Publications by authors named "Broadbent I"

A number of bacteria, including pathogens like Pseudomonas aeruginosa, utilize homoserine lactones (HSLs) as quorum sensing (QS) signaling compounds and engage in cell-to-cell communication to coordinate their behavior. Blocking this bacterial communication may be an attractive strategy for infection control as QS takes a central role in P. aeruginosa biology.

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While myriad molecular formats for bispecific antibodies have been examined to date, the simplest structures are often based on the scFv. Issues with stability and manufacturability in scFv-based bispecific molecules, however, have been a significant hindrance to their development, particularly for high-concentration, stable formulations that allow subcutaneous delivery. Our aim was to generate a tetravalent bispecific molecule targeting two inflammatory mediators for synergistic immune modulation.

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The rise in infections caused by Gram-negative bacteria and the spread of resistance to conventional antibiotics provide significant challenges to the pharmaceutical industry. Monoclonal antibodies have achieved impressive recent clinical successes in a variety of indications, but to date there are no licensed immunotherapeutics that target bacterial infections, despite several promising studies in animal models of infection. Several key questions remain, in particular relating to the target(s), mechanism of action, and mode of delivery of any potential novel immunotherapeutic.

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Background/aims: Myofibroblast apoptosis promotes the resolution of liver fibrosis. However, retaining macrophages may enhance reversal. The effects of specifically stimulating myofibroblast apoptosis in vivo were assessed.

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The cadherin-catenin complex is essential for tissue morphogenesis during animal development. In cultured mammalian cells, p120 catenin (p120ctn) is an important regulator of cadherin-catenin complex function. However, information on the role of p120ctn family members in cadherin-dependent events in vivo is limited.

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Relieving pressure.

Nurs Times

January 2003

Mrs Smith has been resident on a continuing care ward for approximately six years. She was originally admitted after a left cerebral vascular accident that resulted in a right-sided hemiplegia. She is dysphasic but appears to understand much of what is said to her, and she is continent of urine and faeces, using facial expressions and body gestures to communicate her needs.

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Nervous system morphogenesis is characterized by extensive interactions between individual axon growth cones and their cellular environments. Selective cell adhesion is one mechanism by which the growth of an axon can be modulated, and members of the classic cadherin group of cell adhesion molecules have been shown to play a role in this process in both vertebrates and Drosophila. In Drosophila, there are two classic cadherins: one involved primarily in regulating the morphogenesis of epithelia, and the other, DN-cadherin, required almost exclusively in neuronal development.

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The ability to form selective cell-cell adhesions is an essential property of metazoan cells. Members of the cadherin superfamily are important regulators of this process in both vertebrates and invertebrates. With the advent of genome sequencing projects, determination of the full repertoire of cadherins available to an organism is possible and here we present the identification and analysis of the cadherin repertoires in the genomes of Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster.

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An expression vector (CIp10-MAL2p) for use in Candida albicans has been constructed in which a gene of interest can be placed under the control of the CaMAL2 maltase promoter and stably integrated at the CaRP10 locus. Using this vector to express the Candida URA3 gene from the CaMAL2 promoter, we have demonstrated tight regulation of CaURA3 expression by carbon source. Thus under conditions when the CaMAL2 promoter is not induced, expression of Candida URA3 was unable either to complement a C.

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The CST20 gene of Candida albicans was cloned by functional complementation of a deletion of the STE20 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. CST20 encodes a homolog of the Ste20p/p65PAK family of protein kinases. Colonies of C.

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The Candida albicans clone cDNA10 was isolated on the basis that it encodes a protein which is immunogenic during infections in humans (R. K. Swoboda, G.

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