Publications by authors named "Harney D"

Article Synopsis
  • * A study was conducted using mass spectrometry to analyze the differences in metabolome (metabolism) and proteome (proteins) between healthy left and right ventricles, revealing significant metabolic changes.
  • * In advanced heart conditions like dilated and ischemic cardiomyopathy, the distinct metabolic pathways between the ventricles become less pronounced, but the left ventricle shows more adverse changes related to heart failure.
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Article Synopsis
  • Pregnancy causes significant changes in a woman’s heart and vascular system, but some women can develop a heart condition called peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) during or after pregnancy which can lead to heart failure.
  • A study used mass spectrometry to compare protein and metabolite profiles from heart tissue of patients with end-stage PPCM against those with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and non-failing heart donors, aiming to understand the molecular differences.
  • Findings revealed two specific proteins (SBSPON and TNS3) were downregulated in PPCM, disrupting tissue remodeling, while certain metabolites showed abnormal levels indicating altered metabolic functions; both PPCM and DCM shared some inflammatory pathways but differed significantly in thyroid
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Heart failure (HF) with left ventricular diastolic dysfunction is a growing global concern. This study evaluated myocardial oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) levels in human systolic and diastolic HF and in a murine model of HF with preserved ejection fraction, exploring NAD repletion as therapy. We quantified myocardial NAD and nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase levels, assessing restoration with nicotinamide riboside (NR).

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Background: Cardiac arrest is a common and devastating emergency of both the heart and brain. More than 380,000 patients suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrest annually in the USA. Induced cooling of comatose patients markedly improved neurological and functional outcomes in pivotal randomized clinical trials, but the optimal duration of therapeutic hypothermia has not yet been established.

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Unlabelled: Mitochondria facilitate thousands of biochemical reactions, covering a broad spectrum of anabolic and catabolic processes. Here we demonstrate that the adipocyte mitochondrial proteome is markedly altered across multiple models of insulin resistance and reveal a consistent decrease in the level of the mitochondrial processing peptidase miPEP.

Objective: To determine the role of miPEP in insulin resistance.

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Background: Cardiac arrest is a common and devastating emergency of both the heart and brain. More than 380,000 patients suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrest annually in the United States. Induced cooling of comatose patients markedly improved neurological and functional outcomes in pivotal randomized clinical trials, but the optimal duration of therapeutic hypothermia has not yet been established.

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Fatty liver is characterized by the expansion of lipid droplets (LDs) and is associated with the development of many metabolic diseases. We assessed the morphology of hepatic LDs and performed quantitative proteomics in lean, glucose-tolerant mice compared with high-fat diet (HFD) fed mice that displayed hepatic steatosis and glucose intolerance as well as high-starch diet (HStD) fed mice who exhibited similar levels of hepatic steatosis but remained glucose tolerant. Both HFD- and HStD-fed mice had more and larger LDs than Chow-fed animals.

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The nature of the review of local context by institutional review boards (IRBs) is vague. Requirements for single IRB review of multicenter trials create a need to better understand interpretation and implementation of local-context review and how to best implement such reviews centrally. We sought a pragmatic understanding of IRB local-context review by exploring stakeholders' attitudes and perceptions.

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Background: The risk for dementia increases exponentially from the seventh decade of life. Identifying and understanding the biochemical changes that sensitize the ageing brain to neurodegeneration will provide new opportunities for dementia prevention and treatment. This study aimed to determine how ageing and major genetic risk factors for dementia affect the hippocampal proteome and lipidome of neurologically-normal humans over the age of 65.

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Intermittent fasting (IF) is an established intervention to treat the growing obesity epidemic. However, the interaction between dietary interventions and sex remains a significant knowledge gap. In this study, we use unbiased proteome analysis to identify diet-sex interactions.

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The analysis of low abundance peptide hormones such as insulin in blood plasma is difficult with unbiased mass spectrometry-based proteomics, as they are overshadowed by very abundant proteins such as albumin and IgG. The small-protein enrichment assay (SPEA) can greatly increase detection and discovery of these factors through specific enrichment, which enables fast and efficient analysis of many small-protein factors using a single untargeted LC-MS/MS acquisition. SPEA uses an alcohol-acid-based dissociation and precipitation step, prior to denaturing SEC to remove the large highly abundant plasma proteins leaving only a small-protein fraction.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how aging and genetic risk factors influence the hippocampal proteome and lipidome in neurologically normal individuals over 65, as the risk of dementia increases significantly after this age.
  • Using advanced mass spectrometry techniques, researchers analyzed brain samples from 74 donors aged 66-104 to identify age-related changes in 40 specific proteins linked to cell functions and metabolism, highlighting TMEM106B as a key protein associated with aging and genetic risk.
  • While the lipid composition of the hippocampus was not largely affected by genetics, changes in levels of certain lipids, such as lower myelin-enriched sulfatides in genetically at-risk individuals, were noted, suggesting potential biomarkers for dementia risk and pathways that could
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Skeletal muscle weakness is linked to many adverse health outcomes. Current research to identify new drugs has often been inconclusive due to lack of adequate cellular models. We previously developed a scalable monolayer system to differentiate human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) into mature skeletal muscle cells (SkMCs) within 26 days without cell sorting or genetic manipulation.

