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1.
Vaccine ; 42(9): 2317-2325, 2024 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38433065

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Vaccination has been proven effective against infection with enterovirus A71 (EV-A71) in clinical trials, but vaccine effectiveness in real-world situations remains incompletely understood. Furthermore, it is not clear whether previous vaccination will result in symptom attenuation among post-vaccinated cases. METHODS: Based on long-term data extracted from the only designed referral hospital for infectious diseases, we used a test-negative case-control design and multivariate logistic regression models to analyze the effectiveness of EV-A71 vaccine against hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD). And then, generalized linear regression models were used to evaluate the associations between prior vaccination and disease profiles. RESULTS: We selected 4883 inpatients for vaccine efficacy estimations and 2188 inpatients for disease profile comparisons. Vaccine effectiveness against EV-A71-induced HFMD for complete vaccination was 63.4 % and 51.7 % for partial vaccination. The vaccine effectiveness was higher among cases received the first dose within 12 months. No protection was observed against coxsackievirus (CV) A6-, CV-A10- or CV-A16-associated HFMD among children regardless of vaccination status. Completely vaccinated cases had shorter hospital stay and disease course compared to unvaccinated cases (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: These findings reiterate the need to continue the development of a multivalent vaccine or combined vaccines, and have implications for introducing optimized vaccination strategies.


Subject(s)
Communicable Diseases , Enterovirus A, Human , Enterovirus Infections , Enterovirus , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease , Viral Vaccines , Child , Humans , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/prevention & control , Enterovirus Infections/prevention & control , Vaccination , Antibodies, Viral , Antigens, Viral , Vaccines, Combined , China
2.
Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr ; 12(4): 534-544, 2023 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37601001

ABSTRACT

Background: Existing reporting guidelines pay insufficient attention to the detail and comprehensiveness reporting of surgical technique. The Surgical techniqUe rePorting chEcklist and standaRds (SUPER) aims to address this gap by defining reporting standards for surgical technique. The SUPER guideline intends to apply to articles that encompass surgical technique in any study design, surgical discipline, and stage of surgical innovation. Methods: Following the EQUATOR (Enhancing the QUAlity and Transparency Of health Research) Network approach, 16 surgeons, journal editors, and methodologists reviewed existing reporting guidelines relating to surgical technique, reviewed papers from 15 top journals, and brainstormed to draft initial items for the SUPER. The initial items were revised through a three-round Delphi survey from 21 multidisciplinary Delphi panel experts from 13 countries and regions. The final SUPER items were formed after an online consensus meeting to resolve disagreements and a three-round wording refinement by all 16 SUPER working group members and five SUPER consultants. Results: The SUPER reporting guideline includes 22 items that are considered essential for good and informative surgical technique reporting. The items are divided into six sections: background, rationale, and objectives (items 1 to 5); preoperative preparations and requirements (items 6 to 9); surgical technique details (items 10 to 15); postoperative considerations and tasks (items 16 to 19); summary and prospect (items 20 and 21); and other information (item 22). Conclusions: The SUPER reporting guideline has the potential to guide detailed, comprehensive, and transparent surgical technique reporting for surgeons. It may also assist journal editors, peer reviewers, systematic reviewers, and guideline developers in the evaluation of surgical technique papers and help practitioners to better understand and reproduce surgical technique. Trial Registration: https://www.equator-network.org/library/reporting-guidelines-under-development/reporting-guidelines-under-development-for-other-study-designs/#SUPER.

