1,253 research outputs found
Promotional Tone in Reviews of Menopausal Hormone Therapy After the Women's Health Initiative: An Analysis of Published Articles
Adriane Fugh-Berman and colleagues analyzed a selection of published opinion pieces on hormone therapy and show that there may be a connection between receiving industry funding for speaking, consulting, or research and the tone of such opinion pieces
Fr-TM-align: a new protein structural alignment method based on fragment alignments and the TM-score
©2008 Pandit and Skolnick; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This article is available from: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/9/531doi:10.1186/1471-2105-9-531Background: Protein tertiary structure comparisons are employed in various fields of
contemporary structural biology. Most structure comparison methods involve generation of an
initial seed alignment, which is extended and/or refined to provide the best structural superposition
between a pair of protein structures as assessed by a structure comparison metric. One such
metric, the TM-score, was recently introduced to provide a combined structure quality measure
of the coordinate root mean square deviation between a pair of structures and coverage. Using the
TM-score, the TM-align structure alignment algorithm was developed that was often found to have
better accuracy and coverage than the most commonly used structural alignment programs;
however, there were a number of situations when this was not true.
Results: To further improve structure alignment quality, the Fr-TM-align algorithm has been
developed where aligned fragment pairs are used to generate the initial seed alignments that are
then refined using dynamic programming to maximize the TM-score. For the assessment of the
structural alignment quality from Fr-TM-align in comparison to other programs such as CE and TMalign,
we examined various alignment quality assessment scores such as PSI and TM-score. The
assessment showed that the structural alignment quality from Fr-TM-align is better in comparison
to both CE and TM-align. On average, the structural alignments generated using Fr-TM-align have
a higher TM-score (~9%) and coverage (~7%) in comparison to those generated by TM-align. Fr-
TM-align uses an exhaustive procedure to generate initial seed alignments. Hence, the algorithm is
computationally more expensive than TM-align.
Conclusion: Fr-TM-align, a new algorithm that employs fragment alignment and assembly provides
better structural alignments in comparison to TM-align. The source code and executables of Fr-
TM-align are freely downloadable at: http://cssb.biology.gatech.edu/skolnick/files/FrTMalign/
ORENZA: a web resource for studying ORphan ENZyme activities
BACKGROUND: Despite the current availability of several hundreds of thousands of amino acid sequences, more than 36% of the enzyme activities (EC numbers) defined by the Nomenclature Committee of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (NC-IUBMB) are not associated with any amino acid sequence in major public databases. This wide gap separating knowledge of biochemical function and sequence information is found for nearly all classes of enzymes. Thus, there is an urgent need to explore these sequence-less EC numbers, in order to progressively close this gap. DESCRIPTION: We designed ORENZA, a PostgreSQL database of ORphan ENZyme Activities, to collate information about the EC numbers defined by the NC-IUBMB with specific emphasis on orphan enzyme activities. Complete lists of all EC numbers and of orphan EC numbers are available and will be periodically updated. ORENZA allows one to browse the complete list of EC numbers or the subset associated with orphan enzymes or to query a specific EC number, an enzyme name or a species name for those interested in particular organisms. It is possible to search ORENZA for the different biochemical properties of the defined enzymes, the metabolic pathways in which they participate, the taxonomic data of the organisms whose genomes encode them, and many other features. The association of an enzyme activity with an amino acid sequence is clearly underlined, making it easy to identify at once the orphan enzyme activities. Interactive publishing of suggestions by the community would provide expert evidence for re-annotation of orphan EC numbers in public databases. CONCLUSION: ORENZA is a Web resource designed to progressively bridge the unwanted gap between function (enzyme activities) and sequence (dataset present in public databases). ORENZA should increase interactions between communities of biochemists and of genomicists. This is expected to reduce the number of orphan enzyme activities by allocating gene sequences to the relevant enzymes
Visual Fixations Duration as an Indicator of Skill Level in eSports
Using highly interactive systems like computer games requires a lot of visual
activity and eye movements. Eye movements are best characterized by visual
fixation - periods of time when the eyes stay relatively still over an object.
