12 research outputs found

    Exploring Eye Movements in Patients with Glaucoma When Viewing a Driving Scene

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    Glaucoma is a progressive eye disease and a leading cause of visual disability. Automated assessment of the visual field determines the different stages in the disease process: it would be desirable to link these measurements taken in the clinic with patient's actual function, or establish if patients compensate for their restricted field of view when performing everyday tasks. Hence, this study investigated eye movements in glaucomatous patients when viewing driving scenes in a hazard perception test (HPT)

    A Human IgSF Cell-Surface Interactome Reveals a Complex Network of Protein-Protein Interactions

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    Cell-surface protein-protein interactions (PPIs) mediate cell-cell communication, recognition, and responses. We executed an interactome screen of 564 human cell-surface and secreted proteins, most of which are immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) proteins, using a high-throughput, automated ELISA-based screening platform employing a pooled-protein strategy to test all 318,096 PPI combinations. Screen results, augmented by phylogenetic homology analysis, revealed ∼380 previously unreported PPIs. We validated a subset using surface plasmon resonance and cell binding assays. Observed PPIs reveal a large and complex network of interactions both within and across biological systems. We identified new PPIs for receptors with well-characterized ligands and binding partners for “orphan” receptors. New PPIs include proteins expressed on multiple cell types and involved in diverse processes including immune and nervous system development and function, differentiation/proliferation, metabolism, vascularization, and reproduction. These PPIs provide a resource for further biological investigation into their functional relevance and may offer new therapeutic drug targets

    A Human IgSF Cell-Surface Interactome Reveals a Complex Network of Protein-Protein Interactions

    Get PDF
    Cell-surface protein-protein interactions (PPIs) mediate cell-cell communication, recognition, and responses. We executed an interactome screen of 564 human cell-surface and secreted proteins, most of which are immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) proteins, using a high-throughput, automated ELISA-based screening platform employing a pooled-protein strategy to test all 318,096 PPI combinations. Screen results, augmented by phylogenetic homology analysis, revealed ∼380 previously unreported PPIs. We validated a subset using surface plasmon resonance and cell binding assays. Observed PPIs reveal a large and complex network of interactions both within and across biological systems. We identified new PPIs for receptors with well-characterized ligands and binding partners for “orphan” receptors. New PPIs include proteins expressed on multiple cell types and involved in diverse processes including immune and nervous system development and function, differentiation/proliferation, metabolism, vascularization, and reproduction. These PPIs provide a resource for further biological investigation into their functional relevance and may offer new therapeutic drug targets

    Visual performance fall-off with eccentricity in myopes versus emmetropes

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    Purpose: To compare the central and peripheral visual performance of myopic and emmetropic eyes. Methods: Thirty emmetropic (−0.50 to +0.50 D) and 60 myopic (−2.00 to −9.62 D) subjects were recruited. Resolution acuity was assessed at central and 12 peripheral retinal locations (±10°, ±20°, ±30° along the horizontal meridian, and ±10°, ±20°, ±25° along the vertical meridian) using a modified version of the Contrast Acuity Assessment test at low (δl/l = 14%) and high (δl/l = 100%) contrast levels. The central and peripheral data were analysed using univariate and repeated-measures analysis of variance respectively. In addition, asymmetries in visual function, along both the horizontal (temporal versus nasal) and vertical (superior versus inferior) meridians, were investigated. Results: When analysed in terms of acuity fall-off with eccentricity, repeated measures ANOVA exhibited a statistically significant difference in peripheral visual performance between refractive groups for high contrast stimuli (p = 0.025), with a more rapid fall-off in myopes compared to emmetropes. Nasal and superior retinal regions performed better than temporal (high contrast: p < 0.001, low contrast: p < 0.001) and inferior (high contrast: p < 0.001, low contrast: p = 0.003) regions for both refractive groups, consistent with differences between quadrants in neural cell density reported by histological studies. Conclusion: The myopic patients evaluated in this study exhibited reduced peripheral visual performance compared to their emmetropic counterparts when assessed using the Contrast Acuity Assessment test at high contrast level

    Addressing inequalities in eye health with subsidies and increased fees for General Ophthalmic Services in socio-economically deprived communities: A sensitivity analysis

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    Objectives: Poor knowledge of eye health, concerns about the cost of spectacles, mistrust of optometrists and limited geographical access in socio-economically deprived areas are barriers to accessing regular eye examinations and result in low uptake and subsequent late presentation to ophthalmology clinics. Personal Medical Services (PMS) were introduced in the late 1990s to provide locally negotiated solutions to problems associated with inequalities in access to primary care. An equivalent approach to delivery of optometric services could address inequalities in the uptake of eye examinations. Study design: One-way and multiway sensitivity analyses. Methods: Variations in assumptions were included in the models for equipment and accommodation costs, uptake and length of appointments. The sensitivity analyses thresholds were cost-per-person tested below the GOS1 fee paid by the NHS and achieving break-even between income and expenditure, assuming no cross-subsidy from profits from sales of optical appliances. Results: Cost per test ranged from £24.01 to £64.80 and subsidy required varied from £14,490 to £108,046. Unused capacity utilised for local enhanced service schemes such as glaucoma referral refinement reduced the subsidy needed. Conclusions: In order to support the financial viability of primary eye care in socio-economically deprived communities, income is required from additional subsidies or from sources other than eye examinations, such as ophthalmic or other optometric community services. This would require a significant shift of activity from secondary to primary care locations. The subsidy required could also be justified by the utility gain from earlier detection of preventable sight loss.Yorkshire Eye Research, NHS Leeds and RNI

    Gymnastics and the reconstitution of Republican motherhood among true women of civic virtue, 1830–1870

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