Publications by authors named "D S Mathur"

Genetic risk variants for common diseases are predominantly located in non-coding regulatory regions and modulate gene expression. Although bulk tissue studies have elucidated shared mechanisms of regulatory and disease-associated genetics, the cellular specificity of these mechanisms remains largely unexplored. This study presents a comprehensive single-nucleus multi-ancestry atlas of genetic regulation of gene expression in the human prefrontal cortex, comprising 5.

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The complex roles of myeloid cells, including microglia and perivascular macrophages, are central to the neurobiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet they remain incompletely understood. Here, we profiled 832,505 human myeloid cells from the prefrontal cortex of 1,607 unique donors covering the human lifespan and varying degrees of AD neuropathology. We delineated 13 transcriptionally distinct myeloid subtypes organized into 6 subclasses and identified AD-associated adaptive changes in myeloid cells over aging and disease progression.

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Objectives: To describe maternal and perinatal outcomes in patients with BMI ≥30 kg/m by BMI class and gestational weight gain.

Methods: Retrospective review of singleton pregnancies with pre-pregnancy BMI ≥30 kg/m who received care at our institution between January 1, 2016 and December 31, 2021. Patients were divided into three categories based on BMI (kg/m): Class I (BMI 30.

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Synthetic DNA nanotechnology has emerged as a powerful tool for creating precise nanoscale structures with diverse applications in biotechnology and materials science. Recently, it has evolved to include gene-encoded DNA nanoparticles, which have potentially unique advantages compared to alternative gene delivery platforms. In exciting new developments, we and others have shown how the long single strand within DNA origami nanoparticles, the scaffold strand, can be customized to encode protein-expressing genes and engineer nanoparticles that interface with the transcription-translation machinery for protein production.

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Article Synopsis
  • About one third of stroke survivors experience post-stroke depression, which negatively impacts their quality of life, especially in those with chronic left-hemisphere stroke and a history of aphasia.
  • A study involving 92 stroke survivors and 70 controls used the Beck Depression Inventory-II to measure depression and various scales to assess stroke-related disabilities, revealing that stroke survivors had significantly higher depression scores.
  • The analysis indicated that lower cognitive, social participation, and perceived recovery scores were strongly linked to higher depression levels, highlighting the complexity of factors influencing depression post-stroke.
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