25 research outputs found

    Reliability and Validity of the Nursing Student Competency Assessment Instrument and Related Factors

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    The purpose of this study was to confirm the reliability and validity of the competency assessment index of nursing students and to identify the factors associated with competency. An anonymous self-administered questionnaire survey was conducted on nursing students enrolled from April 2021 to March 2022. Principal component analysis and Cronbach’s alpha coefficient were used to examine the reliability and validity of the competency factor structure. Multiple regression analysis was used to analyze related factors. As a result, the reliability and validity of the factor structure of competency were statistically clarified. As related factors of competency, “grade level” and “thinking that learning in university education gives students confidence” and “cognitive regulation strategies” were identified. In the analysis by competency sub-factors, other than grade level,[ relationship building] was affected by “being immersed in university education,” [ethical care] and [cooperation and collaboration] by “thinking that learning in university education gives students confidence”, and[ health problem-solving] and[ professional development] by “cognitive regulation strategies”. The importance of recommending experiential education in clinical practice, strengthening self-regulated learning strategies, and education to increase students’ self-confidence were suggested. The results of this study contribute to the reconstruction of education in which competencies are shared with students

    Detection of Progeny Immune Responses after Intravenous Administration of DNA Vaccine to Pregnant Mice

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    A number of factors influence the development of tolerance, including the nature, concentration and mode of antigen presentation to the immune system, as well as the age of the host. The studies were conducted to determine whether immunizing pregnant mice with liposome-encapsulated DNA vaccines had an effect on the immune status of their offspring. Two different plasmids (encoding antigens from HIV-1 and influenza virus) were administered intravenously to pregnant mice. At 9.5 days post conception with cationic liposomes, injected plasmid was present in the tissues of the fetus, consistent with trans-placental transfer. When the offspring of vaccinated dams were immunized with DNA vaccine, they mounted stronger antigen-specific immune responses than controls and were protected against challenge by homologous influenza virus after vaccination. Moreover, such immune responses were strong in the offspring of mothers injected with DNA plasmid 9.5 days after coitus. These results suggest that DNA vaccinated mothers confer the antigen-specific immunity to their progeny. Here we describe the methods in detail as they relate to our previously published work

    The effect of Ndrg2 expression on astroglial activation

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    N-myc downstream-regulated gene 2 (Ndrg2) is a differentiation- and stress-associated molecule predominantly expressed in astrocytes in the central nervous system (CNS). To study the expression and possible role of Ndrg2 in quiescent and activated astrocytes, mice were administrated with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropypridine (MPTP), a Parkinson disease (PD)-related neurotoxin which causes both neurodegeneration and glial activation. Immunohistological analysis revealed that Ndrg2 was highly expressed in both types of astrocytes, but less so in astrocytes during the early process of activation. Ndrg2 was also expressed in astrocyte-like cells, but not in neurons, in human brains from PD and Cortico-basal degeneration (CBD) patients. In cultured astrocytes, gene silencing of Ndrg2 significantly enhanced the numbers of 5-bromo-2′-deoxy-uridine (BrdU)-incorporated and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-positive cells, and reduced the length of cell processes and the amount of F-actin. In contrast, adenovirus-mediated overexpression of Ndrg2 significantly reduced the numbers of BrdU-incorporated and PCNA-positive cells, and enhanced the amount of F-actin. Fractionation and immunocytochemical analysis further revealed that Ndrg2 was located in different cellular fractions including the cytosol and cell surface membranes. These results suggest that Ndrg2 may regulate astroglial activation through the suppression of cell proliferation and stabilization of cell morphology. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Plastid signalling under multiple conditions is accompanied by a common defect in RNA editing in plastids

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    Retrograde signalling from the plastid to the nucleus, also known as plastid signalling, plays a key role in coordinating nuclear gene expression with the functional state of plastids. Inhibitors that cause plastid dysfunction have been suggested to generate specific plastid signals related to their modes of action. However, the molecules involved in plastid signalling remain to be identified. Genetic studies indicate that the plastid-localized pentatricopeptide repeat protein GUN1 mediates signalling under several plastid signalling-related conditions. To elucidate further the nature of plastid signals, investigations were carried out to determine whether different plastid signal-inducing treatments had similar effects on plastids and on nuclear gene expression. It is demonstrated that norflurazon and lincomycin treatments and the plastid protein import2-2 (ppi2-2) mutation, which causes a defect in plastid protein import, all resulted in similar changes at the gene expression level. Furthermore, it was observed that these three treatments resulted in defective RNA editing in plastids. This defect in RNA editing was not a secondary effect of down-regulation of pentatricopeptide repeat protein gene expression in the nucleus. The results indicate that these three treatments, which are known to induce plastid signals, affect RNA editing in plastids, suggesting an unprecedented link between plastid signalling and RNA editing

    Interplay between I308 and Y310 residues in the third repeat of microtubule-binding domain is essential for tau filament formation

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    AbstractInvestigation of the mechanism of tau polymerization is indispensable for finding inhibitory conditions or identifying compounds preventing the formation of paired helical filament or oligomers. Tau contains a microtubule-binding domain consisting of three or four repeats in its C-terminal half. It has been considered that the key event in tau polymerization is the formation of a β-sheet structure arising from a short hexapeptide 306VQIVYK311 in the third repeat of tau. In this paper, we report for the first time that the C–H⋯π interaction between Ile308 and Tyr310 is the elemental structural scaffold essential for forming a dry “steric zipper” structure in tau amyloid fibrils
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