Publications by authors named "A Van den Bogaert"

While recent research has advanced our understanding of asexuality, very little effort has been devoted to examining biomarkers and possible prenatal correlates of asexuality. In response, we recruited a large international sample (N = 1634 women and men) to explore associations between sibling composition and asexual sexual orientation (n = 366) and to replicate previously reported sibship effects in individuals with a same-sex attracted orientation (n = 276) and bisexual sexual orientation (n = 267) compared to heterosexual individuals (n = 725). Our analyses used two of the most recent statistical approaches that attempt to disentangle older sibling effects from family size effects (Ablaza et al.

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This study presents the first clinical implementation of an efficient online daily adaptive proton therapy workflow (DAPT).The DAPT workflow includes awhere aand aare optimized on the planning computed tomography (CT). In the, theis re-optimized on daily images from an in-room CT.

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A woman in her 30s, non-smoker, presented at the emergency department two times because of spontaneous pneumothorax. The first episode was treated with small bore catheter drainage, while during the second episode-occurring only 1 week later-thoracoscopic talcage was attempted. The postoperative course was characterised by slow clinical and radiological resolution, and recurrence 3 days after discharge.

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In this case we describe a 58-year-old male with bilateral pleural effusion after a blunt trauma to the back. A pleural puncture revealed a chylothorax. An additional computed tomography scan showed a vertebral fracture at level D8 with rupture of the nearby thoracic duct.

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Article Synopsis
  • Most eukaryotic proteins have an N-terminal acetylation that plays a significant role in their degradation and function, and researchers have used CRISPR knockout screens to investigate this relationship.
  • The study identifies a strong interaction between the N-terminal acetyltransferase (NatC) and specific ubiquitin ligases, showing that NatC prevents degradation of proteins that lack acetylation at their starting methionine.
  • Loss of NatC in fruit flies leads to serious issues like male sterility and reduced mobility, but overexpressing a targeted protein can counteract these effects, highlighting the importance of N-terminal acetylation for protein stability and organism health.
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