Publications by authors named "Bamidele A"

Article Synopsis
  • Liver fibrosis involves the activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) and the release of extracellular vesicles (EVs), with increased glycolysis in HSCs playing a key role in this process.
  • Genetic inhibition of glycolysis in HSCs was shown to reduce liver fibrosis and alter the expression of EV-related pathways specifically in the liver's pericentral zone.
  • The study suggests that targeting glycolysis in HSCs could serve as a new therapeutic approach to mitigate liver fibrosis by decreasing the release of fibrogenic EVs.
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Background & Aims: Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) is characterized by excessive circulating toxic lipids, hepatic steatosis, and liver inflammation. Monocyte adhesion to liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) and transendothelial migration (TEM) are crucial in the inflammatory process. Under lipotoxic stress, LSECs develop a proinflammatory phenotype known as endotheliopathy.

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Sensory systems allow pathogens to differentiate between different niches and respond to stimuli within them. A major mechanism through which bacteria sense and respond to stimuli in their surroundings is two-component systems (TCSs). TCSs allow for the detection of multiple stimuli to lead to a highly controlled and rapid change in gene expression.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study explores how regulatory T cells (Tregs) behave in inflammatory bowel diseases like Crohn's disease, focusing on their metabolic processes that impact gut homeostasis.
  • Researchers used various advanced techniques (like electron microscopy and mass cytometry) to analyze Tregs' cellular structures and functions in humans and murine models of colitis.
  • Key findings show that inhibiting a specific protein (VDAC1) disrupts Treg metabolism and increases sensitivity to inflammation, while manipulating metabolic pathways can restore proper Treg function and potentially inform new therapeutic strategies for inflammatory diseases.
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Background & Aims: Incapacitated regulatory T cells (Tregs) contribute to immune-mediated diseases. Inflammatory Tregs are evident during human inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); however, mechanisms driving the development of these cells and their function are not well understood. Therefore, we investigated the role of cellular metabolism in Tregs relevant to gut homeostasis.

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Sensory systems allow pathogens to differentiate between different niches and respond to stimuli within them. A major mechanism through which bacteria sense and respond to stimuli in their surroundings is two-component systems (TCSs). TCSs allow for the detection of multiple stimuli to lead to a highly controlled and rapid change in gene expression.

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Article Synopsis
  • - NASH (Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis) is a severe form of NAFLD (Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease) linked to liver damage, inflammation, and fibrosis, with ROCK1 protein being implicated in liver injury responses to high-fat diets.
  • - Research showed elevated ROCK1 levels in patients and mice with NASH; knocking out ROCK1 in liver cells reduced liver damage and inflammation, indicating its critical role in NASH progression.
  • - Administering a new ROCK inhibitor (ROCKi) improved liver health in mice with established NASH, suggesting that targeting ROCK1 may lead to effective treatments for human NASH.
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Escherichia coli associates with humans early in life and can occupy several body niches either as a commensal in the gut and vagina, or as a pathogen in the urinary tract. As such, E. coli has an arsenal of acid response mechanisms that allow it to withstand the different levels of acid stress encountered within and outside the host.

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Background & Aims: Although T-cell intrinsic expression of G9a has been associated with murine intestinal inflammation, mechanistic insight into the role of this methyltransferase in human T-cell differentiation is ill defined, and manipulation of G9a function for therapeutic use against inflammatory disorders is unexplored.

Methods: Human naive T cells were isolated from peripheral blood and differentiated in vitro in the presence of a G9a inhibitor (UNC0642) before being characterized via the transcriptome (RNA sequencing), chromatin accessibility (assay for transposase-accessible chromatin by sequencing), protein expression (cytometry by time of flight, flow cytometry), metabolism (mitochondrial stress test, ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography-tandem mas spectroscopy) and function (T-cell suppression assay). The in vivo role of G9a was assessed using 3 murine models.

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Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the most common chronic liver disease worldwide. A significant proportion of patients with NAFLD develop a progressive inflammatory condition termed nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which may eventually advance to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). NASH is characterized by steatosis, hepatocyte ballooning, and lobular inflammation.

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FOXP3+ Tregs are expanded within the inflamed intestine of human Crohn's disease, yet FOXP3-mediated gene repression within these cells is lost. The polycomb repressive complexes play a role in FOXP3 target gene regulation, but deeper mechanistic insight is incomplete. We have now specifically identified the polycomb-repressive complex 1 (PRC1) family member, BMI1 in the regulation of a proinflammatory enhancer network in both human and murine Tregs.

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This paper investigates the concentrations of PCBs in the water and sediment media and its bio-concentration in the fish host-parasite bentho-pelagic food chain in Epe lagoon. Samples of water, sediment, plankton, mollusks, fish and intestinal helminth parasites were collected from three stations (Oriba, Imode and Ikosi) in Epe Lagoon. Concentration of total PCBs in the surface water and sediment across the stations ranges from 3.

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Background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a complex multisystemic disorder of public health interest. It has both pulmonary and extrapulmonary manifestation that affect the Health-related Quality of Life (HRQOL) of the patients. The COPD Assessment Test (CAT) is an example of HRQOL, a self-administered questionnaire.

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This paper assesses the role of intestinal helminth parasite of Macrobrachium vollenhovenii on host metal accumulation in Lekki lagoon, Lagos, Nigeria. Lead, zinc, copper, chromium and iron concentrations were determined in water, sediment, intestinal parasite, intestine of infected and non-infected prawns. Intestinal nematode parasite Cucullanus sp.

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