Publications by authors named "D Tseng"

Endocrine therapies targeting the estrogen receptor (ER/ESR1) are the cornerstone to treat ER-positive breast cancers patients, but resistance often limits their effectiveness. Notable progress has been made although the fragmented way data is reported has reduced their potential impact. Here, we introduce EstroGene2.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Understanding how estrogen receptor (ER)-targeting therapies work and why some breast cancer patients develop resistance is crucial for improving treatment options and developing new drugs.
  • - The EstroGene2.0 database, a significant update from its previous version, offers an extensive collection of data focused on breast cancer responses to endocrine therapies, incorporating results from 361 experiments across various cell lines.
  • - Analysis of the data shows notable variability in how different ER-modulators affect cancer cells, revealing unique transcriptomic changes in endocrine-resistant models and highlighting important mutant-ER targets for further investigation.
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Compartmentalization, leveraging microfluidics, enables highly sensitive assays, but the requirement for significant infrastructure for their design, build, and operation limits access. Multimaterial particle-based technologies thermodynamically stabilize monodisperse droplets as individual reaction compartments with simple liquid handling steps, precluding the need for expensive microfluidic equipment. Here, we further improve the accessibility of this lab on a particle technology to resource-limited settings by combining this assay system with a portable multimodal reader, thus enabling nanoliter droplet assays in an accessible platform.

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Purpose: Thoracoabdominal hernias remain a rare and poorly understood entity. Data remain sparse as terminology varies in the literature and case reports demonstrate wide variability in technique. We present a novel approach for repair of thoracoabdominal hernias using the robotic platform.

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Long-term memory (LTM) requires learning-induced synthesis of new proteins allocated to specific neurons and synapses in a neural circuit. Not all learned information, however, becomes permanent memory. How the brain gates relevant information into LTM remains unclear.

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