Publications by authors named "B R Hutcheson"

Faced with desiccation stress, many organisms deploy strategies to maintain the integrity of their cellular components. Amorphous glassy media composed of small molecular solutes or protein gels present general strategies for protecting against drying. We review these strategies and the proposed molecular mechanisms to explain protein protection in a vitreous matrix under conditions of low hydration.

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Purpose: Intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) is associated with high morbidity and mortality, with mortality rates up to 65%. Oral anticoagulants (OAC) are a major risk factor for ICH. Since these patients are usually diagnosed in the emergency department (ED), emergency medicine (EM) pharmacists can help ensure appropriate selection and delivery of medications in urgent situations including reversal agents for OAC-associated bleeding.

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Lyophilization is promising for tackling degradation during the drying and storage of protein-based drugs. Tardigrade cytosolically abundant heat soluble (CAHS) proteins are necessary and sufficient for desiccation-tolerance in vivo and protein protection in vitro. Hydrated CAHS proteins form coiled-coil-based fine-stranded, cold-setting hydrogels, but the dried protein remains largely uncharacterized.

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Most efforts to understand macromolecular crowding focus on global (i.e., complete) unfolding, but smaller excursions, often called breathing, promote aggregation, which is associated with several diseases and the bane of pharmaceutical and commercial protein production.

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