1,071 research outputs found

    SLSC Letter Regarding End of Sierra Leone Program

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    Correspondence from Dr. Turner to Dr. Addington, informing him of the decision not to continue the Sierra Leone Program in 1971-1972 due to the expense and political unrest in Sierra Leone

    SLSC Dr. Turner Letter Requesting to Accompany Sierra Leone Trip

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    Correspondence from Dr. Turner to Mildred Stauffer explaining that he and his wife would like to accompany the 1969-1970 Sierra Leone trip

    The Otterbein Miscellany - May 1969

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    https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/miscellany/1009/thumbnail.jp

    The Otterbein Miscellany - May 1967

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    https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/miscellany/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO)-1, SUMO-2/3 and SUMOylation are involved with centromeric heterochromatin of chromosomes 9 and 1 and proteins of the synaptonemal complex during meiosis in men

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    Background: Post-transcriptional modification by SUMOylation is involved in numerous cellular processes including human spermatogenesis. For human male meiosis, we previously showed that the small ubiquitin-related modifier-1 (SUMO-1) protein localizes to chromatin axes in early pachytene spermatocytes, then to kinetochores as meiosis progresses. Here, we delineate possible functional roles based on subcellular localization for SUMO-1 and SUMO-2/3. Methods: Western and immunoprecipitation analyses were conducted on proteins isolated from the testis of two normal adult fertile men. Combinatorial immunofluorescence and chromosome-specific fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses were performed on male meiocytes obtained during testicular biopsy from four patients undergoing testicular sperm extraction for assisted reproduction technologies. Results: The synaptonemal complex (SC) and SC proteins (SCP)-1 and SCP2, but not SCP3, are SUMOylated by SUMO-1 during the pachytene substage. Likewise, two distinct localization patterns for SUMO-1 are identified: a linear pattern co-localized with autosomal SCs and isolated SUMO-1 near the centromeric heterochromatin of chromosomes 9 and 1. In contrast to SUMO-1, which is not detectable prior to pachytene in normal tissue, SUMO-2/3 is identified as early as leptotene and zygotene and in some, but not all, pachytene cells; no linear patterns were detected. Similar to SUMO-1, SUMO-2/3 localizes in two predominant subnuclear patterns: a single, dense signal near the centromere of human chromosome 9 and small, individual foci co-localized with autosomal centromeres. Conclusions: Our data suggest that SUMO-1 may be involved in maintenance and/or protection of the autosomal SC. SUMO-2/3, though expressed similarly, may function separately and independently during pachytene in men

    Prevalence and determinants of depression up to 5 years after colorectal cancer surgery : results from the ColoREctal Wellbeing (CREW) study

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    Aim: Depression experienced by people with colorectal cancer (CRC) is an important clinical problem affecting quality of life. Recognition of depression at key points in the pathway enables timely referral to support. This study aimed to examine depression before and 5 years after surgery to examine its prevalence and identify determinants. Method: The ColoREctal Wellbeing (CREW) study is a prospective UK cohort study involving 872 adults with nonmetastatic CRC recruited before surgery with curative intent. Questionnaires completed before surgery and 3, 9, 15, 24, 36, 48 and 60 months after surgery captured socioā€demographics and assessed depression (Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, CESā€D) and other psychosocial factors. Clinical details were also gathered. We present the prevalence of clinically significant depression (CESā€D ā‰„ 20) over time and its predictors assessed before and 2 years after surgery. Results: Before surgery, 21.0% of the cohort reported CESā€D ā‰„ 20 reducing to 14.7% 5 years after surgery. Presurgery risk factors predicting subsequent depression were clinically significant depression and anxiety, previous mental health service use, low selfā€efficacy, poor health, having neoadjuvant treatment and low social support. Postsurgery risk factors at 2 years predicting subsequent depression were clinically significant depression, negative affect, cognitive dysfunction, accommodation type and poor health. Conclusion: Depression is highly pervasive in people with CRC, exceeding prevalence in the general population across followā€up. Our findings emphasize the need to screen and treat depression across the pathway. Our novel data highlight key risk factors of later depression at important and opportune time points: before surgery and at the end of routine surveillance. Early recognition and timely referral to appropriate support is vital to improve longā€term psychological outcomes

    Regulation of ventilatory sensitivity and carotid body proliferation in hypoxia by the PHD2/HIF-2 pathway.

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    Ventilatory sensitivity to hypoxia increases in response to continued hypoxic exposure as part of acute acclimatisation. Although this process is incompletely understood, insights have been gained through studies of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) hydroxylase system. Genetic studies implicate these pathways widely in the integrated physiology of hypoxia, through effects on developmental or adaptive processes. In keeping with this, mice that are heterozygous for the principal HIF prolyl hydroxylase, PHD2, show enhanced ventilatory sensitivity to hypoxia and carotid body hyperplasia. Here we have sought to understand this process better through comparative analysis of inducible and constitutive inactivation of PHD2 and its principal targets HIF-1Ī± and HIF-2Ī±. We demonstrate that general inducible inactivation of PHD2 in tamoxifen-treated Phd2(f/f);Rosa26(+/CreERT2) mice, like constitutive, heterozygous PHD2 deficiency, enhances hypoxic ventilatory responses (HVRs: 7.2 Ā± 0.6 vs. 4.4 Ā± 0.4 ml min(-1) g(-1) in controls, P < 0.01). The ventilatory phenotypes associated with both inducible and constitutive inactivation of PHD2 were strongly compensated for by concomitant inactivation of HIF-2Ī±, but not HIF-1Ī±. Furthermore, inducible inactivation of HIF-2Ī± strikingly impaired ventilatory acclimatisation to chronic hypoxia (HVRs: 4.1 Ā± 0.5 vs. 8.6 Ā± 0.5 ml min(-1) g(-1) in controls, P < 0.0001), as well as carotid body cell proliferation (400 Ā± 81 vs. 2630 Ā± 390 bromodeoxyuridine-positive cells mm(-2) in controls, P < 0.0001). The findings demonstrate the importance of the PHD2/HIF-2Ī± enzyme-substrate couple in modulating ventilatory sensitivity to hypoxia

