Publications by authors named "Brass H"

Background: The bacterial secondary metabolite prodigiosin has been shown to exert anticancer, antimalarial, antibacterial and immunomodulatory properties. With regard to cancer, it has been reported to affect cancer cells but not non-malignant cells, rendering prodigiosin a promising lead compound for anticancer drug discovery. However, a direct protein target has not yet been experimentally identified.

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Bacterial secondary metabolites exhibit diverse remarkable bioactivities and are thus the subject of study for different applications. Recently, the individual effectiveness of tripyrrolic prodiginines and rhamnolipids against the plant-parasitic nematode , which causes tremendous losses in crop plants, was described. Notably, rhamnolipid production in engineered strains has already reached industrial implementation.

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The red pigment prodigiosin is of high pharmaceutical interest, due to its potential applications as an antitumor drug and antibiotic agent. As previously demonstrated, Pseudomonas putida KT2440 is a suitable host for prodigiosin production, as it exhibits high tolerance toward the antimicrobial properties of prodigiosin. So far, prodigiosin concentrations of up to 94 mg/L have been achieved in shake flask cultivations.

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Cisplatin-based treatment is the standard of care therapy for urothelial carcinomas. However, complex cisplatin resistance mechanisms limit the success of this approach. Both apoptosis and autophagy have been shown to contribute to this resistance.

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Semi-rational redesign of the substrate binding pocket and access tunnels of prodigiosin ligase PigC enhanced the catalytic efficiency in the synthesis of pyrrolic anti-cancer agents more than 45 times. A molecular understanding was gained on residues V333 and T334 relevant to substrate binding and translocation of small pyrroles through PigC access tunnels.

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Bacterial metabolites represent an invaluable source of bioactive molecules which can be used as such or serve as chemical frameworks for developing new antimicrobial compounds for various applications including crop protection against pathogens. Prodiginines are tripyrrolic, red-colored compounds produced by many bacterial species. Recently, due to the use of chemical-, bio-, or mutasynthesis, a novel group of prodiginines was generated.

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A colourimetric high-throughput screening system was established for directed evolution of prodigiosin ligase PigC. The two-step system consists of a colony prescreening test and a subsequent photometric 96-well plate assay. Screening PigC epPCR libraries in Pseudomonas putida revealed a PigC variant that achieved a 2.

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Prodiginines are a group of naturally occurring pyrrole alkaloids produced by various microorganisms and known for their broad biological activities. The production of nature-inspired cyclic prodiginines was enabled by combining organic synthesis with a mutasynthesis approach based on the GRAS (generally recognized as safe) certified host strain Pseudomonas putida KT2440. The newly prepared prodiginines exerted antimicrobial effects against relevant alternative biotechnological microbial hosts whereas P.

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The deeply red-colored natural compound prodigiosin is a representative of the prodiginine alkaloid family, which possesses bioactivities as antimicrobial, antitumor, and antimalarial agents. Various bacteria including the opportunistic human pathogen Serratia marcescens and different members of the Streptomycetaceae and Pseudoalteromonadaceae produce prodiginines. In addition, these microbes generally accumulate many structurally related alkaloids making efficient prodiginine synthesis and purification difficult and expensive.

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The choice of wastewater compliance methods used in the United States has been largely prescribed; however, in some cases, this has led to data of unknown or poor quality. This problem is further compounded by the relatively slow regulatory approval process to incorporate discharge-specific method modifications or flexibility to using alternate, potentially better technologies. In this study, a framework is presented, using a performance-based-system approach, which a discharger could use to verify proper use of an alternate or modified method.

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Mycophenolate mofetil is an immunosuppressive agent in transplantation which inhibits the purin neogenesis. Proliferating lymphocytes are suppressed and antibody production is decreased. Many cases of successful therapy in different kidney diseases are reported, such as diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis, pauci-immune necrotizing glomerulonephritis, focal segmental glomerular sclerosis and IgA nephropathy.