We analyzed the distributions of fixation duration of professional athletes,
amateur and newbie players. We show that the analysis of fixation durations can
be used to deduce the skill level in computer game players. Highly skilled
gaming performance is characterized by more variability in fixation durations
and by bimodal fixation duration distributions suggesting the presence of two
fixation types in high skill gamers. These fixation types were identified as
ambient (automatic spatial processing) and focal (conscious visual processing).
The analysis of computer gamers' skill level via the analysis of fixation
durations may be used in developing adaptive interfaces and in interface
design.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Coding potential of the products of alternative splicing in human
Background: Analysis of the human genome has revealed that as much as an order of magnitude more of the genomic sequence is transcribed than accounted for by the predicted and characterized genes. A number of these transcripts are alternatively spliced forms of known protein coding genes; however, it is becoming clear that many of them do not necessarily correspond to a functional protein. Results: In this study we analyze alternative splicing isoforms of human gene products that are unambiguously identified by mass spectrometry and compare their properties with those of isoforms of the same genes for which no peptide was found in publicly available mass spectrometry datasets. We analyze them in detail for the presence of uninterrupted functional domains, active sites as well as the plausibility of their predicted structure. We report how well each of these strategies and their combination can correctly identify translated isoforms and derive a lower limit for their specificity, that is, their ability to correctly identify non-translated products. Conclusions: The most effective strategy for correctly identifying translated products relies on the conservation of active sites, but it can only be applied to a small fraction of isoforms, while a reasonably high coverage, sensitivity and specificity can be achieved by analyzing the presence of non-truncated functional domains. Combining the latter with an assessment of the plausibility of the modeled structure of the isoform increases both coverage and specificity with a moderate cost in terms of sensitivity
The Use of Experimental Structures to Model Protein Dynamics
The number of solved protein structures submitted in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) has increased dramatically in recent years. For some specific proteins, this number is very high—for example, there are over 550 solved structures for HIV-1 protease, one protein that is essential for the life cycle of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) which causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in humans. The large number of structures for the same protein and its variants include a sample of different conformational states of the protein. A rich set of structures solved experimentally for the same protein has information buried within the dataset that can explain the functional dynamics and structural mechanism of the protein. To extract the dynamics information and functional mechanism from the experimental structures, this chapter focuses on two methods—Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Elastic Network Models (ENM). PCA is a widely used statistical dimensionality reduction technique to classify and visualize high-dimensional data. On the other hand, ENMs are well-established simple biophysical method for modeling the functionally important global motions of proteins. This chapter covers the basics of these two. Moreover, an improved ENM version that utilizes the variations found within a given set of structures for a protein is described. As a practical example, we have extracted the functional dynamics and mechanism of HIV-1 protease dimeric structure by using a set of 329 PDB structures of this protein. We have described, step by step, how to select a set of protein structures, how to extract the needed information from the PDB files for PCA, how to extract the dynamics information using PCA, how to calculate ENM modes, how to measure the congruency between the dynamics computed from the principal components (PCs) and the ENM modes, and how to compute entropies using the PCs. We provide the computer programs or references to software tools to accomplish each step and show how to use these programs and tools. We also include computer programs to generate movies based on PCs and ENM modes and describe how to visualize them
Pegylated Interferon and Ribavirin Dosing Strategies to Enhance Sustained Virologic Response
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) affects about 170 million people worldwide and is the most common chronic blood borne infection in the United States. Since the advent of blood screening protocols in the early 1990s, injection drug use has become the leading cause of infection. Hepatitis C can have both hepatic and nonhepatic manifestations of infection. Hepatic manifestations include hepatic fibrosis, cirrhosis, liver cancer, and liver failure. The standard treatment for chronic HCV is combination therapy with pegylated interferon-α and ribavirin. Although pegylated interferon and ribavirin has been used against HCV for close to a decade, advances in therapy have centered on doses and treatment durations. There has been increasing interest in applying on-treatment response or viral kinetics to predict antiviral response rates and shape therapeutic intervention. Protease inhibitors are a promising adjuvant to combination therapy, but their efficacy and safety are still under investigation
Promotion of Prescription Drugs to Consumers and Providers, 2001–2010
Background: Pharmaceutical firms heavily promote their products and may have changed marketing strategies in response to reductions in new product approvals, restrictions on some forms of promotion, and the expanding role of biologic therapies.
