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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Als Mutations Of Fus Suppress Protein Translation And Disrupt The Regulation Of Nonsense-Mediated Decay, Marisa Kamelgarn, Jing Chen, Lisha Kuang, Huan Jin, Edward J. Kasarskis, Haining Zhu
Als Mutations Of Fus Suppress Protein Translation And Disrupt The Regulation Of Nonsense-Mediated Decay, Marisa Kamelgarn, Jing Chen, Lisha Kuang, Huan Jin, Edward J. Kasarskis, Haining Zhu
Toxicology and Cancer Biology Faculty Publications
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an incurable neurodegenerative disease characterized by preferential motor neuron death. Approximately 15% of ALS cases are familial, and mutations in the fused in sarcoma (FUS) gene contribute to a subset of familial ALS cases. FUS is a multifunctional protein participating in many RNA metabolism pathways. ALS-linked mutations cause a liquid–liquid phase separation of FUS protein in vitro, inducing the formation of cytoplasmic granules and inclusions. However, it remains elusive what other proteins are sequestered into the inclusions and how such a process leads to neuronal dysfunction and degeneration. In this study, we developed …
Antimalarial Proteasome Inhibitor Reveals Collateral Sensitivity From Intersubunit Interactions And Fitness Cost Of Resistance., Laura A. Kirkman, Wenhu Zhan, Joseph Visone, Alexis Dziedziech, Pradeep K. Singh, Hao Fan, Xinran Tong, Igor Bruzual, Ryoma Hara, Masanori Kawasaki, Toshihiro Imaeda, Rei Okamoto, Kenjiro Sato, Mayako Michino, Elena Fernandez Alvaro, Liselle F. Guiang, Laura M. Sanz, Daniel J. Mota, Kavitha Govindasamy, Rong Wang, Yan Ling, Patrick K. Tumwebaze, George Sukenick, Lei Shi, Jeremie Vendome, Purnima Bhanot, Philip J. Rosenthal, Kazuyoshi Aso, Michael A. Foley, Roland A. Cooper, Bjorn Kafsack, J Stone Doggett, Carl F. Nathan, Gang Lin
Antimalarial Proteasome Inhibitor Reveals Collateral Sensitivity From Intersubunit Interactions And Fitness Cost Of Resistance., Laura A. Kirkman, Wenhu Zhan, Joseph Visone, Alexis Dziedziech, Pradeep K. Singh, Hao Fan, Xinran Tong, Igor Bruzual, Ryoma Hara, Masanori Kawasaki, Toshihiro Imaeda, Rei Okamoto, Kenjiro Sato, Mayako Michino, Elena Fernandez Alvaro, Liselle F. Guiang, Laura M. Sanz, Daniel J. Mota, Kavitha Govindasamy, Rong Wang, Yan Ling, Patrick K. Tumwebaze, George Sukenick, Lei Shi, Jeremie Vendome, Purnima Bhanot, Philip J. Rosenthal, Kazuyoshi Aso, Michael A. Foley, Roland A. Cooper, Bjorn Kafsack, J Stone Doggett, Carl F. Nathan, Gang Lin
Natural Sciences and Mathematics | Faculty Scholarship
We describe noncovalent, reversible asparagine ethylenediamine (AsnEDA) inhibitors of the Plasmodium falciparum proteasome (Pf20S) β5 subunit that spare all active subunits of human constitutive and immuno-proteasomes. The compounds are active against erythrocytic, sexual, and liver-stage parasites, against parasites resistant to current antimalarials, and against P. falciparum strains from patients in Africa. The β5 inhibitors synergize with a β2 inhibitor in vitro and in mice and with artemisinin. P. falciparum selected for resistance to an AsnEDA β5 inhibitor surprisingly harbored a point mutation in the noncatalytic β6 subunit. The β6 mutant was resistant to the species-selective Pf20S β5 inhibitor but remained …
Tat Controls Transcriptional Persistence Of Unintegrated Hiv Genome In Primary Human Macrophages., Beatrix Meltzer, Deemah Dabbagh, Jia Guo, Fatah Kashanchi, Mudit Tyagi, Yuntao Wu
Tat Controls Transcriptional Persistence Of Unintegrated Hiv Genome In Primary Human Macrophages., Beatrix Meltzer, Deemah Dabbagh, Jia Guo, Fatah Kashanchi, Mudit Tyagi, Yuntao Wu
Medicine Faculty Publications
In HIV infected macrophages, a large population of viral genomes persists as the unintegrated form (uDNA) that is transcriptionally active. However, how this transcriptional activity is controlled remains unclear. In this report, we investigated whether Tat, the viral transactivator of transcription, is involved in uDNA transcription. We demonstrate that de novo Tat activity is generated from uDNA, and this uDNA-derived Tat (uTat) transactivates the uDNA LTR. In addition, uTat is required for the transcriptional persistence of uDNA that is assembled into repressive episomal minichromatin. In the absence of uTat, uDNA minichromatin is gradually silenced, but remains highly inducible by HDAC …
Motivators For Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trial Participation, Shoshana H. Bardach, Sarah D. Holmes, Gregory A. Jicha
Motivators For Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trial Participation, Shoshana H. Bardach, Sarah D. Holmes, Gregory A. Jicha
Graduate Center for Gerontology Faculty Publications
Background
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research progress is impeded due to participant recruitment challenges. This study seeks to better understand, from the perspective of individuals engaged in clinical trials (CTs), research motivations.
