Publications by authors named "Arash Ng"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the relationship between yellow fever virus (YFV) nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) and disease severity in yellow fever (YF) patients, highlighting how increased NS1 levels correlate with vascular dysfunction and severe clinical outcomes.
  • Researchers analyzed serum samples from patients with severe and non-severe YF cases, finding higher levels of NS1 and syndecan-1 (a vascular leak marker) in severe cases.
  • Results indicate that YFV NS1 contributes to endothelial dysfunction by inducing shedding of syndecan-1, suggesting these serum markers could be used for diagnosing and predicting disease severity in YF.
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Yellow fever virus (YFV) infections can cause severe disease manifestations, including hepatic injury, endothelial damage, coagulopathy, hemorrhage, systemic organ failure, and shock, and are associated with high mortality in humans. While nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) of the related dengue virus is implicated in contributing to vascular leak, little is known about the role of YFV NS1 in severe YF and mechanisms of vascular dysfunction in YFV infections. Here, using serum samples from qRT-PCR-confirmed YF patients with severe (n=39) or non-severe (n=18) disease in a well-defined hospital cohort in Brazil, plus samples from healthy uninfected controls (n=11), we investigated factors associated with disease severity.

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Background: Activity in neurons drives afferent competition that is critical for the refinement of nascent neural circuits. In ferrets, when an eye is lost in early development, surviving retinogeniculate afferents from the spared eye spread across the thalamus in a manner that is dependent on spontaneous retinal activity. However, how this spontaneous activity, also known as retinal waves, might dynamically regulate afferent terminal targeting remains unknown.

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The spread of insecticide resistance genes in Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto threatens to compromise vector-based malaria control programs. Two mutations at the same locus in the voltage-gated sodium channel gene are known to confer knockdown resistance (kdr) to pyrethroids and DDT. Kdr-e involves a leucine-serine substitution, and it was until recently thought to be restricted to East Africa, whereas kdr-w, which involves a leucine-phenylalanine substitution, is associated with resistance in West Africa.

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