Publications by authors named "Farre J"

The precise mode of action of ganaplacide (KAF156), a phase III antimalarial candidate, remains elusive. Here we employ omics-based methods with the closely related chemical analog, GNF179, to search for potential targets. Ranking potential targets derived from chemical genetics and proteomic affinity chromatography methodologies identifies , or Synthetic Enhancement of YOP1, which is predicted to encode an essential dynamin-like GTPase implicated in homotypic fusion of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cells adjust their protein content in response to environmental changes through a combination of protein synthesis and degradation processes, particularly involving proteasomal and vacuolar pathways.
  • Researchers developed a method using isotopically labeled nutrients to study protein degradation in yeast, revealing that bulk and selective autophagy are the main drivers of proteome remodeling.
  • The study found that different types of autophagy, influenced by environmental signals, manage the breakdown of various proteins, and has created an online database to assist in identifying the proteins and pathways involved in this process.
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Summary: perox-per-cell automates cumbersome, image-based data collection tasks often encountered in peroxisome research. The software processes microscopy images to quantify peroxisome features in yeast cells. It uses off-the-shelf image processing tools to automatically segment cells and peroxisomes and then outputs quantitative metrics including peroxisome counts per cell and spatial areas.

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automates cumbersome, image-based data collection tasks often encountered in peroxisome research. The software processes microscopy images to quantify peroxisome features in yeast cells. It uses off-the-shelf image processing tools to automatically segment cells and peroxisomes and then outputs quantitative metrics including peroxisome counts per cell and spatial areas.

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We aimed to find out which are the most frequent complications for patients who suffer a traumatic brain injury (TBI) and its relation with brain biomarker levels. We conducted a hospital cohort study with patients who attended the Hospital Emergency Department between 1 June 2018 and 31 December 2020. Different variables were collected such as biomarkers levels after 6 h and 12 h of TBI (S100, NSE, UCHL1 and GFAP), clinical and sociodemographic variables, complementary tests, and complications 48 h and 7 days after TBI.

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Organelle division and segregation are important in cellular homeostasis. Peroxisomes (POs) and mitochondria share a core division machinery and mechanism of membrane scission. The division of each organelle is interdependent not only on the other but also on other organelles, reflecting the dynamic communication between subcellular compartments, even as they coordinate the exchange of metabolites and signals.

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Introduction: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a very important reason for consultation in emergency departments.

Methods: A hospital cohort study with patients who attended a hospital emergency department between June 1, 2018 and December 31, 2020 due to TBI was studied. Clinical and sociodemographic variables were recorded.

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Objective: Long-term changes in burnout and its predictors in hospital staff during the COVID-19 pandemic were investigated in an international study.

Methods: Two online surveys were distributed to hospital staff in seven countries (Germany, Andorra, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Romania, Iran) between May and October 2020 (T1) and between February and April 2021 (T2), using the following variables: Burnout (emotional exhaustion and depersonalization), job function, age, gender, and contact with COVID-19 patients; individual resources (self-compassion, sense of coherence, social support) and work-related resources and demands (support at the workplace, risk perception, health and safety at the workplace, altruistic acceptance of risk). Data were analyzed using linear mixed models repeated measures, controlled for age.

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Studies conducted during the last 50 years have proposed electrocardiographic criteria and algorithms to determine if a wide QRS tachycardia is ventricular or supraventricular in origin. Sustained ventricular tachycardia is an uncommon reason for consultation in the emergency room. The latter and the complexity of available electrocardiographic diagnostic criteria and algorithms result in frequent misdiagnoses.

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Background: Transient ischemic attack (TIA) provides a unique opportunity to optimize secondary preventive treatments to avoid subsequent ischemic stroke (SIS). Although atrial fibrillation (AF) is the leading cause of cardioembolism in IS and anticoagulation prevents stroke recurrence (SR), limited data exists about the risk of new-diagnosed AF (NDAF) after TIA and the consequences of the diagnostic delay. The aim of our study was to determine this risk in a cohort of TIA patients with long-term follow-up.

