Publications by authors named "E Kanata"

Article Synopsis
  • Severe alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) is a serious liver disease characterized by increased neutrophil infiltration, but the impact of alcohol on neutrophil function is still not fully understood.
  • Researchers discovered that Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) is elevated in neutrophils of AH patients and is activated by alcohol through TLR4 signaling, linked to liver damage.
  • In mouse models, inhibiting BTK or knocking it out in specific immune cells reduced neutrophil activity and damage to the liver, suggesting that targeting BTK and its interaction with CD84 might offer new treatments for AH.
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Background: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a highly heterogenous neurodegenerative disorder that primarily affects upper and lower motor neurons, affecting additional cell types and brain regions. Underlying molecular mechanisms are still elusive, in part due to disease heterogeneity. Molecular disease subtyping through integrative analyses including RNA editing profiling is a novel approach for identification of molecular networks involved in pathogenesis.

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Background: Accurate diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) represents a health issue due to the absence of disease traits. We assessed the performance of a SIMOA panel in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 43 AD and 33 FTD patients with 60 matching Control subjects in combination with demographic-clinical characteristics.

Methods: 136 subjects (AD: = 43, FTD: = 33, Controls: = 60) participated.

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This Review elucidates the regulatory principles of random monoallelic expression by focusing on two well-studied examples: the X-chromosome inactivation regulator Xist and the olfactory receptor gene family. Although the choice of a single X chromosome or olfactory receptor occurs in different developmental contexts, common gene regulatory principles guide monoallelic expression in both systems. In both cases, an event breaks the symmetry between genetically and epigenetically identical copies of the gene, leading to the expression of one single random allele, stabilized through negative feedback control.

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Prions are proteinaceous pathogens responsible for a variety of devastating diseases in mammals, including scrapie in sheep and goats, chronic wasting disease in cervids, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans. They are characterized by their exceptional persistence to common inactivation procedures. This applies to all possible sources of prion contamination as prions may be present in the tissues and biological fluids of infected individuals.

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