3.
Gland Surg ; 12(6): 749-766, 2023 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37441012

ABSTRACT

Background: Surgical technique plays an essential role in achieving good health outcomes. However, the quality of surgical technique reporting remains heterogeneous. Reporting checklists could help authors to describe the surgical technique more transparently and effectively, as well as to assist reviewers and editors evaluate it more informatively, and promote readers to better understand the technique. We previously developed SUPER (surgical technique reporting checklist and standards) to assist authors in reporting their research that contains surgical technique more transparently. However, further explanation and elaboration of each item are needed for better understanding and reporting practice. Methods: We searched surgical literature in PubMed, Google Scholar and journal websites published up to January 2023 to find multidiscipline examples in various article types for each SUPER item. Results: We explain the 22 items of the SUPER and provide rationales item by item alongside. We provide 69 examples from 53 literature that present optimal reporting of the 22 items. Article types of examples include pure surgical technique, and case reports, observational studies and clinical trials that contain surgical technique. Examples are multidisciplinary, including general surgery, orthopaedical surgery, cardiac surgery, thoracic surgery, gastrointestinal surgery, neurological surgery, oncogenic surgery, and emergency surgery etc. Conclusions: Along with SUPER article, this explanation and elaboration file can promote deeper understanding on the SUPER items. We hope that the article could further guide surgeons and researchers in reporting, and assist editors and peer reviewers in reviewing manuscripts related to surgical technique.

4.
J Clin Epidemiol ; 155: 1-12, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36574532

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To identify reporting guidelines related to surgical technique and propose recommendations for areas that require improvement. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A protocol-guided scoping review was conducted. A literature search of MEDLINE, the EQUATOR Network Library, Google Scholar, and Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations was conducted to identify surgical technique reporting guidelines published up to December 31, 2021. RESULTS: We finally included 55 surgical technique reporting guidelines, vascular surgery (n = 18, 32.7%) was the most common among the clinical specialties covered. The included guidelines generally showed a low degree of international and multidisciplinary cooperation. Few guidelines provided a detailed development process (n = 14, 25.5%), conducted a systematic literature review (n = 13, 23.6%), used the Delphi method (n = 4, 7.3%), or described post-publication strategy (n = 6, 10.9%). The vast majority guidelines focused on the reporting of intraoperative period (n = 50, 90.9%). However, of the guidelines requiring detailed descriptions of surgical technique methodology (n = 43, 78.2%), most failed to provide guidance on what constitutes an adequate description. CONCLUSION: Our study demonstrates significant deficiencies in the development methodology and practicality of reporting guidelines for surgical technique. A standardized reporting guideline that is developed rigorously and focuses on details of surgical technique may serve as a necessary impetus for change.

5.
Sichuan Da Xue Xue Bao Yi Xue Ban ; 53(6): 1074-1080, 2022 Nov.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36443055

ABSTRACT

Objective: To analyze the epidemiological characteristics of hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) in Chengdu from 2012 to 2020, to make comparison in order to examine the changes in incidence before and after vaccination was introduced, and to provide basis for the prevention of HFMD in the future. Methods: Descriptive epidemiological methods were adopted to analyze the incidence, mortality and rate of severe cases of HFMD cases reported in Chengdu from 2012 to 2020. Results: From 2012 to 2020, the cumulative cases of HFMD reported in Chengdu were as many as 279216, of which, there were 2201 severe cases and 16 deaths. The incidence increased every other year, reaching 326.43 per 100000 person-years, the highest ever, in 2018. The rate of severe cases and mortality had shown a decreasing trend since 2016. A total of 11892 cases of EV71, CoxA16 and other enteroviruses were detected in the laboratory, accounting for 14.8%, 18.8% and 66.3%, respectively. Since 2016, HFMD cases caused by EV71 virus infection had shown an overall decreasing trend, cases caused by Cox A16 virus infection had increased every other year, and cases caused by other enteroviral infections had shown an overall increasing trend. The reported cases were mainly concentrated in children aged 0-5 years (92.1%), with those in the age group of 1-2 years reporting the highest number of cases. For children of different ages, male patients always outnumber female patients. The geographic distribution showed that the areas with high HFMD incidence were always located in the central part of Chengdu City, and the three districts with the highest incidence growth rate were Qingbaijiang District, Shuangliu District, and Longquanyi District. Temporal distribution of HFMD cases showed an obvious bimodal distribution, with most of the cases concentrated in May through August and October through December of each year. The number of new cases reached the highest (12309 cases) in July 2018. Conclusion: While continuing to promote EV71 vaccination in the future, Chengdu also needs to pay more attention to viral infection serotypes other than EV71 and Cox A16 and conduct research on multivalent vaccines against a variety of enteroviruses. The focus of prevention and control can be placed on areas with high population density, large floating populations, large numbers of agriculture-related communities, and insufficient individual awareness of hygiene. For the second circle of Chengdu city, the disinfection of agriculture-related communities should be strengthened, and information sessions or other health education activities could be organized for individuals and daycare facilities with low awareness of the importance of hygiene. In addition, more attention should be given to the prevention and control of HFMD in the high incidence seasons.


