The number of peer-reviewed publications that feature biosensor data increases every year. A search of PubMed using common technique terminology, including bio-layer interferometry (BLI), surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and grating-coupled interferometry (GCI) generated more than 2500 scientific papers from 2022. Compared to 2009, when David Myszka and Rebecca Rich presented their most recent review of biosensor literature (Rich and Myszka, 2011), this number has nearly doubled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNoroviruses are the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis in the developed world. Noroviruses are a diverse group of nonenveloped RNA viruses that are continuously evolving. This leads to the rise of immunologically distinct strains of the same genotype on a frequent basis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe first 23-step total synthesis of the cyclodepsipeptide dolastatin 16 (1) has been achieved. Synthesis of the dolaphenvaline and dolamethylleuine amino acid units using simplified methods improved the overall efficiency. The formation of the 25-membered macrocycle employing lactonization with 2-methyl-6-nitrobenzoic anhydride completed a key step in the synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe free movement of European citizens to live and work within the European Union (EU) is one of the fundamental pillars of the European single market. Recent EU legislation on the recognition of professional qualifications (to take effect January 2016) updates the framework within which doctors and others can migrate freely between EU member states to practise their profession. UK organisations lobbied extensively to change aspects of the original proposals, in particular those that threatened to 'water down' public protection in the interest of free movement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany governments in Europe, either of their own volition or at the behest of the international financial institutions, have adopted stringent austerity policies in response to the financial crisis. By contrast, the USA launched a financial stimulus. The results of these experiments are now clear: the American economy is growing and those European countries adopting austerity, including the UK, Ireland, Greece, Portugal and Spain, are stagnating and struggling to repay rising debts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRemoval of the intensive care unit (ICU) at the Vale of Leven Hospital mandated the identification and transfer out of those acute medical admissions with a high risk of requiring ICU. The aim of the study was to develop triaging tools that identified such patients and compare them with other scoring systems. The methodology included a retrospective analysis of physiological and arterial gas measurements from 1976 acute medical admissions produced PREEMPT-1 (PRE-critical Emergency Medical Patient Triage).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne approach to prepare protein binding ligands is to join two low-affinity ligands that bind different sites on the target protein to create a high-affinity bivalent ligand. This typically requires some knowledge of the ligand binding site and requires exquisite orientation of the ligands in order to achieve maximum binding affinity. Here, we explored the limit of affinity improvement possible with no a priori knowledge of peptide binding site and with minimal effort spent in linking the lead peptides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree advances necessary to bring dolastatin 16 (1) into full-scale preclinical development as an anticancer drug have been accomplished. The X-ray crystal structure of dolastatin 16 has been solved, which allowed stereoselective syntheses of its two new amino acid units, dolamethylleuine (Dml) and dolaphenvaline (Dpv), to be completed. The X-ray crystal structures of synthetic Z-Dml and TFA-Dpv have also been completed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is a significant need for affinity reagents with high target affinity/specificity that can be developed rapidly and inexpensively. Existing affinity reagent development approaches, including protein mutagenesis, directed evolution, and fragment-based design utilize large libraries and/or require structural information thereby adding time and expense. Until now, no systematic approach to affinity reagent development existed that could produce nanomolar affinity from small chemically synthesized peptide libraries without the aid of structural information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is a pressing need for high-affinity protein binding ligands for all proteins in the human and other proteomes. Numerous groups are working to develop protein binding ligands but most approaches develop ligands using the same strategy in which a large library of structured ligands is screened against a protein target to identify a high-affinity ligand for the target. While this methodology generates high-affinity ligands for the target, it is generally an iterative process that can be difficult to adapt for the generation of ligands for large numbers of proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a high-throughput two-dimensional microarray-based screen, incorporating both target binding intensity and off-rate, which can be used to analyze thousands of compounds in a single binding assay. Relative binding intensities and time-resolved dissociation are measured for labeled tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) bound to a peptide microarray. The time-resolved dissociation is fitted to a one-component exponential decay model, from which relative dissociation rates are determined for all peptides with binding intensities above background.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA full understanding of the proteome will require ligands to all of the proteins encoded by genomes. While antibodies represent the principle affinity reagents used to bind proteins, their limitations have created a need for new ligands to large numbers of proteins. Here we propose a general concept to obtain protein affinity reagents that avoids animal immunization and iterative selection steps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: The primary aim of this study was to examine the needs of older people in relation to cardiac rehabilitation and to determine if these were currently being met. A secondary aim was to compare illness representations, quality of life and anxiety and depression in groups with different levels of attendance at a cardiac rehabilitation programme.
Background: Coronary heart disease accounted for over seven million cardiovascular deaths globally in 2001.
Background: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is carried out for prognosis and symptomatic relief. Smoking is associated with increased postoperative complications, although its precise influence on long-term survival is unclear. We examined the influence of smoking and other risk factors on survival and myocardial ischaemia seven years after CABG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim And Objective: The accuracy with which patients recall their cardiac symptoms prior to aorta-coronary artery bypass grafting is assessed approximately one year after surgery together with patient-related factors potentially influencing accuracy of recall.
Background: This is a novel investigation of patient's rating of preoperative symptom severity before and approximately one year following aorta-coronary artery bypass grafting.
Design: Patients undergoing aorta-coronary artery bypass grafting (n = 208) were recruited preoperatively and 177 of these were successfully followed up at 16.
European Commission proposals provide legal clarity and more information for patients
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Ischaemic preconditioning protects the myocardium from ischaemic injury and may also protect the vascular endothelium from the deleterious effects of ischaemia and reperfusion. We examined the possibility that ischaemic preconditioning might preserve the integrity of the coronary microcirculation following ischaemia and reperfusion.
Methods: Isolated rat hearts were perfused in Langendorff mode for 30 minutes and then subjected to 30 minutes of global ischaemia with or without ischaemic preconditioning (threexthree minute cycles).
Objectives: Cardiopulmonary bypass impairs formation of large stable platelet aggregates (macroaggregation), although formation of small aggregates (microaggregation) is preserved. A factor in the uncertain benefits of intraoperative autologous blood transfusion may be the effects of storage on platelet function. The effects of citrate preservative and heparinization before storage on platelet function was therefore assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Hematol Disord Drug Targets
March 2006
The aim of this review is (1) to give a rationale for anti-platelet therapy based on mechanisms of platelet rich arterial thrombosis, (2) to point out the pitfalls involved in monitoring therapy with platelet function tests and (3) to outline the potential clinical applications of such therapy based on the various modes of action of anti-platelet drugs. The primary event in arterial thrombosis is platelet-mediated, either due to increased shear or exposed collagen, followed by fibrin-rich thrombosis. Anti-platelet therapy needs to be monitored but most platelet function tests, now in use, do not reflect in vivo function; the anticoagulant used for blood samples removes extra-cellular calcium ions, platelets are often separated before the test, or very high doses of agonist are used: all of these can give misleading results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Cardiovasc Nurs
September 2006
Background: The aim of the coronary artery bypass graft operation is to relieve anginal symptoms and improve functional ability, quality of life and survival. However, having the surgery does not always have the desired outcomes. Although numerous studies have investigated the outcomes of coronary artery bypass graft operation, little attention has been given to patients' perceptions of the outcomes or effects of the operation on health and well-being over time.
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