Publications by authors named "Blumenfeld N"

Introduction/objectives: Primary care organizations are increasingly collecting data on patients' social risks, bringing forth an unprecedented opportunity to present combined health and social data that clinical and social care providers could leverage to improve patient care and outcomes. Little is known, however, about how these data could be used and what combinations of specific data elements are most helpful. We explored how primary care staff who provide clinical or social care services view potential benefits of and use cases for combined patient-level clinical and social data.

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Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) offers the capabilities of real-time monitoring of amplified products, fast detection, and quantitation of infectious units, but poses technical hurdles for point-of-care miniaturization compared with end-point polymerase chain reaction. Here we demonstrate plasmonic thermocycling, in which rapid heating of the solution is achieved via infrared excitation of nanoparticles, successfully performing reverse-transcriptase qPCR (RT-qPCR) in a reaction vessel containing polymerase chain reaction chemistry, fluorescent probes and plasmonic nanoparticles. The method could rapidly detect SARS-CoV-2 RNA from human saliva and nasal specimens with 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity, as well as two distinct SARS-CoV-2 variants.

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To analyze the impact of housing instability and social risk facts on food insecurity using resource center client information. We utilized 2-1-1 San Diego's client database to analyze the association of food insecurity and housing instability among residents from August 2017 to March 2020. 3468 clients had food or housing needs assessed by a risk rating scale.

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There is widespread evidence that increasing functional mass of brown adipose tissue (BAT) via browning of white adipose tissue (WAT) could potentially counter obesity and diabetes. However, most current approaches focus on administration of pharmacological compounds which expose patients to highly undesirable side effects. Here, we describe a simple and direct tissue-grafting approach to increase BAT mass through ex vivo browning of subcutaneous WAT, followed by re-implantation into the host; this cell-therapy approach could potentially act synergistically with existing pharmacological approaches.

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A six-month cohort of general adult psychiatric inpatients was followed for up to two years to evaluate outcome and contrast the validity of DSM-IV measures of adaptive functioning-the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF), the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (SOFAS), and the Global Assessment of Relational Functioning Scale (GARF). Detailed data, including quality-of-life ratings and DSM-IV axis I and V codes, were collected by interview and self-report questionnaires for 53 study participants. Patients' retrospective ratings of the care they received were not predictive of outcome.

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Degradation of a protein via the ubiquitin system involves two discrete steps, signaling by covalent conjugation of multiple moieties of ubiquitin and degradation of the tagged substrate. Conjugation is catalyzed via a three-step mechanism that involves three distinct enzymes that act successively: E1, E2, and E3. The first two enzymes catalyze activation of ubiquitin and transfer of the activated moiety to E3, respectively.

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Background And Design: Keratinocytes are ideal targets for somatic gene therapy. Among the viral gene transfer systems, adenoassociated virus vectors have recently gained attention. We studied the feasibility of using adenoassociated virus-transduced human keratinocytes to provide a long-term, high-level production of a therapeutic factor after implantation in mice.

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Organoids are adenoviral vector transduced cells embedded ex vivo in a collagen-polytetrafluoroethylene lattice that is saturated with angiogenic factors. Organoids provide an alternative method of cell mediated gene transfer following implantation in the donor/recipient. The feasibility of adenovirally mediated delivery via organoids using the erythropoietin (Epo) cDNA was tested.

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We have examined whether the secretion of erythropoietin (Epo) from genetically modified cells could represent an alternative to repeated injections of the recombinant hormone for treating chronic anemias responsive to Epo. Primary mouse skin fibroblasts were transduced with a retroviral vector in which the murine Epo cDNA is expressed under the control of the murine phosphoglycerate kinase promoter. "Neo-organs" containing the genetically modified fibroblasts embedded into collagen lattices were implanted into the peritoneal cavity of mice.

