Two experiments were conducted to determine the effects of low acid-binding capacity () specialty soy protein sources on weanling pig performance. In experiment 1, 2,260 pigs, initially weighed 6.7 kg, were used to determine the effects of low ABC soy proteins as a replacement to poultry meal () or spray-dried blood plasma ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Obesity is a risk factor for developing cancer but is also associated with improved outcomes after treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), a phenomenon called the obesity paradox. To interrogate mechanisms of divergent immune responses in obese and non-obese patients, we examined the relationship among obesity status, clinical responses, and immune profiles from a diverse, pan-tumor cohort of patients treated with ICI-based therapy.
Methods: From June 2021 to March 2023, we prospectively collected serial peripheral blood samples from patients with advanced or metastatic solid tumors who received ICI as standard of care at Johns Hopkins.
Primary (non-motile) cilia represent structurally and functionally diverse organelles whose roles as specialized cellular antenna are central to animal cell signaling pathways, sensory physiology and development. An ever-growing number of ciliary proteins, including those found in vertebrate photoreceptors, have been uncovered and linked to human disorders termed ciliopathies. Here, we demonstrate that an evolutionarily-conserved PPEF-family serine-threonine phosphatase, not functionally linked to cilia in any organism but associated with rhabdomeric (non-ciliary) photoreceptor degeneration in the Drosophila rdgC (retinal degeneration C) mutant, is a bona fide ciliary protein in C.
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