Methods: We used descriptive analyses of annual cross-sectional data from 2001 through 2010 to examine direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) (Kantar Media) and provider-targeted promotion (IMS Health and SDI), including: (1) inflation-adjusted total promotion spending (36.1 billion (13.4% of sales). By 2010 it had declined to 370 million (8.8% of sales) spent on promotion, top biologics were promoted less, with only $33 million (1.4% of sales) spent per product. Little change occurred in the composition of promotion between primary care physicians and specialists from 2001–2010. Conclusions: These findings suggest that pharmaceutical companies have reduced promotion following changes in the pharmaceutical pipeline and patent expiry for several blockbuster drugs. Promotional strategies for biologic drugs differ substantially from small molecule therapies
Variation in antibiotic treatment for diabetic patients with serious foot infections: A retrospective observational study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Diabetic foot infections are common, serious, and diverse. There is uncertainty about optimal antibiotic treatment, and probably substantial variation in practice. Our aim was to document whether this is the case: A finding that would raise questions about the comparative cost-effectiveness of different regimens and also open the possibility of examining costs and outcomes to determine which should be preferred.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used the Veterans Health Administration (VA) Diabetes Epidemiology Cohorts (DEpiC) database to conduct a retrospective observational study of hospitalized patients with diabetic foot infections. DEpiC contains computerized VA and Medicare patient-level data for VA patients with diabetes since 1998, including demographics, ICD-9-CM diagnostic codes, antibiotics prescribed, and VA facility. We identified all patients with ICD-9-CM codes for cellulitis/abscess of the foot and then sub-grouped them according to whether they had cellulitis/abscess plus codes for gangrene, osteomyelitis, skin ulcer, or none of these. For each facility, we determined: 1) The proportion of patients treated with an antibiotic and the initial route of administration; 2) The first antibiotic regimen prescribed for each patient, defined as treatment with the same antibiotic, or combination of antibiotics, for at least 5 continuous days; and 3) The antibacterial spectrum of the first regimen.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We identified 3,792 patients with cellulitis/abscess of the foot either alone (16.4%), or with ulcer (32.6%), osteomyelitis (19.0%) or gangrene (32.0%). Antibiotics were prescribed for 98.9%. At least 5 continuous days of treatment with an unchanged regimen of one or more antibiotics was prescribed for 59.3%. The means and (ranges) across facilities of the three most common regimens were: 16.4%, (22.8%); 15.7%, (36.1%); and 10.8%, (50.5%). The range of variation across facilities proved substantially greater than that across the different categories of foot infection. We found similar variation in the spectrum of the antibiotic regimen.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The large variations in regimen appear to reflect differences in facility practice styles rather than case mix. It is unlikely that all regimens are equally cost-effective. Our methods make possible evaluation of many regimens across many facilities, and can be applied in further studies to determine which antibiotic regimens should be preferred.</p
Invasive pleural malignant mesothelioma with rib destruction and concurrent osteosarcoma in a dog
A 7-year-old Dachshund was clinically examined because of a 10-day history of lameness in the left hind limb. On the
basis of radiological and cytological findings, an osteosarcoma of the left acetabular region was suspected. The dog
underwent a hemipelvectomy and osteosarcoma was diagnosed by subsequent histopathological examination. An
immovable subcutaneous mass was noted on the left chest wall during the physical examination and non-septic neutrophilic
inflammation was diagnosed by cytology. Forty days later, the dog showed signs of respiratory distress with
an in-diameter increase of the subcutaneous mass up to 4 cm. Thoracic radiography and ultrasonography revealed
pleural effusion and a lytic process in the fourth left rib. Furthermore, ultrasound examination revealed a mixed
echogenic mobile structure with a diameter of around 2 cm floating within the pleural fluid of the left hemithorax
close to the pericardium. The dog underwent surgery for an en bloc resection of the subcutaneous mass together
with the fourth rib and the parietal pleura. Moreover, the left altered lung lobe, corresponding to the mobile structure
detected by ultrasound, was removed. Based on cytological, histopathological, and immunohistochemical examinations,
an invasive epithelioid pleural malignant mesothelioma was diagnosed
- …