Publications by authors named "Braem L"

Introduction: Low back pain (LBP) accounts for nearly a third of musculoskeletal disorders in ballet dancers. LBP has a significant short- and long-term impact on dancers' performance, career, income, identity and overall health. However, the literature provides little specific guidance for the prevention and management of low back pain in ballet dancers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Abiotic stress conditions, such as salinity, affect plant development and productivity and threaten the sustainability of agricultural production. Salt has been proven to accumulate in soil and water over time as a result of various anthropogenic activities and climatic changes. Species of the genus thrive in the most saline environments and have a wide climatic tolerance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The synthetic strigolactone analog, rac-GR24, plays a crucial role in studying how strigolactones and karrikins influence plant signaling pathways by activating specific receptors (D14 and KAI2).
  • Treatment with rac-GR24 impacts root structure by reducing lateral root density while enhancing root hair growth and increasing flavonol levels.
  • Research findings indicate that transcription factors like HY5 and MYB12 regulate flavonol production and root hair elongation, with additional regulators identified that influence lateral root density responses to rac-GR24 treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

is an obligate root-parasitic weed that threatens major crops in central Europe. In order to germinate, it must perceive various structurally divergent host-exuded signals, including isothiocyanates (ITCs) and strigolactones (SLs). However, the receptors involved are still uncharacterized.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The F-box protein MORE AXILLARY GROWTH 2 (MAX2) is a central component in the signaling cascade of strigolactones (SLs) as well as of the smoke-derived karrikins (KARs) and the so far unknown endogenous KAI2 ligand (KL). The two groups of molecules are involved in overlapping and unique developmental processes, and signal-specific outcomes are attributed to perception by the paralogous α/β-hydrolases DWARF14 (D14) for SL and KARRIKIN INSENSITIVE 2/HYPOSENSITIVE TO LIGHT (KAI2/HTL) for KAR/KL. In addition, depending on which receptor is activated, specific members of the SUPPRESSOR OF MAX2 1 (SMAX1)-LIKE (SMXL) family control KAR/KL and SL responses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Karrikins stimulate Arabidopsis thaliana germination, whereas parasitic weeds of the Orobanchaceae family have evolved to respond to host-exuded compounds such as strigolactones, dehydrocostus lactone, and 2-phenylethyl isothiocyanate. In Phelipanche ramosa, strigolactone-induced germination was shown to require one of the CYP707A proteins involved in abscisic acid catabolism. Here, germination and gene expression were analysed to investigate the role of CYP707As in germination of both parasitic plants and Arabidopsis upon perception of germination stimulants, after using pharmacological inhibitors and Arabidopsis mutants disrupting germination signals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Strigolactones (SLs) are a family of terpenoid allelochemicals that were recognized as plant hormones only a decade ago. They influence a myriad of both above- and below-ground developmental processes, and are an important survival strategy for plants in nutrient-deprived soils. A rapidly emerging approach to gain knowledge on hormone signaling is the use of traceable analogs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phytohormones tightly regulate plant growth by integrating changing environmental and developmental cues. Although the key players have been identified in many plant hormonal pathways, the molecular mechanisms and mode of action of perception and signaling remain incompletely resolved. Characterization of protein partners of known signaling components provides insight into the formed protein complexes, but, unless quantification is involved, does not deliver much, if any, information about the dynamics of the induced or disrupted protein complexes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Obligate root-parasitic plants belonging to the Orobanchaceae family are deadly pests for major crops all over the world. Because these heterotrophic plants severely damage their hosts even before emerging from the soil, there is an unequivocal need to design early and efficient methods for their control. The germination process of these species has probably undergone numerous selective pressure events in the course of evolution, in that the perception of host-derived molecules is a necessary condition for seeds to germinate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The plant hormones strigolactones are synthesized from carotenoids and signal via the α/β hydrolase DWARF 14 (D14) and the F-box protein MORE AXILLARY GROWTH 2 (MAX2). Karrikins, molecules produced upon fire, share MAX2 for signalling, but depend on the D14 paralog KARRIKIN INSENSITIVE 2 (KAI2) for perception with strong evidence that the