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1.
Foods ; 13(14)2024 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39063388

ABSTRACT

As the lack of resources required to meet the demands of a growing population is increasingly evident, plant-based diets can be seen as part of the solution, also addressing ethical, environmental, and health concerns. The rise of vegetarian and vegan food regimes is a powerful catalyzer of a transition from animal-based diets to plant-based diets, which foments the need for innovation within the food industry. Vegetables and fruits are a rich source of protein, and bioactive compounds such as dietary fibres and polyphenols and can be used as technological ingredients (e.g., thickening agents, emulsifiers, or colouring agents), while providing health benefits. This review provides insight on the potential of plant-based ingredients as a source of alternative proteins, dietary fibres and antioxidant compounds, and their use for the development of food- and alternative plant-based products. The application of these ingredients on meat analogues and their impact on health, the environment and consumers' acceptance are discussed. Given the current knowledge on meat analogue production, factors like cost, production and texturization techniques, upscaling conditions, sensory attributes and nutritional safety are factors that require further development to fully achieve the full potential of plant-based meat analogues.

2.
Appl Opt ; 56(3): 510-514, 2017 Jan 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28157907

ABSTRACT

The femtosecond-laser pulse inscription and characterization of fiber Bragg gratings for operation at visible wavelengths was performed using several types of optical fibers, including single-mode and graded-index fibers designed for near-infrared wavelengths. The obtained bandwidths are very narrow (∼0.12-0.36 nm) for the used exposure conditions, even in graded-index fibers. Thermal and strain characterization was performed, with results about half of those found for C-band gratings. The wavelength dependence of the sensitivity is compared with a Sellmeier model.

3.
J Med Case Rep ; 10: 58, 2016 Mar 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27080512

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: An estimated 3700 individuals are seen annually in US emergency departments for nail gun-related injuries. Approximately 45 cases have been reported in the literature concerning nail gun injuries penetrating the cranium. These cases pose a challenge for the neurosurgeon because of the uniqueness of each case, the dynamics of high pressure nail gun injuries, and the surgical planning to remove the foreign body without further vascular injury or uncontrolled intracranial hemorrhage. CASE PRESENTATION: Here we present four cases of penetrating nail gun injuries with variable presentations. Case 1 is of a 33-year-old white man who sustained 10 nail gunshot injuries to his head. Case 2 is of a 51-year-old white man who sustained bi-temporal nail gun injuries to his head. Cases 3 and 4 are of two white men aged 22 years and 49 years with a single nail gun injury to the head. In the context of these individual cases and a review of similar cases in the literature we present surgical approaches and considerations in the management of nail gun injuries to the cranium. Case 1 presented with cranial nerve deficits, Case 2 required intubation for low Glasgow Coma Scale, while Cases 3 and 4 were neurologically intact on presentation. Three patients underwent angiography for assessment of vascular injury and all patients underwent surgical removal of foreign objects using a vice-grip. No neurological deficits were found in these patients on follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Nail gun injuries can present with variable clinical status; mortality and morbidity is low for surgically managed isolated nail gun-related injuries to the head. The current case series describes the surgical use of a vice-grip for a good grip of the nail head and controlled extraction, and these patients appear to have a good postoperative prognosis with minimal neurological deficits postoperatively and on follow-up.


Subject(s)
Construction Materials/adverse effects , Consumer Product Safety/legislation & jurisprudence , Head Injuries, Penetrating/pathology , Adult , Cerebral Angiography , Firearms , Foreign Bodies , Glasgow Coma Scale , Head Injuries, Penetrating/epidemiology , Head Injuries, Penetrating/prevention & control , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neurologic Examination , United States/epidemiology , Violence
4.
Oncotarget ; 5(22): 11541-51, 2014 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25426552