Subject(s)
Enterovirus Infections , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease , Child , Humans , Female , Male , Infant , Child, Preschool , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/epidemiology , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/prevention & control , Vaccination , Antigens, Viral
6.
Int J Audiol ; : 1-8, 2022 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36373606

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The current study aims to translate and cross-culturally adapt the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-Management of Child Hearing Loss (AAQ-MCHL) scale to Chinese caregivers of children with hearing loss (CHL) and verify its psychometric characteristics. DESIGN: This is a cross-sectional design of psychometric validation study. STUDY SAMPLE: In total, 135 caregivers of CHL were invited to participate in the study, and complete data from 125 participants were used to analyse internal consistency, test-retest reliability, content validity, structural validity, criterion validity, and the optimal cut-off score of AAQ-MCHL. RESULTS: Through careful and complete translation and adaptation, the Chinese version of AAQ-MCHL was successfully created. The Chinse version of the AAQ-MCHL had good internal consistency, test-retest reliability, content validity, structural validity, and criterion validity. Our results also showed that poorer speech performance in CHL was a strong predictor of parental psychological inflexibility. CONCLUSIONS: The Chinese version of the AAQ-MCHL could be used as an outcome indicator to evaluate the psychological inflexibility of caregivers of CHL in mainland China, and we suggest that early interventionists should be aware of signs of elevated psychological inflexibility in caregivers of CHL.

7.
Front Neurol ; 13: 1000527, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36277913

ABSTRACT

Background: The prevalence and associated factors of dysphagia in Parkinson's disease (PD) are different in studies conducted in different countries. The purpose of our systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the prevalence of dysphagia in PD and to clarify its associated factors. Methods: Two researchers systematically searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang Database, SinoMed and VIP databases and manually searched references in the retrieved articles to identify potential research subjects. The last search was conducted on June 28, 2022. Finally, a total of 58 studies including 60 observations with 20,530 PD patients were included in our meta-analysis. Results: The meta-analysis estimated that the pooled prevalence rate of dysphagia in PD was 36.9% (95% CI: 30.7-43.6%) and instrumental examination showed a higher prevalence (57.3%, 95% CI: 44.3-69.1%). Oceania showed the highest prevalence of dysphagia in PD (56.3%) compared to Africa (39.5%), Asia (38.6%), Europe (36.1%) and America (28.9%). Dysphagia in PD was associated with older age, lower body mass index, longer disease duration, higher Hoehn and Yahr stage and levodopa equivalent daily dose, PIGD subtype, severe motor symptoms, drooling and higher levels of depression, and lower quality of life. Conclusions: In conclusion, our meta-analysis showed that dysphagia occurs in more than one-third of PD patients and was associated with several demographic characteristics and PD-related characteristics, motor symptoms, non-motor symptoms, as well as decreased quality of life. It deserves early screening, diagnosis, and treatment in clinical practice to prevent serious complications from dysphagia.

8.
Emerg Microbes Infect ; 11(1): 2510-2519, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36103331

ABSTRACT

Three inactivated enterovirus A71 (EV-A71) vaccines have been widely vaccinated among children in the targeted age group in mainland China since mid-2016. However, comprehensive virological surveillance of hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) over multiple years after the use of EV-A71 vaccines has rarely been conducted. Using long-term data extracted from the Public Health and Clinical Center of Chengdu, we described the clinical, aetiological, and epidemiological characteristics of HFMD inpatients after the use of EV-A71 vaccines from 2017 through 2022. A total of 5115 patients were selected for analysis with a male-to-female ratio of 1.63:1 and were mostly under 5 years of age (97.6%). Among these cases, 4.3% presented with severe symptoms, and 4.1% of severe cases experienced significant complications. EV-A71 was no longer the major serotype for laboratory-confirmed HFMD, responsible for 15.6% of severe cases and 1.2% of mild cases. A significant downwards trend of EV-A71 infections was observed after the use of EV-A71 vaccines (P for trend < 0.001). Coxsackievirus A6 was the predominant pathogen, accounting for 63.5% of mild cases and 36.2% of severe cases. Coxsackievirus A10 (CV-A10) and A16 were sporadically detected, and an upwards trend was observed in the proportion of CV-A10 infections. This study provides baseline molecular epidemiology for the evaluation of EV-A71 vaccination impact and potential serotype replacement based on HFMD inpatients. Additional nationwide and population-based epidemiologic and serologic studies are essential to elucidate HFMD dynamics after the use of EV-A71 vaccines, and to inform public health authorities to introduce optimized intervention strategies.


