132 research outputs found

    La iconografía del poder real: el códice miniado de los “Castigos de Sancho IV”. [RESEÑA]

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    Haro Cortés, Marta La iconografía del poder real: el códice miniado de los “Castigos de Sancho IV”. Historia y Literatura 4. Alcalá de Henares: Universidad de Alcalá, 2014. Col. 177 pp. (ISBN: 978-84-16133-32-1)

    In1-ghrelin splicing variant is associated with reduced disease-free survival of breast cancer patients and increases malignancy of breast cancer cells lines

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    OXFORD UNIVERSITY: This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Carcinogenesis following peer review. The version of record David Rincón-Fernández, Michael D Culler, Natia Tsomaia, Gema Moreno-Bueno, Raúl M Luque, Manuel D Gahete, Justo P Castaño; In1-ghrelin splicing variant is associated with reduced disease-free survival of breast cancer patients and increases malignancy of breast cancer cells lines, Carcinogenesis, Volume 39, Issue 3, 8 March 2018, Pages 447–457, https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgx146Ghrelin gene generates several variants that regulate multiple pathophysiological functions, including tumor-related processes. In1-ghrelin is a splicing variant that was previously shown to be overexpressed in breast cancer (BCa), where it correlated with proliferation markers; however, its possible association with clinical outcome of BCa patients and underlying mechanisms are still unknown. To address this issue, expression levels and clinical associations of In1-ghrelin were analyzed in a cohort of 117 BCa samples. Additionally, a battery of cellular and molecular assays was implemented using two BCa cell lines (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231), wherein the role of In1-ghrelin on proliferation, migration, dedifferentiation and signaling pathways was explored. The results generated revealed that high expression of In1-ghrelin in BCa samples was associated with lymph node metastasis and reduced disease-free survival. Indeed, In1-ghrelin overexpression stimulated proliferation and migration in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. Similar results were found by treating MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 with In1- ghrelin-derived peptides. Conversely, In1-ghrelin silencing decreased proliferation and migration capacities of MDA-MB-231. Furthermore, In1-ghrelin (but not ghrelin) overexpression increased the capacity to form mammospheres in both cell lines. These effects could be associated with activation of MAPK-ERK, Jag1/Notch, Wnt/β-catenin and/or TGF-β1 pathways. Altogether, our data indicate that In1-ghrelin could play relevant functional roles in the regulation of BCa development and progression and may provide insights to identify novel biomarkers and new therapeutic approaches for this pathology.BIO-0139, CTS-1406, PI-639-2012, PI-0541-2013 (Junta de Andalucia), BFU2013-43282-R, BFU2016-80360-R (MINECO), PI13-00651, PI16/00264 (Proyectos de Investigación en Salud FIS, funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III), GETNE Grant 2014, Merck Serono Grant 2013 and CIBERobn (to RML and JPC); PI13/00132, RETICC RD12/0036/0007, CIBERonc and S2010/BMD-2303 (to GMB

    Interim Report of the Working Group on Ecosystem Assessment of Western European Shelf Seas

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    The ICES Working Group on Ecosystem Assessment of Western European Shelf Seas (WGEAWESS) meeting was held in Lisbon (Portugal), on 24–28 April 2017. The meeting was attended by 8 participants from 4 countries and chaired by Steven Beggs, Northern Ireland (UK). This was the first year of the new 3-year Terms of Reference (ToR) for WGEAWESS. The main activities for the group at the 2017 meeting were to discuss progress and further development of work towards the ToRs a) Continue metadata compilation for all ecosystem components available for IEA development, b) Continue evaluation of data and trends for a regional Integrated Ecosystem Assessment (IEA). Identify ecosystem trends relevant to stock assessment and management. As an outcome of specific objectives to integrate the activities of WGEAWESS with sister IEA groups, the meeting was held back to back with both the ICES/HELCOM Working Group on Integrated Assessments of the Baltic Sea (WGIAB) and the Working Group on Comparative Analyses between European Atlantic and Mediterranean marine ecosystems to move towards an Ecosystem-based Approach to Fisheries (WGCOMEDA). This back to back meeting had many advantages and provided much opportunity for group integration and future collaboration

    Territorios sustentables: criterios e instrumentos para el análisis, valoración y gestión ambiental de los procesos urbano-metropolitanos. El caso Córdoba y su área metropolitana