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More than a century has passed since Tawara demonstrated the presence of the insulated pathways that extend from the "knoten" at the base of the atrial septum to their ramifications at the ventricular apexes. Having initially doubted the existence of the atrioventricular bundle until reading the monograph produced by Tawara, Keith, together with Flack, soon revealed the presence of the sinus node. Shortly thereafter, Thorel suggested that a special system might be found within the atrial walls, connecting the newly discovered atrial nodes.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how environmental factors affect the proliferation of peroxisomes, specifically in yeast, and highlights the connection between mitochondrial activity and peroxisome development.
  • Researchers found that mutations impacting the NADH-shuttling and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) pathways inhibit peroxisome proliferation due to ATP depletion, affecting the expression of key peroxisomal proteins.
  • The activation of the Snf1 complex, which is responsive to energy levels, plays a crucial role in regulating these proteins, and deficiencies in OXPHOS lead to phenotypic defects that can be reversed by removing certain transcriptional repressors.
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Pex11, an abundant peroxisomal membrane protein (PMP), is required for division of peroxisomes and is robustly imported to peroxisomal membranes. We present a comprehensive analysis of how the Pex11 is recognized and chaperoned by Pex19, targeted to peroxisome membranes and inserted therein. We demonstrate that Pex11 contains one Pex19-binding site (Pex19-BS) that is required for Pex11 insertion into peroxisomal membranes by Pex19, but is non-essential for peroxisomal trafficking.

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Despite years of research, many details of the formation of the atrioventricular conduction axis remain uncertain. In this study, we aimed to clarify the situation. We studied three-dimensional reconstructions of serial histological sections and episcopic datasets of human embryos, supplementing these findings with assessment of material housed at the Human Developmental Biological Resource.

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Aims: The arrangement of the conduction axis is markedly different in various mammalian species. Knowledge of such variation may serve to question the validity of using animals as prospective models for design of systems for clinical use.

Methods And Results: We compared the arrangement of the atrioventricular conduction axis in human, murine, canine, porcine, and bovine hearts, examining serially sectioned datasets from 20 human, 16 murine, 3 porcine, 5 canine, and 1 bovine hearts.

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Surgeons, when dividing bypass tracts adjacent to the His bundle, considered them to be 'anteroseptal'. The area was subsequently recognized to be superior and paraseptal, although this description is not entirely accurate anatomically, and conveys little about the potential risk during catheter interventions. We now describe the area as being para-Hisian, and it harbours two types of accessory pathways.

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The mid-paraseptal region corresponds to the portion of the pyramidal space whose right atrial aspect is known as the triangle of Koch. The superior area of this mid-paraseptal region is also para-Hisian, and is close to the compact atrioventricular node and the His bundle. The inferior sector of the mid-paraseptal area is unrelated to the normal atrioventricular conduction pathways.

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Aims: Seeking to account for accessory atrioventricular conduction potentially leading to ventricular pre-excitation, Mahaim in the mid-20th century had described pathways between the atrioventricular conduction axis and the muscular ventricular septum. We aimed to look for such 'paraspecific' connections in adult human hearts.

Methods And Results: We serially sectioned 21 hearts, covering the triangle of Koch and the aortic root, and assessing the atrioventricular node, the penetration of the conduction axis, and the bundle branches in our search for fasciculo-ventricular connections.

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Aims: Although the anatomy of the atrioventricular conduction axis was well described over a century ago, the precise arrangement in the regions surrounding its transition from the atrioventricular node to the so-called bundle of His remain uncertain. We aimed to clarify these relationships.

Methods And Results: We have used our various datasets to examine the development and anatomical arrangement of the atrioventricular conduction axis, paying particular attention to the regions surrounding the point of penetration of the bundle of His.

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Aims: To take full advantage of the knowledge of cardiac anatomy, structures should be considered in their correct attitudinal orientation. Our aim was to discuss the triangle of Koch in an attitudinally appropriate fashion.

Methods And Results: We reviewed our material prepared by histological sectioning, along with computed tomographic datasets of human hearts.

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