Subject(s)
AIDS Vaccines , Enterovirus A, Human , Enterovirus Infections , Enterovirus , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease , Influenza Vaccines , Papillomavirus Vaccines , Respiratory Syncytial Virus Vaccines , SAIDS Vaccines , Child , Humans , Male , Female , Enterovirus/genetics , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/epidemiology , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/prevention & control , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/complications , Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis Vaccine , Molecular Epidemiology , BCG Vaccine , Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine , Enterovirus Infections/epidemiology , Enterovirus Infections/prevention & control , Enterovirus Infections/diagnosis , China/epidemiology , Vaccines, Inactivated , Antigens, Viral , Hospitalization , Enterovirus A, Human/genetics
9.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 13(7)2022 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35888934

ABSTRACT

Increasing information capacity is significant for high-speed communication systems in a congested radio frequency sequence. Vortex waves carrying mode orthogonal orbital angular momentum (OAM) have gained considerable attention in recent years, owing to their multiplexing quality. In this study, a broadband Pancharatnam-Berry (PB) metasurface element with a simple structure is proposed, which exhibits an efficient reflection of the co-polarized component and a full 2π phase variation in 10.5-21.5 GHz under circularly polarized wave incidence. By convolution and addition operations, the elaborate phase distribution is arranged and the corresponding metasurface-reflecting dual-mode asymmetric dual-OAM waves is constructed. Under continuous control of the working frequency, the OAM vortex beams with the topological charges 1 and -1 are steered to scan within the angle range of 11.9°-24.9° and 17.9°-39.1° at φ = 315° and 135° planes, respectively. The simulation and measurement results verified the feasibility of generating frequency-controlled asymmetric dual beams and the validity of dual-mode OAM characteristics, both in the near and far fields. This design approach has considerable potential in OAM wave multiplexing and wireless communication system transmission.

10.
BMC Public Health ; 22(1): 998, 2022 05 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35581574

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Meteorological factors and air pollutants have been reported to be associated with hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) epidemics before the introduction of vaccine. However, there is limited evidence for studies with long-term dimensions. METHODS: We collected the daily HFMD counts, weather and air pollution data from 2014 to 2020 in Chengdu. Distributed lag non-linear models (DLNM) were used to assess the associations of meteorological factors and air pollutants on HFMD cases. RESULTS: From 2014-2020, high relative humidity and precipitation and extremely high and low levels of PM10, O3, SO2 and CO increased the risk of HFMD. In pre-vaccination period, extreme high and low temperatures, PM10 and NO2, low precipitation and high concentrations of PM2.5 and O3 significantly increase the risk of HFMD; In post-vaccination period, high relative humidity and low level of CO can significantly increase the incidence of HFMD; During the period of COVID-19, only low temperature will significantly increase the risk of HFMD; Low concentration of air pollutants has the greatest impact on the 6-14 age group, while the high concentration of air pollutants has the greatest impact on the 0-1 age group. CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggest that high relative humidity and precipitation and extremely high and low levels of PM10, O3, SO2 and CO increased the risk of HFMD from 2014 to 2020. The results of this study provide a reference for local authorities to formulate intervention measures and establish an environment-based disease early warning system.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants , Air Pollution , COVID-19 , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease , Air Pollutants/adverse effects , Air Pollution/adverse effects , Air Pollution/analysis , China/epidemiology , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/epidemiology , Humans , Incidence , Meteorological Concepts
11.
BMC Infect Dis ; 22(1): 162, 2022 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35184744