Methods
Participants, or their caregivers, from AD treatment and prevention CTs were surveyed about research motivators.
Results
The 87 respondents had a mean age of 72.2, were predominantly Caucasian, 55.2% were male, and 56.3% had cognitive impairment. An overwhelming majority rated the potential to help themselves or a loved one and the potential to help others in the future as important motivators. Relatively few respondents were motivated by free …
Treated Hypothyroidism Is Associated With Cerebrovascular Disease But Not Alzheimer's Disease Pathology In Older Adults, Willa D. Brenowitz, Fang Han, Walter A. Kukull, Peter T. Nelson
Treated Hypothyroidism Is Associated With Cerebrovascular Disease But Not Alzheimer's Disease Pathology In Older Adults, Willa D. Brenowitz, Fang Han, Walter A. Kukull, Peter T. Nelson
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Faculty Publications
Thyroid hormone (TH) disease is common among older adults and is associated with cognitive impairment. However, pathologic correlates are not well understood. We studied pathologic and clinical factors associated with hypothyroidism, the most common form of TH disease, in research subjects seen annually for clinical evaluations at U.S. Alzheimer’s Disease Centers. Thyroid disease and treatment status were assessed during clinician interviews. Among autopsied subjects, there were 555 participants with treated hypothyroidism and 2,146 with no known thyroid disease; hypothyroidism was associated with severe atherosclerosis (OR=1.35 95% CI: 1.02, 1.79) but not Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathologies (amyloid plaques or neurofibrillary tangles). …
Baseline White Matter Hyperintensities And Hippocampal Volume Are Associated With Conversion From Normal Cognition To Mild Cognitive Impairment In The Framingham Offspring Study., Katherine J Bangen, Sarah R Preis, Lisa Delano-Wood, Philip A Wolf, David J Libon, Mark W Bondi, Rhoda Au, Charles Decarli, Adam M Brickman
Baseline White Matter Hyperintensities And Hippocampal Volume Are Associated With Conversion From Normal Cognition To Mild Cognitive Impairment In The Framingham Offspring Study., Katherine J Bangen, Sarah R Preis, Lisa Delano-Wood, Philip A Wolf, David J Libon, Mark W Bondi, Rhoda Au, Charles Decarli, Adam M Brickman
Rowan-Virtua School of Osteopathic Medicine Faculty Scholarship
INTRODUCTION: We examined associations between magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) markers of cerebrovascular disease and neurodegeneration with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) diagnosis at baseline and conversion from normal cognition to MCI at follow-up.
METHODS: Framingham Offspring participants underwent brain MRI and neuropsychological assessment at baseline (n=1049) and follow-up (n=561). Participants were classified at baseline and at follow-up as cognitively normal or MCI using sensitive neuropsychological criteria. White matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume, covert brain infarcts, hippocampal volume, and total cerebral brain volume were quantified.
RESULTS: Baseline measures of WMH and hippocampal volume were associated with MCI status cross-sectionally and also with conversion …