25 research outputs found

    The Melting of Aqueous Foams

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    Diffusing-wave spectroscopy measurements show that ordinarily solid aqueous foams flow by a series of stick-slip avalanche-like rearrangements of neighboring bubbles from one tight packing configuration to another. Contrary to a recent prediction, the distribution of avalanche sizes do not obey a power-law distribution characteristic of self-organized criticality. This can be understood from a simple model of foam mechanics based on bubble-bubble interactions

    Immune-Mediated Inflammation May Contribute to the Pathogenesis of Cardiovascular Disease in Mucopolysaccharidosis Type I.

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    BackgroundCardiovascular disease, a progressive manifestation of α-L-iduronidase deficiency or mucopolysaccharidosis type I, continues in patients both untreated and treated with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or intravenous enzyme replacement. Few studies have examined the effects of α-L-iduronidase deficiency and subsequent glycosaminoglycan storage upon arterial gene expression to understand the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease.MethodsGene expression in carotid artery, ascending, and descending aortas from four non-tolerized, non-enzyme treated 19 month-old mucopolysaccharidosis type I dogs was compared with expression in corresponding vascular segments from three normal, age-matched dogs. Data were analyzed using R and whole genome network correlation analysis, a bias-free method of categorizing expression level and significance into discrete modules. Genes were further categorized based on module-trait relationships. Expression of clusterin, a protein implicated in other etiologies of cardiovascular disease, was assessed in canine and murine mucopolysaccharidosis type I aortas via Western blot and in situ immunohistochemistry.ResultsGene families with more than two-fold, significant increased expression involved lysosomal function, proteasome function, and immune regulation. Significantly downregulated genes were related to cellular adhesion, cytoskeletal elements, and calcium regulation. Clusterin gene overexpression (9-fold) and protein overexpression (1.3 to 1.62-fold) was confirmed and located specifically in arterial plaques of mucopolysaccharidosis-affected dogs and mice.ConclusionsOverexpression of lysosomal and proteasomal-related genes are expected responses to cellular stress induced by lysosomal storage in mucopolysaccharidosis type I. Upregulation of immunity-related genes implicates the potential involvement of glycosaminoglycan-induced inflammation in the pathogenesis of mucopolysaccharidosis-related arterial disease, for which clusterin represents a potential biomarker

    Is diet partly responsible for differences in COVID-19 death rates between and within countries?

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    Correction: Volume: 10 Issue: 1 Article Number: 44 DOI: 10.1186/s13601-020-00351-w Published: OCT 26 2020Reported COVID-19 deaths in Germany are relatively low as compared to many European countries. Among the several explanations proposed, an early and large testing of the population was put forward. Most current debates on COVID-19 focus on the differences among countries, but little attention has been given to regional differences and diet. The low-death rate European countries (e.g. Austria, Baltic States, Czech Republic, Finland, Norway, Poland, Slovakia) have used different quarantine and/or confinement times and methods and none have performed as many early tests as Germany. Among other factors that may be significant are the dietary habits. It seems that some foods largely used in these countries may reduce angiotensin-converting enzyme activity or are anti-oxidants. Among the many possible areas of research, it might be important to understand diet and angiotensin-converting enzyme-2 (ACE2) levels in populations with different COVID-19 death rates since dietary interventions may be of great benefit.Peer reviewe

    Combining angiotensin receptor blockade and enzyme replacement therapy for vascular disease in mucopolysaccharidosis type I

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    Vascular involvement in the genetic disorder mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I) has features of atherosclerotic disease near branch points of arterial vasculature, such as intimal thickening with disruption of the internal elastic lamina, and proliferation of macrophages and myofibroblasts. Inflammatory pathways are implicated in the pathogenesis of vascular disease in MPS I animal models, evidenced by cytokines like CD18 and TGF-β within arterial plaques. The angiotensin II-mediated inflammatory pathway is well studied in human atherosclerotic coronary artery disease. Recent work indicates treatment with the angiotensin receptor blocker losartan may improve vascular MPS I disease in mouse models. Here, we combined losartan with the standard therapy for MPS I, enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), to measure effects on cytokines in serum and aortic vasculature. Each treatment group (losartan, ERT, and their combination) equally normalized levels of cytokines that were largely differential between normal and mutant mice. Some cytokines, notably CD30 ligand, Eotaxin-2, LIX, IL-13, IL-15, GM-CSF, MCP-5, MIG, and CCL3 showed elevations in mice treated with ERT above normal or mutant levels; these elevations were reduced or absent in mice that received losartan or combination therapy. The observations suggest that losartan may impact inflammatory cascades due to MPS I and may also blunt inflammation in combination with ERT

    Didactics and characteristics of public and professional courses of selfdefense

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    Title: Didactics and characteristics of public and professional courses of selfdefense Objectives of the theses: Characterize the public and professional self-defense courses and describe their methodology Method: In the work was used theoretical-descriptive strategy grounded on qualitative research methods of data collection based on information system of personal experience and information obtained controlled interview with instructors police and self-defense instructors in the civilian sphere. Results: The methodology of teaching self-defense in a civil and professional spheres was used. Also was characterized the difference in the focus of these courses. Key words: Selfdefense, combat sports, martial arts, professional and civilian self-defense course

    A Humoral Immune Response Alters the Distribution of Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Murine Mucopolysaccharidosis Type I

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    Antibodies against recombinant proteins can significantly reduce their effectiveness in unanticipated ways. We evaluated the humoral response of mice with the lysosomal storage disease mucopolysaccharidosis type I treated with weekly intravenous recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase (rhIDU). Unlike patients, the majority of whom develop antibodies to recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase, only approximately half of the treated mice developed antibodies against recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase and levels were low. Serum from antibody-positive mice inhibited uptake of recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase into human fibroblasts by partial inhibition compared to control serum. Tissue and cellular distributions of rhIDU were altered in antibody-positive mice compared to either antibody-negative or naive mice, with significantly less recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase activity in the heart and kidney in antibody-positive mice. In the liver, recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase was preferentially found in sinusoidal cells rather than in hepatocytes in antibody-positive mice. Antibodies against recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase enhanced uptake of recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase into macrophages obtained from MPS I mice. Collectively, these results imply that a humoral immune response against a therapeutic protein can shift its distribution preferentially into macrophage-lineage cells, causing decreased availability of the protein to the cells that are its therapeutic targets

    Microarray Results From IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> Canine Arterial Samples.

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    <p>A. Principal component analysis of IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> canine arteries compared to control canine arteries clearly shows the formation of two sample clusters separating IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> and control expression. B. WGCNA dendrogram on the microarray samples showing different modules related to the Pearson correlation of the IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> and control samples. C. Heatmaps of the two major modules (turquoise and blue) formed by WGCNA showing genes upregulated (top panel) or downregulated (bottom panel) by IDUA deficiency. D. Genes significantly upregulated in IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> canine arteries include those related to immunity / inflammation (KEGG pathways: antigen processing and presentation, graft-versus-host disease), proteasomal function, and lysosomal function. E. Genes significantly downregulated in IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> canine arteries are primarily related to cellular adhesion and the cytoskeleton (placed into the dilated cardiomyopathy, focal adhesion, arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy KEGG pathways).</p

    Upregulated Genes in IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> Canine Arteries.

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    <p>The 50 upregulated genes with significant (p-value ≤ 0.05) and greater than 2-fold level of upregulation in IDUA<sup>-/-</sup> canine arteries, compared to controls. Note that some genes are represented more than once due to existence of multiple mRNA probes per gene. For the full list of significantly upregulated genes, please refer to <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0150850#pone.0150850.s007" target="_blank">S1 Table</a>.</p
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