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The duration of virus shedding is necessary for determining the infectious period. But there were few quantitative studies on the changes of viral load and the law of the viral shedding in hand foot and mouth disease (HFMD) patients has not yet been clarified. METHODS: This study will prospectively recruit coxsackievirus A10 (CV-A10), coxsackievirus A16 (CV-A16) and coxsackievirus A6 (CV-A6) infected inpatients from January 2022 to December 2022. A series of samples and questionnaire information will be collected regularly to establish the dynamic function relationship between time and viral load changes and a Bayesian multilevel model will be constructed to clarify the evolvement rules which reflect the dynamic changes of viral load and the duration of viral shedding in patients with HFMD. DISCUSSION: The results of this study is expected to further clarify the evolvement rules which reflect the dynamic changes of viral load and the duration of viral shedding in HFMD patients under the influence of related factors. It can also provide important evidence for the scientific definition of the infectious period and isolation period of HFMD in China.


Subject(s)
Enterovirus A, Human , Enterovirus , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease , Bayes Theorem , China , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Viral Load , Virus Shedding
12.
Ann Transl Med ; 10(24): 1350, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36660693

ABSTRACT

Background: Post-stroke depression (PSD) is one of the most common and serious sequelae of stroke. The pathogenesis of PSD involves both psychosocial and biological mechanisms, and aerobic exercise is a potential therapeutic target. We conducted an in-depth exploration of the protective mechanisms of aerobic exercise in a PSD mouse model. Methods: In this study, C57BL/6 mice were used as the research objects, and a PSD mouse model was established by combining middle cerebral artery occlusion and chronic unpredictable mild stimulation. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, adeno-associated virus microinjection technology, co-immunoprecipitation, fluorescence in-situ hybridization, and western blotting were performed. A moderate-load treadmill exercise was used for aerobic exercise intervention. The moderate-intensity aerobic exercise training method adopted 0 slopes and treadmill adaptation training for 5 days. We verified the effects of aerobic exercise on the nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB)/nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain--like receptor protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome/5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) pathway. Results: Aerobic exercise effectively alleviated the neurological damage caused by PSD (P<0.01). The results from the PSD mouse model in vivo were consistent with those of the cell experiments. Moreover, overexpression of irisin improves depression-like behavior in PSD mice. We confirmed that aerobic exercise is involved in PSD through 5-HT, which inhibits NF-κB/NLRP3 inflammasome initiation through irisin and alleviates mitochondrial damage under stress by reducing calcium overload, thereby inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome activation. Conclusions: Aerobic exercise reversed the NF-κB/NLRP3 inflammasome/5-HT pathway by upregulating irisin expression to alleviate PSD.

13.
Gland Surg ; 10(8): 2591-2599, 2021 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34527570

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Standardized and transparent reporting of surgical technique is the cornerstone of effective dissemination, implementation and improvement. However, current reporting of surgical techniques is inadequate. The existing guidelines potentially applied to guide surgical technique reporting are with a minimal highlight of the surgical technique, lack requirements explaining what extent and dimensions need to be described in detail, or are unlikely to extrapolate to a wide range of surgical techniques. This study aims to formulate a rigorous protocol to develop a surgical technique reporting checklist and standards (SUPER) that defines what a clear, comprehensive and detailed surgical technique report should be contained. METHODS: This protocol is designed following the classic guidance for developing reporting guidelines recommended by the EQUATOR network. RESULTS: The development team will consist of surgeons (~80%), methodologists, and journal editors. The draft checklist sources will include a scoping review of existing reporting guidelines related to surgical technique, surgical technique articles from 15 top journals published in the last year, and brainstorming by the multidisciplinary development team. The final SUPER checklist will be formed after three rounds of Delphi surveys, one round of face-to-face meeting, and a month-long pilot test. The SUPER checklist will be published as open-access and be used in combination with existing reporting guidelines related to surgical techniques (e.g., IDEAL). This protocol will steer the SUPER checklist's development, allowing us to further elaborate surgical technique reporting for all surgical specialties, and enabling a more favorable experience for surgeons, nurses, medical students, residents, editors, and reviewers. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This trial is registered at the EQUATOR network on December 18th, 2020. Available at: https://www.equator-network.org/library/reporting-guidelines-under-development/reporting-guidelines-under-development-for-other-study-designs/.