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Repeated injections of large doses of erythropoietin (Epo) have been shown to be of benefit in the treatment of murine and human beta-thalassemia. To determine whether Epo gene therapy could replace this treatment for long-term periods, lethally irradiated beta-thalassemic (Hbbd3th haplotype) and normal DBA/2J (Hbbd haplotype) mice were grafted with syngeneic bone marrow cells infected with a retroviral vector carrying the Epo cDNA. In normal mice, dysregulated Epo production induced elevated serum Epo levels (176 +/- 68 mU/mL), high hematocrit levels (73% +/- 8%), and elevated beta-minor globin chain synthesis.

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A hormonal model of erythropoietin (Epo) delivery by use of an adenovirus vector was investigated. We constructed a replication-defective adenovirus carrying the monkey (cynomolgus) Epo cDNA under control of the Rous sarcoma virus long terminal repeat promoter. Fifty 8-week-old mice were injected with escalating doses of the recombinant virus from 10(6) to 10(10) plaque-forming units (pfu).

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Ubiquitin-carrier proteins (E2s, ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes, UBCs) participate in proteolysis by catalyzing transfer of activated ubiquitin to the protein substrates, which are bound to specific ubiquitin-protein ligases (E3s). Yeast UBC2 (RAD6) and the mammalian E2(14kDa) bind to the ligase that recognizes and is involved in the degradation of certain free amino-terminal substrates ("N-end rule" substrates). As such proteins are rather scarce, the role of these E2s in general proteolysis is probably limited.

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We studied the effect of sickling on the transmembrane reorientation and distribution of phospholipids in the red blood cells of patients homozygous for sickle cell anemia (SS). To this purpose, we followed the redistribution kinetics of trace amounts of spin-labeled analogues of natural phospholipids first introduced in the membrane outer leaflet of normal or sickle erythrocytes exposed to air or nitrogen. Deoxygenation had no effect on the lipid redistribution kinetics in normal (AA) cell membranes.

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Heparin cofactor II (HCII) is a thrombin inhibitor present in human plasma whose activity is enhanced by heparin. HCII exhibits important homologies with antithrombin III, the main heparin-enhanced thrombin inhibitor. Cases of recurrent thromboembolism have been recently reported in patients with HCII deficiency.

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The purpose of this study was to analyze the expression of B8.7 antigen and its implication in the low molecular weight B-Cell growth factor (LMW BCGF) proliferative pathway at the early stages of the human B-cell differentiation. After an overnight incubation in culture medium of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL), we demonstrated the presence of B8.

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OKT3 exerts its in vivo immunosuppressive effects by inducing major peripheral T cell depletion as well as antigenic modulation of the T3/Ti T cell receptor complex. Modulated cells, which reversibly lose the expression of the CD3 T cell receptor molecular complex but still share the CD4 and CD8 antigens, have been shown to be functionally immunoincompetent. Antigenic modulation is maintained as long as significant OKT3 serum levels are present.

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Using a highly sensitive method for the determination of red cell densities (Percoll-Stractan continuous isopyknic gradients), we find that, in adults, this parameter varies with sex and race. Whites have red cell densities (expressed as mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration [MCHC]) that are, on the average, 0.7 gm/dl higher than those in blacks (the difference of the means has p less than 2 x 10(-7].

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We report here that a Cl(-)-dependent K+ (K:Cl) efflux, which is stimulated by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and by increased red cell volume, exists in young red cells of individuals with normal hemoglobin A (AA) and in those homozygous for hemoglobin S (SS). We have investigated this K:Cl efflux in several density-defined red cell fractions obtained from Percoll-Stractan continuous density gradients. We found high activity of the NEM-stimulated K:Cl transport in reticulocytes and young red cells from nine sickle cell (SS) patients (43 +/- 27 mean +/- SD mmol K+/liter of cells/hr = flux units (FU)) and in the young cell fraction of three AA individuals with high reticulocytosis recuperating from nutritional anemias (41.

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