ABSTRACT

lethal giant larvae (lgl) was first identified as a tumor suppressor in Drosophila, where its loss repressed the differentiation and promoted the invasion of neuroblasts, the Drosophila equivalent of the neural stem cell. Recently we have shown that a human homolog of Lgl, Lgl1 (LLGL1), is constitutively phosphorylated and inactivated in glioblastoma cells; this occurs as a downstream consequence of PTEN loss, one of the most frequent genetic events in glioblastoma. Here we have investigated the consequences of this loss of functional Lgl1 in glioblastoma in vivo. We used a doxycycline-inducible system to express a non-phosphorylatable, constitutively active version of Lgl1 (Lgl3SA) in either a glioblastoma cell line or primary glioblastoma cells isolated under neural stem cell culture conditions from patients. In both types of cells, expression of Lgl3SA, but not wild type Lgl1, inhibited cell motility in vitro. Induction of Lgl3SA in intracerebral xenografts markedly reduced the in vivo invasion of primary glioblastoma cells. Lgl3SA expression also induced the differentiation of glioblastoma cells in vitro and in vivo along the neuronal lineage. Thus the central features of Lgl function as a tumor suppressor in Drosophila are conserved in human glioblastoma.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/metabolism , Cytoskeletal Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Glioblastoma/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Movement , Doxycycline/chemistry , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Mice , Mice, SCID , Microscopy, Video , Neoplasm Invasiveness , Neoplasm Transplantation , Phosphorylation
6.
Oncotarget ; 4(8): 1266-79, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23907540

ABSTRACT

Glioblastoma multiforme is an aggressive and incurable type of brain tumor. A subset of undifferentiated glioblastoma cells, known as glioblastoma tumor initiating cells (GTICs), has an essential role in the malignancy of this disease and also appears to mediate resistance to radiation therapy and chemotherapy. GTICs retain the ability to differentiate into cells with reduced malignant potential, but the signaling pathways controlling differentiation are not fully understood at this time. PTEN loss is a very common in glioblastoma multiforme and leads to aberrant activation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase pathway. Increased signalling through this pathway leads to activation of multiple protein kinases, including atypical protein kinase C. In Drosophila, active atypical protein kinase C has been shown to promote the self-renewal of neuroblasts, inhibiting their differentiation along a neuronal lineage. This effect is mediated by atypical protein kinase c-mediated phosphorylation and inactivation of Lgl, a protein that was first characterized as a tumour suppressor in Drosophila. The effects of the atypical protein kinase C/Lgl pathway on the differentiation status of GTICs, and its potential link to PTEN loss, have not been assessed previously. Here we show that PTEN loss leads to the phosphorylation and inactivation of Lgl by atypical protein kinase C in glioblastoma cells. Re-expression of PTEN in GTICs promoted their differentiation along a neuronal lineage. This effect was also seen when atypical protein kinase C was knocked down using RNA interference, and when a non-phosphorylatable, constitutively active form of Lgl was expressed in GTICs. Thus PTEN loss, acting via atypical protein kinase C activation and Lgl inactivation, helps to maintain GTICs in an undifferentiated state.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/genetics , Cytoskeletal Proteins/metabolism , Glioblastoma/genetics , PTEN Phosphohydrolase/deficiency , Animals , Brain Neoplasms/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cytoskeletal Proteins/genetics , Glioblastoma/metabolism , Glioblastoma/pathology , Heterografts , Humans , Mice , Mice, SCID , PTEN Phosphohydrolase/genetics , PTEN Phosphohydrolase/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , RNA Interference , Signal Transduction , Transfection
7.
ISRN Surg ; 2011: 168959, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22084743

ABSTRACT

Subarachnoid-pleural fistula (SPF) is a rare complication of chest or spine operations for neoplastic disease. Concomitant dural and parietal pleural defects permit flow of cerebrospinal fluid into the pleural cavity or intrapleural air into the subarachnoid space. Dural injury recognized intraoperatively permits immediate repair, but unnoticed damage may cause postoperative pleural effusion, intracranial hypotension, meningitis, or pneumocephalus. We review two cases of SPF following surgical intervention for chest wall metastatic disease to motivate a detailed review of the anatomy of neural, osseous, and ligamentous structures at the intervertebral foramen. We further provide recommendations for avoidance and detection of such complication.