14.
Gland Surg ; 10(7): 2325-2333, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34422603

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The reporting of surgical techniques is of mixed quality, with most at a very minimal level. Reporting guidelines that could be applied to guide surgical technique reporting vary in methodology for development, discipline coverage, dimension coverage and detail requested. However, a scoping review that could indicate the gaps and efforts needed in surgical technique reporting guidelines is lacking and warranted. This study aims to design a methodological rigour protocol to guide the development of a scoping review of surgical technique reporting guidelines. METHODS: This protocol is designed following the 2020 manual proposed by the Joanna Briggs Institute. To further ensure the soundness of the protocol, we also included multidisciplinary professionals (including methodologists, clinicians, and journal editors) to refine the protocol. DISCUSSION: Seven key steps for developing the scoping review are identified and presented in detail, including (I) identifying the research questions; (II) inclusion criteria; (III) search strategy; (IV) source of evidence selection; (V) data extraction; (VI) analysis of the evidence; and (VII) presentation of the results. Guided by this protocol, the subsequent scoping review will inform us the overview of surgical technique reporting guidelines and precisely guide our direction and next steps in improving surgical technique reporting guidelines. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This protocol is not registered as the PROSPERO database only accepts registration of systematic review protocols while does not accept registration of scoping review protocols.

15.
Genome ; 61(7): 497-503, 2018 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29733232

ABSTRACT

Short straw is a desired trait in cultivated hexaploid oat (Avena sativa L.) for some production environments. Marker-assisted selection, a key tool for achieving this objective, is limited by a lack of mapping data and available markers. Here, bulked-segregant analysis was used to identify PCR-based markers associated with a dwarfing gene. Genetic analysis identified a monogenic dominant inheritance of one dwarfing gene from WAOAT2132, temporarily designated DwWA. A simple sequence repeat (SSR) marker (AME117) that was already available and a new codominant PCR-based marker (bi17) developed by homologous cloning in the present study were both associated with the dwarfing gene. The two markers were located 21 and 1.2 cM from DwWA, respectively. The bi17 marker was mapped to neighboring SNP markers on chromosome 18D of the oat consensus map. Since Dw6 was previously mapped on chromosome 18, and since our new marker bi17 is also diagnostic for NILs generated for Dw6, there is strong evidence that the dwarfing gene identified in WAOAT2132 is Dw6. The newly developed markers could find applications in the identification of this gene in oat germplasm and in the fine mapping or positional cloning of the gene.


Subject(s)
Avena/genetics , Chromosome Mapping/methods , Genes, Plant/genetics , Genetic Markers/genetics , Microsatellite Repeats/genetics , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Genetic Linkage , Genome, Plant/genetics , Plant Stems/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction
16.
Mol Med Rep ; 10(2): 707-12, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24913635

ABSTRACT

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small non­coding single­stranded RNAs that regulate gene expression at the posttranscriptional level. Since the identification of miRNA, accumulating research has shown their involvement in numerous biological processes, including timing of developmental patterning, embryogenesis, cell differentiation, organogenesis, growth control and pathogenesis of human diseases. It is estimated that >30% human genes may be regulated by miRNA, and that each miRNA can regulate >100 target mRNAs. The widespread and distinct expression pattern of miRNAs in normal and disease states has been extensively investigated in the context of human diseases. Due to the diversity of targets, it is challenging to identify the specific target genes and elucidate the biological function of a certain miRNAs. In the present study, it was confirmed that SMAD7 is a direct target of miR­21, and overexpression of miR­21 may inhibit the proliferation of rat renal tubular epithelial cells. These findings confirm the results of previous studies, which have demonstrated that miR­21 regulates the expression of SMAD7 protein. However, further investigation is required to determine whether miR­21 is involved in renal development and disease, particularly diabetic nephropathy.


Subject(s)
MicroRNAs/metabolism , Smad7 Protein/antagonists & inhibitors , 3' Untranslated Regions , Animals , Base Sequence , Cell Line , Cell Proliferation , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Genetic Vectors/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Kidney Tubules/cytology , Lentivirus/genetics , MicroRNAs/genetics , Rats , Sequence Alignment , Smad7 Protein/genetics , Smad7 Protein/metabolism
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