Publications by authors named "Artur Lazarian"

Article Synopsis
  • - The text indicates a correction made to an article, identified by its DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1419253.
  • - The correction likely addresses issues such as errors in data, methodology, interpretation, or citations presented in the original article.
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Tools for acute manipulation of protein localization enable elucidation of spatiotemporally defined functions, but their reliance on exogenous triggers can interfere with cell physiology. This limitation is particularly apparent for studying mitosis, whose highly choreographed events are sensitive to perturbations. Here we exploit the serendipitous discovery of a phosphorylation-controlled, cell cycle-dependent localization change of the adaptor protein PLEKHA5 to develop a system for mitosis-specific protein recruitment to the plasma membrane that requires no exogenous stimulus.

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Introduction: At least one-third of the identified risk alleles from Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are involved in lipid metabolism, lipid transport, or direct lipid binding. In fact, a common genetic variant (ε4) in a cholesterol and phospholipid transporter, Apolipoprotein E (), is the primary genetic risk factor for late-onset AD. In addition to genetic variants, lipidomic studies have reported severe metabolic dysregulation in human autopsy brain tissue, cerebrospinal fluid, blood, and multiple mouse models of AD.

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Tools for acute manipulation of protein localization enable elucidation of spatiotemporally defined functions, but their reliance on exogenous triggers can interfere with cell physiology. This limitation is particularly apparent for studying mitosis, whose highly choreographed events are sensitive to perturbations. Here we exploit the serendipitous discovery of a phosphorylation-controlled, cell cycle-dependent localization change of the adaptor protein PLEKHA5 to develop a system for mitosis-specific protein recruitment to the plasma membrane that requires no exogenous stimulus.

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Article Synopsis
  • Radiation therapy is important for treating glioblastoma (GBM), but sometimes it doesn't work well because the tumors come back.
  • Researchers found that after radiation, GBM tumors change how they use energy and start making more lipids (fat) to survive.
  • By targeting the way the tumors create fat, scientists think they can improve treatments and help patients live longer.
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Nanoparticles are widely used for biomedical applications such as vaccine, drug delivery, diagnostics, and therapeutics. This study aims to reveal the influence of nanoparticle surface functionalization on protein corona formation from blood serum and plasma and the subsequent effects on the innate immune cellular responses. To achieve this goal, the surface chemistry of silica nanoparticles of 20 nm diameter was tailored via plasma polymerization with amine, carboxylic acid, oxazolines, and alkane functionalities.

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Various thermosensitive liposome (TSL) formulations have been described to date and it is currently unclear which are optimal for solid tumor treatment. Sufficient circulation half-life is important and most liposomes obtain this by polyethylene glycol (PEG) surface modification. 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphodiglycerol (DPPG) has been described as a promising alternative which increases TSL circulation half-life and facilitates rapid drug release under mild hyperthermia at 20-30 mol%.

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