10.
Am J Hum Genet ; 78(1): 2-14, 2006 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16385445

ABSTRACT

Erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) is an inherited disorder of heme biosynthesis that results from a partial deficiency of ferrochelatase (FECH). Recently, we have shown that the inheritance of the common hypomorphic IVS3-48C allele trans to a deleterious mutation reduces FECH activity to below a critical threshold and accounts for the photosensitivity seen in patients. Rare cases of autosomal recessive inheritance have been reported. We studied a cohort of 173 white French EPP families and a group of 360 unrelated healthy subjects from four ethnic groups. The prevalences of the recessive and dominant autosomal forms of EPP are 4% (95% confidence interval 1-8) and 95% (95% confidence interval 91-99), respectively. In 97.9% of dominant cases, an IVS3-48C allele is co-inherited with the deleterious mutation. The frequency of the IVS3-48C allele differs widely in the Japanese (43%), southeast Asian (31%), white French (11%), North African (2.7%), and black West African (<1%) populations. These differences can be related to the prevalence of EPP in these populations and could account for the absence of EPP in black subjects. The phylogenic origin of the IVS3-48C haplotypes strongly suggests that the IVS3-48C allele arose from a single recent mutational event. Estimation of the age of the IVS3-48C allele from haplotype data in white and Asian populations yields an estimated age three to four times younger in the Japanese than in the white population, and this difference may be attributable either to differing demographic histories or to positive selection for the IVS3-48C allele in the Asian population. Finally, by calculating the KA/KS ratio in humans and chimpanzees, we show that the FECH protein sequence is subject to strong negative pressure. Overall, EPP looks like a Mendelian disorder, in which the prevalence of overt disease depends mainly on the frequency of a single common single-nucleotide polymorphism resulting from a unique mutational event that occurred 60,000 years ago.


Subject(s)
Ferrochelatase/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , Protoporphyria, Erythropoietic/epidemiology , Protoporphyria, Erythropoietic/genetics , Base Sequence , DNA Mutational Analysis , Ethnicity/genetics , France/epidemiology , Gene Components , Genetics, Population , Haplotypes/genetics , Humans , Inheritance Patterns/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Prevalence , Selection, Genetic , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Statistics, Nonparametric , White People/genetics
11.
Hum Mol Genet ; 14(20): 3089-98, 2005 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16159891

ABSTRACT

Hereditary coproporphyria (HCP), an autosomal dominant acute hepatic porphyria, results from mutations in the gene that encodes coproporphyrinogen III oxidase (CPO). HCP (heterozygous or rarely homozygous) patients present with an acute neurovisceral crisis, sometimes associated with skin lesions. Four patients (two families) have been reported with a clinically distinct variant form of HCP. In such patients, the presence of a specific mutation (K404E) on both alleles or associated with a null allele, produces a unifying syndrome in which hematological disorders predominate: 'harderoporphyria'. Here, we report the fifth case (from a third family) with harderoporphyria. In addition, we show that harderoporphyric patients exhibit iron overload secondary to dyserythropoiesis. To investigate the molecular basis of this peculiar phenotype, we first studied the secondary structure of the human CPO by a predictive method, the hydrophobic cluster analysis (HCA) which allowed us to focus on a region of the enzyme. We then expressed mutant enzymes for each amino acid of the region of interest, as well as all missense mutations reported so far in HCP patients and evaluated the amount of harderoporphyrin in each mutant. Our results strongly suggest that only a few missense mutations, restricted to five amino acids encoded by exon 6, may accumulate significant amounts of harderoporphyrin: D400-K404. Moreover, all other type of mutations or missense mutations mapped elsewhere throughout the CPO gene, lead to coproporphyrin accumulation and subsequently typical HCP. Our findings, reinforced by recent crystallographic results of yeast CPO, shed new light on the genetic predisposition to HCP. It represents a first monogenic metabolic disorder where clinical expression of overt disease is dependent upon the location and type of mutation, resulting either in acute hepatic or in erythropoietic porphyria.


Subject(s)
Coproporphyria, Hereditary/genetics , Coproporphyria, Hereditary/pathology , Coproporphyrinogen Oxidase/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Porphyrias, Hepatic/genetics , Porphyrias, Hepatic/pathology , Amino Acid Sequence , Coproporphyria, Hereditary/enzymology , Coproporphyrinogen Oxidase/chemistry , Coproporphyrinogen Oxidase/metabolism , Exons/genetics , Gene Expression , Heme/biosynthesis , Humans , Iron Overload/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation, Missense/genetics , Pedigree , Porphyrias, Hepatic/enzymology , Protein Structure, Secondary , Sequence Homology
12.
Hum Genet ; 114(3): 256-62, 2004 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14669009