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    La ponencia plantea avances en el marco del proyecto "Territorios sustentables: calidad del habitar y del hábitat y proyecto sustentable en el territorio urbano-metropolitano. El caso de Córdoba y su Área Metropolitana", cuyo problema de investigación se define a partir de los procesos de transformación territorial del área metropolitana de Córdoba (AMC) que manifiesta problemas ambientales emergentes de los actuales estilos de desarrollo, acrecentando situaciones de fragmentación socio-espacial. Objetivos generales del proyecto marco: a) analizar críticamente modos actuales de producción del hábitat y sus efectos socio-ambientales en los territorios urbano-metropolitanos en el AMC. b) articular enfoques y metodologías de calidad sustentable en procesos y productos a nivel de territorio y ciudad, para el análisis de sustentabilidad de las transformaciones territoriales. c) definir una metodología integrada basada indicadores territoriales y ambientales complejos para evaluar las intervenciones en los territorios metropolitanos. d) establecer criterios de calidad sustentable y resiliencia urbana, a los fines de formular orientaciones para el ordenamiento, gestión y producción sustentable de los territorios urbano-metropolitanos. Objetivos específicos de esta etapa planteados en esta presentación: a) identificar los componentes territoriales para su evaluación integrada desde el enfoque de calidad sustentable; b) definir indicadores y matrices de evaluación ambiental desde el enfoque de calidad sustentable. Metodología: definición del perfil ambiental local e identificación de componentes ambientales relevantes para la construcción de parámetros e indicadores; construcción de parámetros, indicadores y matrices de valoración desde el enfoque de calidad sustentable, los criterios Holcim y las dimensiones ambientales de sustentabilidad; ponderación de relevancia de indicadores para su posterior valoración.Fil: Ávila, Víctor D. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaFil: Barotto, Daniel E. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaFil: Rincón, David M. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaFil: Terreno, Cristián Gabriel. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaFil: Charras, María Alejandra. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaFil: Rincón, David M. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaFil: Terreno, Cristián Gabriel. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño; ArgentinaEstudios Urbanos (Planeamiento y Desarrollo

    Análisis de las velocidades de operación en los carriles mixtos de las troncales del transporte masivo en bogotá – hacia una propuesta de aumento de la velocidad máxima permitida

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    En este artículo se presentan las velocidades de operación de los vehículos que circulan por lo carriles mixtos del sistema de transporte masivo de Bogotá, para lo cual se analizaron seis corredores: autopista Norte, calle 80, carrera 30, avenida de lasAméricas, avenida Suba y la calle 26; se hicieron mediciones de velocidades puntuales por medio de medidas directas con radar; se realizaron cálculos de las velocidades máximas seguras y cómodas a las que se podría circular sin que se afecte la seguridad de los usuarios de cada corredor analizado, con lo cual se pretende emitir una propuesta de velocidades máximas de operación para cada uno de estos corredores

    In1-ghrelin splicing variant is overexpressed in pituitary adenomas and increases their aggressive features

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    Pituitary adenomas comprise a heterogeneous subset of pathologies causing serious comorbidities, which would benefit from identification of novel, common molecular/cellular biomarkers and therapeutic targets. The ghrelin system has been linked to development of certain endocrine-related cancers. Systematic analysis of the presence and functional implications of some components of the ghrelin system, including native ghrelin, receptors and the recently discovered splicing variant In1-ghrelin, in human normal pituitaries (n 5 11) and pituitary adenomas (n 5 169) revealed that expression pattern of ghrelin system suffers a clear alteration in pituitary adenomasas comparedwith normal pituitary, where In1-ghrelin is markedly overexpressed. Interestingly, in cultured pituitary adenoma cells In1-ghrelin treatment (acylated peptides at 100 nM; 24–72 h) increasedGHandACTHsecretion, Ca21 and ERK1/2 signaling and cell viability, whereas In1-ghrelin silencing (using a specific siRNA; 100 nM) reduced cell viability. These results indicate that an alteration of the ghrelin system, specially its In1-ghrelin variant, could contribute to pathogenesis of different pituitary adenomas types, and suggest that this variant and its related ghrelin system could provide new tools to identify novel, more general diagnostic, prognostic and potential therapeutic targets in pituitary tumors

