of Arabidopsis. Plant Cell. 2001;13:1653–68.Nieuwland J, Menges M, Murray JAH. The plant cyclins. In: Inze D, editor. Cell cycle control and plant development, vol. 2007. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing; 2007. p. 33–61.Menges M, Samland AK, Planchais S, Murray JA. The D-type cyclin CYCD3;1 is limiting for the G1-to-S-phasetransition in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell. 2006;18:893–906.Boruc J, Mylle E, Duda M, De Clercq R, Rombauts S, Geelen D, et al. Systematic localization of the Arabidopsis core cell cycle proteins reveals novel cell division complexes. Plant Physiol. 2010;152(2):553–65.Sampedro J, Cosgrove DJ. The expansin superfamily. Genome Biol. 2005;6:242.Esmon CA, Tinsley AG, Ljung K, Sandberg G, Hearne LB, Liscum E. A gradient of auxin and auxin-dependent transcription precedes tropic growth responses. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 2006;103:236–41.De Folter S, Busscher J, Colombo L, Losa A, Angenent GC. Transcript profiling of transcription factors genes during siliques development in Arabidopsis. Plant Mol Bio. 2004;56:351–3662004.Son O, Cho HY, Kim MR, Lee H, Lee MS, Song E, et al. Induction of a homeodomain-leucine zipper gene by auxin is inhibited by cytokinin in Arabidopsis roots. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2005;326(1):203–9.Olsson ASB, Engstroem P, Seoderman E. The homeobox genes ATHB12 and ATHB7 encode potential regulators of growth in response to water deficit in Arabidopsis. Plant Mol Biol. 2004;55:663–77.Merrow SB, Hopp RJ. Storage effects on winter squashes. Associations between the sugar and starch content of and the degree of preference for winter squashes. J Agric Food Chem. 1961;9:321–6.Berg JM, Tymoczko JL, Stryer L. Carbohydrates. In: Freeman WH, editor. Biochemistry. 5th ed. New York: W H Freeman; 2002.Prabhakar V, Löttgert T, Gigolashvili T, Bell K, Flügge UI, Häusler RE. Molecular and functional characterization of the plastid-localized phosphoenolpyruvate enolase (ENO1) from Arabidopsis thaliana. FEBS Lett. 2009;583(6):983–91.Rius SP, Casati P, Iglesias AA, Gomez-Casati DF. Characterization of Arabidopsis lines deficient in GAPC-1, a cytosolic NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Plant Physiol. 2008;148(3):1655–67.Van der Linde K, Gutsche N, Leffers HM, Lindermayr C, Müller B, Holtgrefe S, et al. Regulation of plant cytosolic aldolase functions by redox-modifications. Plant Physiol Biochem. 2011;49(9):946–57.Lim H, Cho MH, Jeon JS, Bhoo SH, Kwon YK, Hahn TR. Altered expression of pyrophosphate: fructose-6-phosphate 1-phosphotransferase affects the growth of transgenic Arabidopsis plants. Mol Cells. 2009;27(6):641–9.Baud S, Wuillème S, Dubreucq B, De Almeida A, Vuagnat C, Lepiniec L, et al. Function of plastidial pyruvate kinases in seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant J. 2007;52:405–19.De Jong M, Mariani C, Vriezen WH. The role of auxin and gibberellin in tomato fruit set. J Exp Bot. 2009;60(5):1523–32.Martínez C, Manzano S, Megías Z, Garrido D, Picó B, Jamilena M. Involvement of ethylene biosynthesis and signalling in fruit set and early fruit development in zucchini squash (Cucurbita pepo L.). BMC Plant Biol. 2013;13:139.Serrani JC, Fos M, Atarés A, Garcia-martinez JL. Effect of gibberellin and auxin on parthenocarpic fruit growth induction in the cv. micro-tom of tomato. J Plant Growth Regul. 2007;26:211–21.Mapelli S. Changes in cytokinin in the fruits of parthenocarpic and normal tomatoes. Plant Sci Lett. 1981;22:227–33.Ulmasov T, Hagen G, Guilfoyle TJ. Activation and repression of transcription by auxin-response factors. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999;96:5844–9.Ulmasov T, Hagen G, Guilfoyle TJ. Dimerization and DNA binding of auxin response factors. Plant J. 1999;19:309–19.Tiwari SB, Hagen G, Guilfoyle TJ. Aux/IAA proteins contain a potent transcriptional repression domain. Plant Cell. 2004;16:533–43.Switzenberg JA, Beaudry RM, Grumet R. Effect of CRC:: etr1-1 transgene expression on ethylene production, sex expression, fruit set and fruit ripening in transgenic melon (Cucumis melo L.). Transgenic Res. 2015;24(3):497-507.Nitsch LM, Oplaat C, Feron R, Ma Q, Wolters-Arts M, Hedden P, et al. Abscisic acid levels in tomato ovaries are regulated by LeNCED1 and SlCYP707A1. Planta. 2009;229(6):1335–46.Mortazavi A, Williams BA, McCue K, Schaeffer L, Wold B. Mapping and quantifying mammalian transcriptomes by RNA-seq. Nat Methods. 2008;5(7):621–8.Robinson MD, McCarthy DJ, Smyth GK. Edger: a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data. Bioinformatics. 2008;26(1):139–40.Raza K, Mishra A. A novel anticlustering filtering algorithm for the prediction of genes as a drug target. Am J Bio Engi. 2012;2(5):206–11.Van Iterson M, Boer JM, Menezes RX. Filtering, FDR and power. BMCBioinformatics. 2010;11:450.Conesa A, Götz S, Garcia-Gomez JM, Terol J, Talon M, Robles M. Blast2GO: a universal tool for annotation, visualization and analysis in functional genomics research. Bioinformatics. 2005;21:3674–6.Berardini TZ, Reiser L, Li D, Mezheritsky Y, Muller R, Strait E, Huala E. The Arabidopsis information resource: making and mining the “gold standard” annotated reference plant genome. Genesis. 2015. https://doi.org/10.1002/dvg.22877 .Bairoch A, Apweiler R. The SWISS-PROT protein sequence database and its supplement TrEMBL. Nucleic Acids Res. 2000;28(1):45–8.Johnson M, Zaretskaya I, Raytselis Y, Merezhuk Y, McGinnis S, Madden TL. NCBI BLAST: a better web interface. Nucleic Acids Res. 2008;36:W5–9.Wyatt LE, Strickler SR, Mueller LA, Mazourek M. An acorn squash (Cucurbita pepo ssp. ovifera) fruit and seed transcriptome as a resource for the study of fruit traits in Cucurbita. Hortic Res. 2015;2:14070. https://doi.org/10.1038/hortres.2014.70 .Zhang A, Ren GA, Sun YA, Guo H, Zhang SA, Zhang FA, et al. A high-density genetic map for anchoring genome sequences and identifying QTLs associated with dwarf vine in pumpkin (Cucurbita maxima Duch.). BMC Genomics. 2015;16:1101.Finn RD, Attwood TK, Babbit AB, Bork P, Bridge AJ, Chang HY. InterPro in 2017-beyond protein family and domain annotations. Nucleic Acids Res. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw1107 .Ashburner M, Ball CA, Blake JA, Botstein D, Butler H, Sherlock G. Gene ontology: tool for the unification of biology. Nat Genet. 2000;25(1):25–9.Kanehisa M, Araki M, Goto S, et al. KEGG for linking genomes to life and the environment. Nucleic Acids Res. 2008;36:480–4