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Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis of secreted proteins has contributed to our understanding of human disease and physiology but is limited by its need for accurate protein database annotation. Common assumptions used in proteomics of perfect protease specificity are inaccurate for secreted proteins, which are cleaved by numerous endogenous proteases. Here, we describe the generation of an optimized protein database that divides proteins into their individual biological chains and peptides to allow fast identification of semi-tryptic peptides from secreted proteins using fully tryptic searches.

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Background: Exception from informed consent (EFIC) regulations for research in emergency settings contain unique requirements for community consultation and public disclosure. These requirements address ethical challenges intrinsic to this research context. Multiple approaches have evolved to accomplish these activities that may reflect and advance different aims.

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Intermittent fasting is a beneficial dietary treatment for obesity. But the response of each distinct adipose depot is currently poorly defined. Here we explore the response of key adipose depots to every-other-day fasting (EODF) in mice using proteomics.

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There is an unmet need and urgency to find safe and effective anti-obesity interventions. Our recent study in mice fed on obesogenic diet found that treatment with the alcohol aversive drug disulfiram reduced feeding efficiency and led to a decrease in body weight and an increase in energy expenditure. The intervention with disulfiram improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, and mitigated metabolic dysfunctions in various organs through poorly defined mechanisms.

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Study Objective: It is important for researchers interested in trials using the exception from informed consent to understand the views and experiences of enrolled individuals. Previous studies have shown that patient and surrogate attitudes are generally positive. These studies were small and did not include pediatric patients, and interviews were often conducted long after trial enrollment.

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Obesity is a top public health concern, and a molecule that safely treats obesity is urgently needed. Disulfiram (known commercially as Antabuse), an FDA-approved treatment for chronic alcohol addiction, exhibits anti-inflammatory properties and helps protect against certain types of cancer. Here, we show that in mice disulfiram treatment prevented body weight gain and abrogated the adverse impact of an obesogenic diet on insulin responsiveness while mitigating liver steatosis and pancreatic islet hypertrophy.

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Every-other-day fasting (EODF) is an effective intervention for the treatment of metabolic disease, including improvements in liver health. But how the liver proteome is reprogrammed by EODF is currently unknown. Here, we use EODF in mice and multi-omics analysis to identify regulated pathways.

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Neuropathic pain causes severe suffering, and most patients are resistant to current therapies. A core element of neuropathic pain is the loss of inhibitory tone in the spinal cord. Previous studies have shown that foetal GABAergic neuron precursors can provide relief from pain.

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Unbiased and sensitive quantification of low abundance small proteins in human plasma ( hormones, immune factors, metabolic regulators) remains an unmet need. These small protein factors are typically analyzed individually and using antibodies that can lack specificity. Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics has the potential to address these problems, however the analysis of plasma by MS is plagued by the extremely large dynamic range of this body fluid, with protein abundances spanning at least 13 orders of magnitude.

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Intermittent fasting (IF) increases lifespan and decreases metabolic disease phenotypes and cancer risk in model organisms, but the health benefits of IF in humans are less clear. Human plasma derived from clinical trials is one of the most difficult sample sets to analyze using mass spectrometry-based proteomics due to the extensive sample preparation required and the need to process many samples to achieve statistical significance. Here, we describe an optimized and accessible device (Spin96) to accommodate up to 96 StageTips, a widely used sample preparation medium enabling efficient and consistent processing of samples prior to LC-MS/MS.

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Some epigenetic modifications are inherited from one generation to the next, providing a potential mechanism for the inheritance of environmentally acquired traits. Transgenerational inheritance of RNAi phenotypes in Caenorhabditis elegans provides an excellent model to study this phenomenon, and although studies have implicated both chromatin modifications and small RNA pathways in heritable silencing, their relative contributions remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that the putative histone methyltransferases SET-25 and SET-32 are required for establishment of a transgenerational silencing signal but not for long-term maintenance of this signal between subsequent generations, suggesting that transgenerational epigenetic inheritance is a multi-step process with distinct genetic requirements for establishment and maintenance of heritable silencing.

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