Publications by authors named "Beth Moore"

Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are first responders to tissue injury, where they prime naive T cells. The role of pDCs in physiologic wound repair has been examined, but little is known about pDCs in diabetic wound tissue and their interactions with naive CD4+ T cells. Diabetic wounds are characterized by increased levels of inflammatory IL-17A cytokine, partly due to increased Th17 CD4+ cells.

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A fundamental challenge for personalized medicine is to capture enough of the complexity of an individual patient to determine an optimal way to keep them healthy or restore their health. This will require personalized computational models of sufficient resolution and with enough mechanistic information to provide actionable information to the clinician. Such personalized models are increasingly referred to as medical digital twins.

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Medical digital twins are computational models of human biology relevant to a given medical condition, which are tailored to an individual patient, thereby predicting the course of disease and individualized treatments, an important goal of personalized medicine. The immune system, which has a central role in many diseases, is highly heterogeneous between individuals, and thus poses a major challenge for this technology. In February 2023, an international group of experts convened for two days to discuss these challenges related to immune digital twins.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Early-onset colorectal cancer is increasing in Western populations, particularly in patients under 50, who make up 21% of a study sample of 2,193 colorectal cancer patients.
  • - Early-onset patients generally presented with more advanced disease (stages III-IV) compared to older patients and received more aggressive treatments regardless of their disease stage.
  • - Factors influencing early-onset cases include a higher likelihood of being never smokers and a lower likelihood of being overweight, indicating different lifestyle or demographic patterns between early and late-onset patients.
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  • Recent studies suggest that lung microbiota influences immune responses in the lungs and that toll-like receptors (TLRs) play a crucial role in maintaining lung health.
  • Researchers investigated how the absence of TLRs affects lung microbiota by comparing TLR-deficient mice to wild-type mice and found significant differences in community composition, diversity, and bacterial levels in the lungs.
  • The study concluded that TLR signaling is important for shaping the lung microbiota, demonstrating that TLR-deficient mice have distinct microbiota profiles that are relatively stable despite varying environmental conditions.
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Rationale: Differences in the lung microbial community influence idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) progression. Whether the lung microbiome influences IPF host defense remains unknown.

Objectives: To explore the host immune response and microbial interaction in IPF as they relate to progression-free survival (PFS), fibroblast function, and leukocyte phenotypes.

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The family Syngnathidae is a large and diverse clade of morphologically unique bony fishes, with 57 genera and 300 described species of seahorses, pipefishes, pipehorses, and seadragons. They primarily inhabit shallow coastal waters in temperate and tropical oceans, and are characterized by a fused jaw, male brooding, and extraordinary crypsis. Phylogenetic relationships within the Syngnathidae remain poorly resolved due to lack of generic taxon sampling, few diagnostic morphological characters, and limited molecular data.

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Background: A number of small prospective studies with conflicting results have evaluated the effect of sugar-free chewing gum on postoperative GI recovery in patients initially maintained nil per os after major colorectal surgery.

Objective: We sought to evaluate the effect of sugared chewing gum in combination with early enteral feeding on recovery of GI function after major colorectal surgery to ascertain any additive effects of this combination.

Design: This was a randomized prospective study.

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Epigenetic changes occur frequently in Wilms' tumor (WT), especially loss of imprinting (LOI) of IGF2/H19 at 11p15. Our previous results have identified imprinted transcripts (WT1-AS and AWT1) from the WT1 locus at 11p13 and showed LOI of these in some WTs. In this article, we set out to test the relationship between LOI at 11p13 and 11p15 and their timing in WT progression relative to other genetic changes.

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