ABSTRACT

We have recently demonstrated that in an autosomal dominant porphyria, erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP), the coinheritance of a ferrochelatase (FECH) gene defect and of a wild-type low-expressed FECH allele is generally involved in the clinical expression of EPP. This mechanism may provide a model for phenotype modulation by minor variations in the expression of the wild-type allele in the other three autosomal dominant porphyrias that exhibit incomplete penetrance: acute intermittent porphyria (AIP), variegata porphyria (VP) and hereditary coproporphyria (HC), which are caused by partial deficiencies of hydroxy-methyl bilane synthase (HMBS), protoporphyrinogen oxidase (PPOX) and coproporphyrinogen oxidase (CPO), respectively. Given the dominant mode of inheritance of EPP, VP, AIP and HC, we first confirmed that the 200 overtly porphyric subjects (55 EPP, 58 AIP, 56 VP; 31 HC) presented a single mutation restricted to one allele (20 novel mutations and 162 known mutations). We then analysed the available single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) present at high frequencies in the general population and spreading throughout the FECH, HMBS, PPOX and the CPO genes in four case-control association studies. Finally, we explored the functional consequences of polymorphisms on the abundance of wild-type RNA, and used relative allelic mRNA determinations to find out whether low-expressed HMBS, PPOX and the CPO alleles occur in the general population. We confirm that the wild-type low-expressed allele phenomenon is usually operative in the mechanism of variable penetrance in EPP, but conclude that this is not the case in AIP and VP. For HC, the CPO mRNA determinations strongly suggest that normal CPO alleles with low-expression are present, but whether this low-expression of the wild-type allele could modulate the penetrance of a CPO gene defect in HC families remains to be ascertained.


Subject(s)
Alleles , Genes, Dominant , Penetrance , Porphyria, Hepatoerythropoietic/genetics , Porphyrias, Hepatic/genetics , Acute Disease , Case-Control Studies , Cohort Studies , Coproporphyrinogen Oxidase/genetics , DNA Mutational Analysis , Ferrochelatase/genetics , Flavoproteins , Humans , Hydroxymethylbilane Synthase/genetics , Mitochondrial Proteins , Mutation , Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-CH Group Donors/genetics , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Porphyria, Hepatoerythropoietic/diagnosis , Porphyrias, Hepatic/diagnosis , Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase , RNA, Messenger/analysis , Reproducibility of Results , White People/genetics
13.
Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand) ; 48(1): 79-82, 2002 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11929051

ABSTRACT

The autosomal dominant disorder, variegate porphyria (VP), results from mutations in the protoporphyrinogen oxidase (PPOX) gene. We have investigated the effects of 22 disease-associated missense mutations in this gene on enzyme activity. Mutants were generated in the expression plasmid pHPPOX by site-directed mutagenesis. They were screened for PPOX activity by complementation of the Escherischia coli strain SAS38X which lacks PPOX activity. Ten mutants (G40E, L85P, G232R, de1281H, V282D, L295P, V335G, S350P, L444P, G453V) had no detectable PPOX activity. PPOX activity of the remaining 12 mutants (L15F, R38P, L73P, V84G, D143V, R152C, L154P, V158M, R168H, A172V, V290L, G453R) ranged from less than 1% to 9.2% of wild-type activity. Our findings show that all 22 mutations substantially impair or abolish PPOX activity in a prokaryotic expression system and add to the evidence that they cause VP.


Subject(s)
Mutation, Missense/genetics , Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-CH Group Donors , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Porphyrias, Hepatic/genetics , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Flavoproteins , Gene Expression/genetics , Genetic Complementation Test , Humans , Mitochondrial Proteins , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Porphyrias, Hepatic/enzymology , Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase
14.
Nat Genet ; 30(1): 27-8, 2002 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11753383

ABSTRACT

Erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) is an inherited disorder of heme biosynthesis caused by a partial deficiency of ferrochelatase (FECH, EC 4.99.1.1). EPP is transmitted as an autosomal dominant disorder with an incomplete penetrance. Using haplotype segregation analysis, we have identified an intronic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), IVS3-48T/C, that modulates the use of a constitutive aberrant acceptor splice site. The aberrantly spliced mRNA is degraded by a nonsense-mediated decay mechanism (NMD), producing a decreased steady-state level of mRNA and the additional FECH enzyme deficiency necessary for EPP phenotypic expression.


Subject(s)
Ferrochelatase/biosynthesis , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Genes, Dominant , Penetrance , Point Mutation , Porphyria, Erythropoietic/genetics , RNA Splice Sites/genetics , Base Sequence , DNA, Antisense/genetics , Female , Ferrochelatase/genetics , Ferrochelatase/physiology , France/epidemiology , Gene Frequency , Genotype , Haplotypes , Humans , Introns/genetics , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Polymorphism, Genetic , Porphyria, Erythropoietic/epidemiology , Protoporphyria, Erythropoietic , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism
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