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We report a case of hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis (HUV). The clinical course was characterized by urticaria, angio-edema, pericarditis, joint pain and conjunctivitis. The laboratory findings revealed moderate proteinuria, erythrocyturia, normal renal function, normotension, reduction of C3, C4 and C1q complement with elevated C1q antibodies.

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Case Report: A 65-year-old female patient was admitted to the hospital in somnolent state. During physical examination, she had an increase in blood pressure and a positive bilateral Babinski's sign. Laboratory findings showed elevated liver enzymes, metabolic alkalosis and slightly elevated kidney values.

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The clinical course of 15 patients with Wegener's granulomatosis (WG) and eight patients with microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) from one nephrological clinical center is presented for the period from 1984 to 1993, when testing for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) was gradually introduced into routine clinical practice. We found a high degree of prolonged time periods with symptoms attributable to WG or MPA until the specific diagnosis was made. Nine patients with WG and one patient with MPA had symptomatic prediagnostic periods of more than three years, which extended in one case up to twenty years.

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Between 1988 and 1992, 565 type 2 diabetic patients were examined for nephropathy and diabetes-associated diseases during hospital treatment. Stages of nephropathy were defined as no clinical sign of nephropathy (N = 280), microalbuminuria (N = 38), overt proteinuria (N = 105), impaired renal function (N = 55), and chronic dialysis therapy (N = 87). In dialyzed patients, HbA1c averaged 6.

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To evaluate storage iron deficiency and iron-deficient erythropoiesis we determined, in a cross-sectional study of 95 patients mainly including end-stage renal disease patients (ESRD) with (32) and without rh-EPO therapy (55), the following parameters: hemoglobin, mean corpuscular red cell volume, ferritin, transferrin saturation (TS), zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) and soluble transferrin receptor (TfR). In the dialysis group the percentage of positive samples with each marker of tissue iron supply defined as TS < 20%, ZPP > 40 mumol/mol Heme and TfR > 3.05 microgram/ml was as follows: TS 43.

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Background: Brucellosis is a zoonosis with good prognosis in cases of early diagnosis. To make the diagnosis is still a problem today.

Case Report: A 60-year-old butcher was admitted with undulating fever, sweats, arthralgia and weight loss.

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OBJECTIVES: To elucidate the prevalence of nondipping in 24 h blood pressure monitoring (BPM) during hospital care with respect to antihypertensive drug therapy, diabetes, renal artery stenosis, and inverse diurnal blood pressure profiles. METHODS: Prospective, consecutive categorization of routine 24 h BPM was performed according to nondipping, drug therapy, normotension, severity of hypertension, diabetes, and inverse diurnal profile for 2 years. Retrospective analysis of patients examined by intraarterial renal artery angiography were performed.

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Background: Ferritin and the percentage of transferrin saturation (TS) are established parameters with which to evaluate endogenous iron availability during treatment of renal anaemia with recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo). Zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) has been proposed as another valid marker in this setting.

Methods: We determined the following parameters in 127 patients, including 117 haemodialysis patients: haemoglobin, erythrocytes, haematocrit, mean corpuscular volume (MCV), iron, ferritin, transferrin saturation and ZPP.

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We present a patient whose cause of renal failure was primary and isolated bilateral renal manifestation of centrocytic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The treatment options for bilateral primary renal lymphoma are discussed against the background of published data concerning this topic.

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A 66-year-old patient was admitted to our hospital in January 1992 for further evaluation of severe normocytic anemia. Hemoglobin (Hb) was 3.5 g/dl, reticulocyte count 1%.

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Plasma levels of endothelin (ET) and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) are known to be elevated in patients on chronic hemodialysis. Since ET and ANP plasma levels are found to be raised in nonuremic diabetic versus nondiabetic subjects, we wanted to detect a possible difference in plasma levels of these hormones in diabetic versus nondiabetic patients who were on chronic renal replacement therapy. ET is a possible marker of increased vascular atherogenic activity.

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