    Nuclear Targeting of IGF-1 Receptor in Orbital Fibroblasts from Graves' Disease: Apparent Role of ADAM17

    Get PDF
    Insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R) comprises two subunits, including a ligand binding domain on extra- cellular IGF-1Rα and a tyrosine phosphorylation site located on IGF-1Rβ. IGF-1R is over-expressed by orbital fibroblasts in the autoimmune syndrome, Graves' disease (GD). When activated by IGF-1 or GD-derived IgG (GD-IgG), these fibroblasts produce RANTES and IL-16, while those from healthy donors do not. We now report that IGF-1 and GD-IgG provoke IGF-1R accumulation in the cell nucleus of GD fibroblasts where it co-localizes with chromatin. Nuclear IGF-1R is detected with anti-IGF-1Rα-specific mAb and migrates to approximately 110 kDa, consistent with its identity as an IGF-1R fragment. Nuclear IGF-1R migrating as a 200 kDa protein and consistent with an intact receptor was undetectable when probed with either anti-IGF-1Rα or anti-IGF-1Rβ mAbs. Nuclear redistribution of IGF-1R is absent in control orbital fibroblasts. In GD fibroblasts, it can be abolished by an IGF-1R-blocking mAb, 1H7 and by physiological concentrations of glucocorticoids. When cell-surface IGF-1R is cross-linked with 125I IGF-1, 125I-IGF-1/IGF-1R complexes accumulate in the nuclei of GD fibroblasts. This requires active ADAM17, a membrane associated metalloproteinase, and the phosphorylation of IGF-1R. In contrast, virally encoded IGF-1Rα/GFP fusion protein localizes equivalently in nuclei in both control and GD fibroblasts. This result suggests that generation of IGF-1R fragments may limit the accumulation of nuclear IGF-1R. We thus identify a heretofore-unrecognized behavior of IGF-1R that appears limited to GD-derived fibroblasts. Nuclear IGF-1R may play a role in disease pathogenesis