    A histologic scoring system for prognosis of patients with Alcoholic hepatitis

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    BACKGROUND & AIMS: There is no histologic classification system to determine prognoses of patients with alcoholic hepatitis (AH). We identified histologic features associated with disease severity and created a histologic scoring system to predict short-term (90-day) mortality. METHODS: We analyzed data from 121 patients admitted to the Liver Unit (Hospital Clinic, Barcelona, Spain) from January 2000 to January 2008 with features of AH and developed a histologic scoring system to determine the risk of death using logistic regression. The system was tested and updated in a test set of 96 patients from 5 academic centers in the United States and Europe, and a semiquantitative scoring system called the Alcoholic Hepatitis Histologic Score (AHHS) was developed. The system was validated in an independent set of 109 patients. Interobserver agreement was evaluated by weighted κ statistical analysis. RESULTS: The degree of fibrosis, degree of neutrophil infiltration, type of bilirubinostasis, and presence of megamitochondria were independently associated with 90-day mortality. We used these 4 parameters to develop the AHHS to identify patients with a low (0-3 points), moderate (4-5 points), or high (6-9 points) risk of death within 90 days (3%, 19%, and 51%, respectively; P < .0001). The AHHS estimated 90-day mortality in the training and test sets with an area under the receiver operating characteristic value of 0.77 (95% confidence interval, 0.71-0.83). Interrater agreement values were 0.65 for fibrosis, 0.86 for bilirubinostasis, 0.60 for neutrophil infiltration, and 0.46 for megamitochondria. Interestingly, the type of bilirubinostasis predicted the development of bacterial infections. CONCLUSIONS: We identified histologic features associated with the severity of AH and developed a patient classification system that might be used in clinical decision making

    Mortality and other adverse outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus admitted for COVID-19 in association with glucose-lowering drugs: a nationwide cohort study

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    Background: Limited evidence exists on the role of glucose-lowering drugs in patients with COVID-19. Our main objective was to examine the association between in-hospital death and each routine at-home glucose-lowering drug both individually and in combination with metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus admitted for COVID-19. We also evaluated their association with the composite outcome of the need for ICU admission, invasive and non-invasive mechanical ventilation, or in-hospital death as well as on the development of in-hospital complications and a long-time hospital stay. Methods: We selected all patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus in the Spanish Society of Internal Medicine's registry of COVID-19 patients (SEMI-COVID-19 Registry). It is an ongoing, observational, multicenter, nationwide cohort of patients admitted for COVID-19 in Spain from March 1, 2020. Each glucose-lowering drug user was matched with a user of other glucose-lowering drugs in a 1:1 manner by propensity scores. In order to assess the adequacy of propensity score matching, we used the standardized mean difference found in patient characteristics after matching. There was considered to be a significant imbalance in the group if a standardized mean difference > 10% was found. To evaluate the association between treatment and study outcomes, both conditional logit and mixed effect logistic regressions were used when the sample size was ≥ 100. Results: A total of 2666 patients were found in the SEMI-COVID-19 Registry, 1297 on glucose-lowering drugs in monotherapy and 465 in combination with metformin. After propensity matching, 249 patients on metformin, 105 on dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors, 129 on insulin, 127 on metformin/dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors, 34 on metformin/sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor, and 67 on metformin/insulin were selected. No at-home glucose-lowering drugs showed a significant association with in-hospital death; the composite outcome of the need of intensive care unit admission, mechanical ventilation, or in-hospital death; in-hospital complications; or long-time hospital stays. Conclusions: In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus admitted for COVID-19, at-home glucose-lowering drugs showed no significant association with mortality and adverse outcomes. Given the close relationship between diabetes and COVID-19 and the limited evidence on the role of glucose-lowering drugs, prospective studies are needed

    Local and regional components of aerosol in a heavily trafficked street canyon in central London derived from PMF and cluster analysis of single-particle ATOFMS spectra.

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    Positive matrix factorization (PMF) has been applied to single particle ATOFMS spectra collected on a six lane heavily trafficked road in central London (Marylebone Road), which well represents an urban street canyon. PMF analysis successfully extracted 11 factors from mass spectra of about 700,000 particles as a complement to information on particle types (from K-means cluster analysis). The factors were associated with specific sources and represent the contribution of different traffic related components (i.e., lubricating oils, fresh elemental carbon, organonitrogen and aromatic compounds), secondary aerosol locally produced (i.e., nitrate, oxidized organic aerosol and oxidized organonitrogen compounds), urban background together with regional transport (aged elemental carbon and ammonium) and fresh sea spray. An important result from this study is the evidence that rapid chemical processes occur in the street canyon with production of secondary particles from road traffic emissions. These locally generated particles, together with aging processes, dramatically affected aerosol composition producing internally mixed particles. These processes may become important with stagnant air conditions and in countries where gasoline vehicles are predominant and need to be considered when quantifying the impact of traffic emissions.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available via ACS at http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es506249z
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