MAX2-KAI2 protein complex might also recognize so far unknown plant-made karrikin-like molecules. Thus, the phenotypes of the max2 mutants are the complex consequence of a loss of both D14-dependent and KAI2-dependent signalling, hence, the reason why some biological roles, attributed to strigolactones based on max2 phenotypes, could never be observed in d14 or in the strigolactone-deficient max3 and max4 mutants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Strigolactones are plant metabolites that act as phytohormones and rhizosphere signals. Whereas most research on unraveling the action mechanisms of strigolactones is focused on plant shoots, we investigated proteome adaptation during strigolactone signaling in the roots of Arabidopsis thaliana. Through large-scale, time-resolved, and quantitative proteomics, the impact of the strigolactone analog rac-GR24 was elucidated on the root proteome of the wild type and the signaling mutant more axillary growth 2 (max2).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Pruritus is a fancy word for itching, and it's common after someone gets burned.
  • The study looked at how bad the itching was for patients with different types of burns (grafted and non-grafted) over 18 months.
  • Results showed that while both groups had similar itching in the hospital, grafted patients had worse itching than non-grafted patients after 3 months, but this difference disappeared after a year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sustaining burns is considered a stressful life event that has the power to elicit depressive symptoms. This study aimed to identify predictors of depressive symptoms by investigating the role of demographic variables, the number of operations (burn severity), neuroticism, and cognitive emotion regulation styles as possible influencing factors. Data from 242 patients with burns were analyzed employing latent growth modeling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Primary or secondary cardiac lymphomas are not frequent. Their clinical expression is unusual and the diagnosis is rarely made during the patient's life. Our case report, which is a slow atrial flutter with a pericardial effusion, is an uncommon discovery mode for a malignant lymphoma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) is a recently identified and probably rare congenital cardiomyopathy characterized by changes in the structure of the myocardium secondary to incomplete embryogenesis. The purpose of this report is to describe three cases of LVNC involving African patients. To our knowledge these are the first cases described in Africa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cardiovascular disease is a major worldwide health problem with a growing impact in developing countries. Heart failure is the clinical manifestation of many advanced cardiac disorders. It can have numerous etiologies and the incidence of non-infectious causes is increasing with socio-economic development, thus illustrating the global nature of this epidemiologic transition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors report the case of a 27 years old athletic patient, without any antecedents, presenting with a recent complete atrioventricular (AV block, disclosed by an effort dyspnoea and syncope. The electrophysiological exploration showed a nodal AV block. The magnetic resonance imaging revealed the existence of a septal hypersignal in T1 mode enhanced after Gadolinium injection, and left ventricular function normality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Systemic cholesterol embolism is a rare complication of atherosclerosis, and has various presentations. Arterial catheterisms are a common cause. However, the association with an aortic dissection has been exceptionally reported.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Cardiac sarcoidosis is responsible for 50% of deaths which mainly occur by ventricular arrhythmia or conduction disorders. The aim of this study is to determine the value of cardiac explorations for an early diagnosis of these localizations, which are often underestimated and can cause sudden death.

Patients And Methods: We prospectively studied 24 consecutive patients, aged 33 +/-10 years, presenting with a sarcoidosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors report a case of acute eosinophilic myocarditis (AEM) with acute left ventricular failure preceded by an acute hypoxaemic eosinophilic pneumonia. The diagnosis of myocarditis was confirmed histologically. That of the eosinophilic pneumonia was base on the abundance of eosinophilic polynuclear cells in the bronchoalveolar lavage and appearances on computerised tomography.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Daily changes in serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentration have been studied during two types of infection with Ostertagia ostertagi in calves. In a first experiment two calves were trickle infected (10 times 10,000 L3 Ostertagia) and two animals received a single infection of 100,000 L3 Ostertagia. Gastrin and pepsinogen changes are discussed in relation to adult wormburdens.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF