Publications by authors named "DUNKLEY E"

The crisis of antimicrobial resistance is driving research into the phenomenon of collateral sensitivity. Sometimes, when a bacterium evolves resistance to one antimicrobial, it becomes sensitive to others. In this study, we have investigated the utility of Phenotype Microarray (PM) plates for identifying collateral sensitivities with unprecedented throughput.

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We describe the first examples of nucleophile-intercepted Beckmann fragmentations of indoline oximes. This reaction uses MsCl as a promoter to give cyano chlorides and is believed to proceed through an aziridinium intermediate a double stereoinvertive process. Mechanistic insights have led to the further discovery that oxygen, nitrogen, and bromide nucleophiles can be employed for this fragmentation by the use of other promoters.

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It is well recognized that many cancers are addicted to a constant supply of fatty acids (FAs) and exhibit brisk de novo FA synthesis. Upregulation of a key lipogenic enzyme, fatty acid synthase (FASN), is a near-universal feature of human cancers and their precursor lesions, and has been associated with chemoresistance, tumor metastasis, and diminished patient survival. FASN inhibition has been shown to be effective in killing cancer cells, but progress in the field has been hindered by off-target effects and poor pharmaceutical properties of candidate compounds.

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Background: In 2017, the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society put forward new clinical criteria for the diagnosis of PSP, recognizing diverse PSP phenotypes. In this study, we compared the sensitivity and specificity of the new criteria with the National Institutes of Neurological Disease and Society for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy criteria at different times.

Methods: Patients with clinical parkinsonism, clinical and/or neuropathological diagnosis of PSP, were identified from the Society for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy brain bank.

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Background: For women living with HIV (WLWH) in low- and middle-income countries, World Health Organization (WHO) infant feeding guidelines now recommend exclusive breastfeeding until six months followed by mixed feeding until 24 months, alongside lifelong maternal antiretroviral therapy (ART). These recommendations represent the sixth major revision to WHO infant feeding guidelines since 1992. We explored how WLWH in rural Uganda make infant feeding decisions in light of evolving recommendations.

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Background: In sub-Saharan Africa, 58% of adults living with HIV are women. In Uganda, HIV prevalence is 8.3% for women compared to 6.

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The complexities of navigating pregnancy while living with HIV predispose women to additional stress. Finding ways to minimize psychosocial challenges during the perinatal period may maximize the well-being of mothers living with HIV and their children. The goal of this study was to explore psychosocial challenges experienced by women living with HIV (WLWH) during pregnancy and the postpartum.

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Background: There are difficulties with the diagnosis of serotonin toxicity, particularly with the use of Sternbach's criteria.

Aim: To improve the criteria for diagnosing clinically significant serotonin toxicity.

Design: Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data

Methods: We studied all patients admitted to the Hunter Area Toxicology Service (HATS) following an overdose of a serotonergic drug from January 1987 to November 2002 (n = 2222).

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Transposon Tn917 mutagenesis of Bacillus subtilis BD99 followed by selection for protonophore resistance led to the isolation of strain MS119, which contained a single Tn917 insertion in an open reading frame whose deduced amino acid sequence was 56.6% identical to that of the Escherichia coli rho gene product. The insertional site was near the beginning of the open reading frame, which was located in a region of the B.

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The fatty acid desaturase activity in cell extracts of Bacillus subtilis was characterized and found to be O2 dependent, NADH dependent, and cyanide sensitive. In cell fractionation studies, only 10% of the desaturase activity was recovered in the membrane fraction; the addition of cytosolic factors, which by themselves were devoid of activity, restored membrane activity to the level found in the unfractionated cell extracts. NADH was preferred over NADPH as an electron donor, and palmitoyl-coenzyme A was used preferentially over stearoyl-coenzyme A as the straight-chain fatty acid substrate.

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Two obligate alkaliphiles were found to have high levels of fatty acid desaturase, whereas two facultative alkaliphiles had no detectable activity. Supplementation of the growth medium of one facultative strain with palmitoleic acid, but not palmitic acid, at pH 7.5 inhibited growth.

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Duramycin-resistant mutant strains were selected from wild-type Bacillus subtilis (BD99) and its protonophore-resistant mutant derivative, strain AG1A3. Analyses of the membranes of the duramycin-resistant mutants showed that they had little or no phosphatidylethanolamine and diphosphatidylglycerol as determined by chemical detection after thin-layer chromatography. Small amounts of these phospholipids must remain in the mutant strains, however, because during studies of incorporation of exogenous, radioactive fatty acids, label associated with palmitoleic acid was found in chromatographic positions that corresponded to the expected positions of phosphatidylethanolamine and diphosphatidylglycerol.

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