Publications by authors named "Hurley J"

Over the past few decades, the emergence of resistance amongst intestinal parasites of horses to all available anthelmintic classes has emphasised the need for a paradigm shift in parasite control approaches within the Australian equine industry. Findings of a recent Australia-wide research project have provided new insights into intestinal parasites (i.e.

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Photoreceptors in the retina of a vertebrate's eye are supported by a tissue adjacent to the retina, the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). The RPE delivers glucose to the outer retina, consumes photoreceptor outer segments discs, and regenerates 11-cis-retinal. Here we address the question of whether photoreceptors also provide metabolic support to the RPE.

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Organelles such as mitochondria, lysosomes, peroxisomes, and the endoplasmic reticulum form highly dynamic cellular networks and exchange information through sites of physical contact. While each organelle performs unique functions, this inter-organelle crosstalk helps maintain cell homeostasis. Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a devastating blinding disease strongly associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and decreased clearance of cellular debris in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE).

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In previous work, we found that short sleep caused sensitivity to oxidative stress; here we set out to characterize the physiological state of a diverse group of chronically short-sleeping mutants during hyperoxia as an acute oxidative stress. Using RNA-sequencing analysis, we found that short-sleeping mutants had a normal transcriptional oxidative stress response relative to controls. In both short-sleeping mutants and controls, hyperoxia led to downregulation of glycolytic genes and upregulation of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism, reminiscent of metabolic shifts during sleep.

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Mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), which consists of mTOR, Raptor, and mLST8, receives signaling inputs from growth factor signals and nutrients. These signals are mediated by the Rheb and Rag small GTPases, respectively, which activate mTORC1 on the cytosolic face of the lysosome membrane. We biochemically reconstituted the activation of mTORC1 on membranes by physiological submicromolar concentrations of Rheb, Rags, and Ragulator.

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  • The text discusses the critical research questions regarding the impact of antibiotics on the microbiome and the subsequent risk of bloodstream infections in ICU patients.
  • It proposes using structural equation modeling (SEM) as a tool to examine complex causal relationships among factors like antibiotic exposure and infection outcomes, particularly focusing on unobservable mediators within the microbiome.
  • The use of SEM allows researchers to compare different theoretical models and identify harmful mediators, such as colonization and concurrency, that contribute to increased infection risk.
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Objective: To estimate the herd effects of anti-microbial-based decontamination (ABD) interventions on bloodstream infections (BSIs) among groups of intensive care unit (ICU) patients in relation to group mean length of stay (LOS). To deduce which of three competing hypotheses of ABD effect mediation best accounts for the observed effects.

Design: Arms-based meta-regression of ICU-acquired BSI incidence against group mean LOS for control and interventions arms of ABD and non-ABD controlled trials each versus that in arms of observational studies.

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: The review explores current evidence on Australian pre-registration nurse education in preparing graduates to work in mental health settings, from the perspectives of the graduates. : A scoping review using the Joanna Briggs Institute framework for scoping reviews and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) checklist was undertaken. : There were 31 eligible publications, reporting 12 qualitative studies, eight surveys and 11 quasi-experimental studies.

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The circadian clock is a central driver of many biological and behavioral processes, regulating the levels of many genes and proteins, termed clock controlled genes and proteins (CCGs/CCPs), to impart biological timing at the molecular level. While transcriptomic and proteomic data has been analyzed to find potential CCGs and CCPs, multi-omic modeling of circadian data, which has the potential to enhance the understanding of circadian control of biological timing, remains relatively rare due to several methodological hurdles. To address this gap, a Dual-approach Co-expression Analysis Framework (D-CAF) was created to perform perturbation-robust co-expression analysis on time-series measurements of both transcripts and proteins.