    A Single-Step Sequencing Method for the Identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex Species

    Get PDF
    The Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) comprises several closely related species responsible for strictly human and zoonotic tuberculosis. Some of the species are restricted to Africa and were responsible for the high prevalence of tuberculosis. However, their identification at species level is difficult and expansive. Accurate species identification of all members is warranted in order to distinguish between strict human and zoonotic tuberculosis, to trace source exposure during epidemiological studies, and for the appropriate treatment of patients. In this paper, the Exact Tandem Repeat D (ETR-D) intergenic region was investigated in order to distinguish MTC species. The ETR-D sequencing unambiguously identified MTC species type strain except M. pinnipedii and M. microti, and the results agreed with phenotypic and molecular identification. This finding offers a new tool for the rapid and accurate identification of MTC species in a single sequencing reaction, replacing the current time-consuming polyphasic approach. Its use could assist public health interventions and aid in the control of zoonotic transmission in African countries, and could be of particular interest with the current emergence of multidrug-resistant and extended-resistance isolates

    O-Glycosylation Regulates Ubiquitination and Degradation of the Anti-Inflammatory Protein A20 to Accelerate Atherosclerosis in Diabetic ApoE-Null Mice

    Get PDF
    Background: Accelerated atherosclerosis is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in diabetic patients. Hyperglycemia is a recognized independent risk factor for heightened atherogenesis in diabetes mellitus (DM). However, our understanding of the mechanisms underlying glucose damage to the vasculature remains incomplete. Methodology/Principal Findings: High glucose and hyperglycemia reduced upregulation of the NF-κB inhibitory and atheroprotective protein A20 in human coronary endothelial (EC) and smooth muscle cell (SMC) cultures challenged with Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha (TNF), aortae of diabetic mice following Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) injection used as an inflammatory insult and in failed vein-grafts of diabetic patients. Decreased vascular expression of A20 did not relate to defective transcription, as A20 mRNA levels were similar or even higher in EC/SMC cultured in high glucose, in vessels of diabetic C57BL/6 and FBV/N mice, and in failed vein grafts of diabetic patients, when compared to controls. Rather, decreased A20 expression correlated with post-translational O-Glucosamine-N-Acetylation (O-GlcNAcylation) and ubiquitination of A20, targeting it for proteasomal degradation. Restoring A20 levels by inhibiting O-GlcNAcylation, blocking proteasome activity, or overexpressing A20, blocked upregulation of the receptor for advanced glycation end-products (RAGE) and phosphorylation of PKCβII, two prime atherogenic signals triggered by high glucose in EC/SMC. A20 gene transfer to the aortic arch of diabetic ApoE null mice that develop accelerated atherosclerosis, attenuated vascular expression of RAGE and phospho-PKCβII, significantly reducing atherosclerosis. Conclusions: High glucose/hyperglycemia regulate vascular A20 expression via O-GlcNAcylation-dependent ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. This could be key to the pathogenesis of accelerated atherosclerosis in diabetes

    Global Analysis of Gene Expression Profiles in Developing Physic Nut (Jatropha curcas L.) Seeds

    Get PDF
    Background: Physic nut (Jatropha curcas L.) is an oilseed plant species with high potential utility as a biofuel. Furthermore, following recent sequencing of its genome and the availability of expressed sequence tag (EST) libraries, it is a valuable model plant for studying carbon assimilation in endosperms of oilseed plants. There have been several transcriptomic analyses of developing physic nut seeds using ESTs, but they have provided limited information on the accumulation of stored resources in the seeds. Methodology/Principal Findings: We applied next-generation Illumina sequencing technology to analyze global gen
    corecore