46 research outputs found

    Effects of treatment of acromegaly with Sandostatin® LAR® on lipolytic enzymes and cholesteryl ester transfer protein activities

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    A study on the effect of testosterone replacement on the development of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA)

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    The clinical genetics of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 in Chinese

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    Loss of epigenetic regulator TET2 and oncogenic KIT regulate myeloid cell transformation via PI3K pathway

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    Mutations in KIT and TET2 are associated with myeloid malignancies. We show that loss of TET2-induced PI3K activation and -increased proliferation is rescued by targeting the p110α/δ subunits of PI3K. RNA-Seq revealed a hyperactive c-Myc signature in Tet2-/- cells, which is normalized by inhibiting PI3K signaling. Loss of TET2 impairs the maturation of myeloid lineage-derived mast cells by dysregulating the expression of Mitf and Cebpa, which is restored by low-dose ascorbic acid and 5-azacytidine. Utilizing a mouse model in which the loss of TET2 precedes the expression of oncogenic Kit, similar to the human disease, results in the development of a non-mast cell lineage neoplasm (AHNMD), which is responsive to PI3K inhibition. Thus, therapeutic approaches involving hypomethylating agents, ascorbic acid, and isoform-specific PI3K inhibitors are likely to be useful for treating patients with TET2 and KIT mutations

    A dependent nominal type theory

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    Nominal abstract syntax is an approach to representing names and binding pioneered by Gabbay and Pitts. So far nominal techniques have mostly been studied using classical logic or model theory, not type theory. Nominal extensions to simple, dependent and ML-like polymorphic languages have been studied, but decidability and normalization results have only been established for simple nominal type theories. We present a LF-style dependent type theory extended with name-abstraction types, prove soundness and decidability of beta-eta-equivalence checking, discuss adequacy and canonical forms via an example, and discuss extensions such as dependently-typed recursion and induction principles

    Evidence for a wide extra-astrocytic distribution of S100B in human brain

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    BACKGROUND: S100B is considered an astrocytic in-situ marker and protein levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or serum are often used as biomarker for astrocytic damage or dysfunction. However, studies on S100B in the human brain are rare. Thus, the distribution of S100B was studied by immunohistochemistry in adult human brains to evaluate its cell-type specificity. RESULTS: Contrary to glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), which selectively labels astrocytes and shows only faint ependymal immunopositivity, a less uniform staining pattern was seen in the case of S100B. Cells with astrocytic morphology were primarily stained by S100B in the human cortex, while only 20% (14–30%) or 14% (7–35%) of all immunopositive cells showed oligodendrocytic morphology in the dorsolateral prefrontal and temporal cortices, respectively. In the white matter, however, most immunostained cells resembled oligodendrocytes [frontal: 75% (57–85%); temporal: 73% (59–87%); parietal: 79% (62–89%); corpus callosum: 93% (86–97%)]. S100B was also found in ependymal cells, the choroid plexus epithelium, vascular endothelial cells, lymphocytes, and several neurones. Anti-myelin basic protein (MBP) immunolabelling showed an association of S100B with myelinated fibres, whereas GFAP double staining revealed a distinct subpopulation of cells with astrocytic morphology, which solely expressed S100B but not GFAP. Some of these cells showed co-localization of S100B and A2B5 and may be characterized as O2A glial progenitor cells. However, S100B was not detected in microglial cells, as revealed by double-immunolabelling with HLA-DR. CONCLUSION: S100B is localized in many neural cell-types and is less astrocyte-specific than GFAP. These are important results in order to avoid misinterpretation in the identification of normal and pathological cell types in situ and in clinical studies since S100B is continuously used as an astrocytic marker in animal models and various human diseases

    Effects of treatment with Sandostatin® LAP® on small dense LDL and remnant-like lipoproteins in patients with acromegaly

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    OBJECTIVE: Acromegalic patients have been shown to have an increase in the concentrations of small dense low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and remnant-like lipoprotein particles (RLP).These lipoproteins are atherogenic and may contribute to the cardiovascular risk of these patients. The aim of this study was to determine whether treatment of acromegaly using Sandostatin® LAR® could lower these atherogenic lipoproteins. METHODS: Fourteen patients with active acromegaly were recruited and Sandostatin® LAP®, a long-acting somatostatin analogue, was given every 4 weeks by intramuscular injection for 6 months. Fasting lipids, lipoproteins, lipolytic enzymes were determined at baseline, 12 and 24 weeks after treatment. Small dense LDL was measured using density gradient ultracentrifugation and RLP-cholesterol (RLP-C) by an immunoseparation assay. RESULTS: There was already a marked reduction in GH and IGF-1 by week 8 and, in all subjects, IGF-1 levels within their respective age-specific normal range were achieved. At week 12, plasma triglyceride significantly decreased (P < 0.01) and both HDL2 (P < 0.01) and HDL3 (P < 0.01) subfractions increased. A reduction was seen in small dense LDL concentration (P < 0.05) and RLP-C (P < 0.05). Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity increased (P < 0.01 ) and the magnitude of the increase in LPL activity correlated with the increase in HDL at 3 months (r = 0.55, P < 0.05) but not with the changes in plasma triglyceride, small dense LDL or RLP-C. The improvement in plasma lipids and lipoproteins persisted until the end of the study. CONCLUSION: Sandostatin® LAR® is effective in the treatment of acromegaly and is associated with favourable changes in plasma lipids and a reduction in small dense LDL and RLP-C.link_to_subscribed_fulltex

    Resistance to thyroid hormone in a Chinese family with R429Q mutation in the thyroid hormone receptor beta gene

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    The combination of elevated serum levels of free thyroid hormones with non-suppressed thyroid-stimulating hormone suggests the differential diagnoses of resistance to thyroid hormone or thyroid-stimulating hormone-secreting pituitary tumour. Clinical differentiation of these two conditions can be difficult, because patients with thyroid hormone resistance may exhibit various combinations of hypermetabolic and hypometabolic features, and laboratory results have limited sensitivity and specificity. We report a case of resistance to thyroid hormone in a Chinese family that illustrates this difficulty. The diagnosis could only be confirmed by the identification of a known disease-causing mutation in the thyroid hormone receptor beta gene in peripheral leukocytes. Availability of genetic tests will identify more cases in the future and improve our understanding of this condition.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
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