Publications by authors named "Isabelle Fernandez"

Article Synopsis
  • Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis delta virus (HDV) co-infection is severe and can be transmitted from mother to child, with significant rates found in pregnant women in Cameroon.
  • A study involving 1992 pregnant women revealed a 6.7% prevalence of HBsAg, with 32.3% of HBsAg-positive women also being anti-HDV antibody-positive and almost half showing detectable HDV RNA levels.
  • Risk factors linked to HDV presence included multiple pregnancies and body modifications like tattoos, highlighting the need for awareness and preventive measures against maternal transmission of HDV.
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Article Synopsis
  • In 2019, the WHO reported 81 million people with chronic hepatitis B in Africa, highlighting the need for prevention programs to stop mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HBV, which can lead to chronic infections.
  • A network called the Mother-Infant Cohort Hepatitis B Network (MICHep B Network) was created in 2018, involving multiple African countries and the UK, aiming to promote effective initiatives for preventing MTCT of HBV.
  • The network has conducted various studies and workshops to raise awareness and build capacity around HBV, revealing a significant acceptability of the hepatitis B vaccine among families in Cameroon and Zimbabwe.
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Article Synopsis
  • Vascular patterning is important for growth and development, and the ERG factor helps control blood vessel formation.
  • Scientists found that certain changes in a specific protein called FAK can affect how much ERG and another protein called DLL4 are made, which leads to problems in blood vessel formation.
  • They discovered that FAK interacts with two other proteins, USP9x and TRIM25, which helps manage ERG levels and can fix issues with blood vessels when ERG is restored.
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Expression of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in endothelial cells (EC) is essential for angiogenesis, but how FAK phosphorylation at tyrosine-(Y)397 and Y861 regulate tumor angiogenesis is unknown. Here, we show that tumor growth and angiogenesis are constitutively reduced in inducible, ECCre+; -mutant mice. Conversely, ECCre+; mice exhibit normal tumor growth with an initial reduction in angiogenesis that recovered in end-stage tumors.

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Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) inhibitors have been developed as potential anticancer agents and are undergoing clinical trials. In vitro activation of the FAK kinase domain triggers autophosphorylation of Y397, Src activation, and subsequent phosphorylation of other FAK tyrosine residues. However, how FAK Y397 mutations affect FAK kinase-dead (KD) phenotypes in tumour angiogenesis in vivo is unknown.

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Metastasis is the main cause of cancer-related death and thus understanding the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying this process is critical. Here, our data demonstrate, contrary to established dogma, that loss of haematopoietic-derived focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is sufficient to enhance tumour metastasis. Using both experimental and spontaneous metastasis models, we show that genetic ablation of haematopoietic FAK does not affect primary tumour growth but enhances the incidence of metastasis significantly.

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Chemoresistance is a serious limitation of cancer treatment. Until recently, almost all the work done to study this limitation has been restricted to tumour cells. Here we identify a novel molecular mechanism by which endothelial cells regulate chemosensitivity.

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The prolactin receptor (PRLR) is emerging as a therapeutic target in oncology. Knowledge-based drug design led to the development of a pure PRLR antagonist (Del1-9-G129R-hPRL) that was recently shown to prevent PRL-induced mouse prostate tumorogenesis. In humans, the first gain-of-function mutation of the PRLR (PRLR(I146L)) was recently identified in breast tumor patients.

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Platelets play an important role in the development of plaque formation and in the events after rupture of the atherosclerotic plaque, leading to atherothrombosis. Multiple hormones, either in excess or when deficient, are involved in the development of atherothrombotic disease, but, to which extent such hormones affect platelet function, is still controversial. It was the objective of this study to assess the ability of the pituitary hormone prolactin to affect platelet functions.

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Cathepsins are lysosomal enzymes that were shown to release the antiangiogenic fragments 16K prolactin (PRL), endostatin, and angiostatin by processing precursors at acidic pH in vitro. However, the physiological relevance of these findings is questionable because the neutral pH of physiological fluids is not compatible with the acidic conditions required for the proteolytic activity of these enzymes. Here we show that cathepsin D secreted from various tissues is able to process PRL into 16K PRL outside the cell.

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A quantitative study of the variation of the conformational equilibria of 7-benzyl-2-iodo-9-oxa-7-azabicyclo[4.3.0]nonan-8-one 1 in 10 solvents has been carried out.

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