    Ethnic dissimilarity predicts belonging motive frustration and reduced organizational attachment

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    Some empirical studies show negative consequences of being demographically different from oneā€™s group, but the underlying psychological mechanisms are not well understood. To address this gap, we investigated the role of the belonging and distinctiveness motives in individualsā€™ experiences of being ethnically dissimilar from their group. We propose that ethnic dissimilarity satisfies group membersā€™ need for distinctiveness whereas it frustrates membersā€™ need for belonging, and this frustration reduces their organizational attachment. An experimental study showed that ethnic dissimilarity led to heightened arousal of the belonging motive, indicating that this motive was frustrated. In a naturalistic study of real-life student groups, ethnic dissimilarity was associated with frustrated belonging, which in turn was associated with reduced organizational attachment. This paper contributes to the literature on demographic dissimilarity in groups by closely examining the effect of demographic dissimilarity on group membersā€™ fundamental motives and reactions to group membership

    Survival Data and Predictors of Functional Outcome an Average of 15ā€‰Years after the Fontan Procedure: The Pediatric Heart Network Fontan Cohort

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    ObjectiveMulticenter longitudinal outcome data for Fontan patients surviving into adulthood are lacking. The aim of this study was to better understand contemporary outcomes in Fontan survivors by collecting followā€up data in a previously wellā€characterized cohort.DesignBaseline data from the Fontan Crossā€Sectional Study (Fontan 1) were previously obtained in 546 Fontan survivors aged 11.9 Ā± 3.4ā€‰years. We assessed current transplantā€free survival status in all subjects 6.8 Ā± 0.4ā€‰years after the Fontan 1 study. Anatomic, clinical, and surgical data were collected along with socioeconomic status and access to health care.ResultsThirty subjects (5%) died or underwent transplantation since Fontan 1. Subjects with both an elevated (>21ā€‰pg/mL) brain natriuretic peptide and a low Child Health Questionnaire physical summary score (<44) measured at Fontan 1 were significantly more likely to die or undergo transplant than the remainder, with a hazard ratio of 6.2 (2.9ā€“13.5). Among 516 Fontan survivors, 427 (83%) enrolled in this followā€up study (Fontan 2) at 18.4 Ā± 3.4ā€‰years of age. Although mean scores on functional health status questionnaires were lower than the general population, individual scores were within the normal range in 78% and 88% of subjects for the Child Health Questionnaire physical and psychosocial summary score, and 97% and 91% for the SFā€36 physical and mental aggregate score, respectively. Since Fontan surgery, 119 (28%) had additional cardiac surgery; 55% of these (n = 66) in the interim between Fontan 1 and Fontan 2. A catheter intervention occurred in 242 (57%); 32% of these (n = 78) after Fontan 1. Arrhythmia requiring treatment developed in 118 (28%) after Fontan surgery; 58% of these (n = 68) since Fontan 1.ConclusionsWe found 95% interim transplantā€free survival for Fontan survivors over an average of 7ā€‰years of followā€up. Continued longitudinal investigation into adulthood is necessary to better understand the determinants of longā€term outcomes and to improve functional health status.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110738/1/chd12193.pd

    Circulating CD14brightCD16+ 'intermediate' monocytes exhibit enhanced parasite pattern recognition in human helminth infection.

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    Circulating monocyte sub-sets have recently emerged as mediators of divergent immune functions during infectious disease but their role in helminth infection has not been investigated. In this study we evaluated whether 'classical' (CD14brightCD16-), 'intermediate' (CD14brightCD16+), and 'non-classical' (CD14dimCD16+) monocyte sub-sets from peripheral blood mononuclear cells varied in both abundance and ability to bind antigenic material amongst individuals living in a region of Northern Senegal which is co-endemic for Schistosoma mansoni and S. haematobium. Monocyte recognition of excretory/secretory (E/S) products released by skin-invasive cercariae, or eggs, of S. mansoni was assessed by flow cytometry and compared between S. mansoni mono-infected, S. mansoni and S. haematobium co-infected, and uninfected participants. Each of the three monocyte sub-sets in the different infection groups bound schistosome E/S material. However, 'intermediate' CD14brightCD16+ monocytes had a significantly enhanced ability to bind cercarial and egg E/S. Moreover, this elevation of ligand binding was particularly evident in co-infected participants. This is the first demonstration of modulated parasite pattern recognition in CD14brightCD16+ intermediate monocytes during helminth infection, which may have functional consequences for the ability of infected individuals to respond immunologically to infection
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