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  • Clinical placements are essential for preregistration nursing students, but there's a gap between theory and practice that needs addressing.
  • A study with 19 nurse academics from various Australian universities revealed that unsuitable placements negatively impact student experiences and hinder effective learning.
  • To improve mental health nursing education, there needs to be more investment in appropriate clinical placements, and the insights of nurse academics are vital for driving this change.
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  • Breast cancer is a common illness among women in the Caribbean, but not much is known about how their reproductive patterns affect when they get diagnosed.
  • A study was done to look at changes in these reproductive patterns and the age at which Caribbean women are diagnosed with breast cancer.
  • The study included over 1,000 women from various Caribbean countries, finding that younger women are more likely to start their periods earlier compared to older women.
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Lipid-rich deposits called drusen accumulate under the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) in the eyes of patients with age-related macular degeneration and Sorsby's fundus dystrophy (SFD). Drusen may contribute to photoreceptor degeneration in these blinding diseases. Stimulating β-oxidation of fatty acids could decrease the availability of lipid with which RPE cells generate drusen.

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  • Selective autophagy helps cells get rid of harmful stuff to keep them healthy.
  • Scientists found that certain special receptors can start this cleanup process using different strategies.
  • Understanding how these receptors work could lead to new treatments for diseases.
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Objective: To understand the motivations of champions who worked to bring about system and practice change that supported routine screening for intimate partner violence (IPV) in two rural emergency departments (EDs).

Introduction: Practice changes are required to achieve routine and effective identification and response to IPV. Nurses play a significant role in affecting such practice change.

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Background: Spillover of effect, whether positive or negative, from intervention to control group patients invalidates the Stable Unit Treatment Variable Assumption (SUTVA). SUTVA is critical to valid causal inference from randomized concurrent controlled trials (RCCT). Spillover of infection prevention is an important population level effect mediating herd immunity.

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Rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) sheets are a fundamental domain of the ER and the gateway into the secretory pathway. Although reticulon proteins stabilize high-curvature ER tubules, it is unclear whether other proteins scaffold the flat membranes of rough ER sheets. Through a proteomics screen using ER sheet-localized RNA-binding proteins as bait, we identify the sigma-1 receptor (SigmaR1) as an ER sheet-shaping factor.

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Background: Rural Australian families report lower access to specialist early parenting services than urban families. To address the early parenting needs of rural families with children aged 0-3, a novel specialist-nursing early parenting service, Tresillian To You, was implemented for five rural communities in New South Wales, Australia. This study aimed to investigate the initial impact and reach of the service.

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Unlabelled: Internationally there are both current and looming mental health workforce shortages. Mental health nurses who have received specialist education are a vital component to respond to these challenges.

Aim: This qualitative study aimed to better understand the efficacy and product quality of mental health nurse workforce preparation through pre-registration nurse education in Australia.

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  • Traditional methods for measuring the chemical composition of particulate matter are expensive and complex, mostly using research-grade instruments that aren't suitable for routine monitoring.
  • A new online instrument called "ChemSpot" has been developed to autonomously measure key characteristics like organic aerosol mass loading and sulfur content, offering a cost-effective alternative.
  • The ChemSpot has shown high particle collection efficiency and quick heating capabilities, with its results closely correlating to those from more traditional methods, indicating it can operate reliably over long periods.
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  • Neutrophil hyperactivity and NET release are key factors in the autoimmune disease antiphospholipid syndrome (APS).
  • Research shows that neutrophils from APS patients have a higher reliance on glycolysis compared to those from healthy individuals, particularly in cases linked to microvascular disease.
  • Inhibiting glycolysis or the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) not only reduces NET release and reactive oxygen species production in neutrophils but also significantly decreases thrombosis in mice models of APS.
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The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is omnivorous and can utilize a wide range of substrates for oxidative phosphorylation. Certain tissues with high mitochondrial metabolic load are capable of ketogenesis, a biochemical pathway that consolidates acetyl-CoA into ketone bodies. Earlier work demonstrated that the RPE expresses the rate-limiting enzyme for ketogenesis, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA synthase 2 (HMGCS2), and that the RPE indeed produces ketone bodies, including beta-hydroxybutyrate (β-HB).

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The prion-like spread of protein aggregates is a leading hypothesis for the propagation of neurofibrillary lesions in the brain, including the spread of tau inclusions associated with Alzheimer's disease. The mechanisms of cellular uptake of tau seeds and subsequent nucleated polymerization of cytosolic tau are major questions in the field, and the potential for coupling between the entry and nucleation mechanisms has been little explored. We found that in primary astrocytes and neurons, endocytosis of tau seeds leads to their accumulation in lysosomes.

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