Publications by authors named "James Dias"

Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), or follitropin, exists in multiple molecular forms due largely to its protein-carbohydrate composition and the complexity of the glycans attached to the protein core. The heterogeneity of gonadotropins exists in two forms, macroheterogeneity, which results from the absence of one or two oligosaccharide chains in the ß-subunit, and microheterogeneity which results from variation in the structures and complexity of the glycans attached to the hormone. In the clinical arena, FSH compounds are widely used by fertility specialists to promote ovarian follicle growth and maturation to a preovulatory follicle containing a fertilization-competent oocyte.

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Auditory nerve (AN) function has been hypothesized to deteriorate with age and noise exposure. Here, we perform a systematic review of published studies and find that the evidence for age-related deficits in AN function is largely consistent across the literature, but there are inconsistent findings among studies of noise exposure history. Further, evidence from animal studies suggests that the greatest deficits in AN response amplitudes are found in noise-exposed aged mice, but a test of the interaction between effects of age and noise exposure on AN function has not been conducted in humans.

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Auditory nerve (AN) function has been hypothesized to deteriorate with age and noise exposure. Here, we perform a systematic review of published studies and find that the evidence for age-related deficits in AN function is largely consistent across the literature, but there are inconsistent findings among studies of noise exposure history. Further, evidence from animal studies suggests that the greatest deficits in AN response amplitudes are found in noise-exposed aged mice, but a test of the interaction between effects of age and noise exposure on AN function has not been conducted in humans.

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There is great interest in developing non-invasive approaches for studying cortical plasticity in humans. High-frequency presentation of auditory and visual stimuli, or sensory tetanisation, can induce long-term-potentiation-like (LTP-like) changes in cortical activity. However, contrasting effects across studies suggest that sensory tetanisation may be unreliable.

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Deficits in auditory nerve (AN) function for older adults reduce afferent input to the cortex. The extent to which the cortex in older adults adapts to this loss of afferent input and the mechanisms underlying this adaptation are not well understood. We took a neural systems approach measuring AN and cortical evoked responses within 50 older and 27 younger human adults (59 female) to estimate central gain or increased cortical activity despite reduced AN activity.

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Introduction: In the management of acute hospital admissions during the COVID-19 pandemic, safe patient cohorting depends on robust admission diagnostic strategies. It is essential that screening strategies are sensitive and rapid, to prevent nosocomial transmission of COVID-19 and maintain patient flow.

Methods: We retrospectively identified all COVID-19 positive and suspected cases at our institution screened by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) between 4 April and 28 June 2020.

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Aging is associated with auditory nerve (AN) functional deficits and decreased inhibition in the central auditory system, amplifying central responses in a process referred to here as central gain. Although central gain increases response amplitudes, central gain may not restore disrupted response timing. In this translational study, we measured responses putatively generated by the AN and auditory midbrain in younger and older mice and humans.

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Auditory function declines with age, as evidenced by communication difficulties in challenging listening environments for older adults. Declining auditory function may arise, in part, from an age-related loss and/or inactivity of low-spontaneous-rate (SR) auditory nerve (AN) fibers, a subgroup of neurons important for suprathreshold processing. Compared to high-SR fibers, low-SR fibers take longer to recover from prior stimulation.

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The auditory nerve (AN) of the inner ear is the primary conveyor of acoustic information from sensory hair cells to the brainstem. Approximately 95% of peripheral AN fibers are myelinated by glial cells. The integrity of myelin and the glial-associated paranodal structures at the node of Ranvier is critical for normal AN activity and axonal survival and function in the central auditory nervous system.

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A common complaint of older adults is difficulty understanding speech, particularly in challenging listening conditions. Accumulating evidence suggests that these difficulties may reflect a loss and/or dysfunction of auditory nerve (AN) fibers. We used a novel approach to study age-related changes in AN structure and several measures of AN function, including neural synchrony, in 58 older adults and 42 younger adults.

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Individuals typically exhibit better cross-sensory perception following unisensory loss, demonstrating improved perception of information available from the remaining senses and increased cross-sensory use of neural resources. Even individuals with no sensory loss will exhibit such changes in cross-sensory processing following temporary sensory deprivation, suggesting that the brain's capacity for recruiting cross-sensory sources to compensate for degraded unisensory input is a general characteristic of the perceptual process. Many studies have investigated how auditory and visual neural structures respond to within- and cross-sensory input.

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Multisensory input can improve perception of ambiguous unisensory information. For example, speech heard in noise can be more accurately identified when listeners see a speaker's articulating face. Importantly, these multisensory effects can be superadditive to listeners' ability to process unisensory speech, such that audiovisual speech identification is better than the sum of auditory-only and visual-only speech identification.

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It is well accepted that pituitary follitropin is secreted into the circulation as a mixture of variants, which differ not in primary structure but rather at the level of glycosylation. These glycosidic forms vary in the number of glycosylation sites filled, complexity of glycosidic chains, and sialylation and sulfation. It is generally agreed that high sialylation, 2,3 sialic acid capping of terminal N-acetyl galactosamine or galactose leads to longer circulating half-life, by blocking binding of asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR) in the liver.

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A speech signal carries information about meaning and about the talker conveying that meaning. It is now known that these two dimensions are related. There is evidence that gaining experience with a particular talker in one modality not only facilitates better phonetic perception in that modality, but also transfers across modalities to allow better phonetic perception in the other.

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Background: The auditory brainstem response (ABR), specifically wave I, is widely used to noninvasively measure auditory nerve (AN) function. Recent work in humans has introduced novel electrocochleographic measures to comprehensively characterize AN function that emphasize suprathreshold processing and estimate neural synchrony.

New Method: This study establishes new tools for evaluating AN function in vivo in adult mice using tone-evoked ABRs obtained from young-adult CBA/CaJ mice, adapting the approach previously introduced in humans.

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Declining auditory spatial processing is hypothesized to contribute to the difficulty older adults have detecting, locating, and selecting a talker from among others in noisy listening environments. Though auditory spatial processing has been associated with several cortical structures, little is known regarding the underlying white matter architecture or how age-related changes in white matter microstructure may affect it. The arcuate fasciculus is a target for understanding age-related differences in auditory spatial attention based on normative spatial attention findings in humans.

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Temporal modulations are an important part of speech signals. An accurate perception of these time-varying qualities of sound is necessary for successful communication. The current study investigates the relationship between sustained envelope encoding and speech-in-noise perception in a cohort of normal-hearing younger (ages 18-30 yr, = 22) and older adults (ages 55-90+ yr, = 35) using the subcortical auditory steady-state response (ASSR).

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The follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR) plays a crucial role in reproduction. This structurally complex receptor is a member of the G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily of membrane receptors. As with the other structurally similar glycoprotein hormone receptors (the thyroid-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone-chorionic gonadotropin hormone receptors), the FSHR is characterized by an extensive extracellular domain, where binding to FSH occurs, linked to the signal specificity subdomain or hinge region.

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Older adults typically have difficulty identifying speech that is temporally distorted, such as reverberant, accented, time-compressed, or interrupted speech. These difficulties occur even when hearing thresholds fall within a normal range. Auditory neural processing speed, which we have previously found to predict auditory temporal processing (auditory gap detection), may interfere with the ability to recognize phonetic features as they rapidly unfold over time in spoken speech.

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The Irrelevant Sound Effect (ISE) is the finding that background sound impairs accuracy for visually presented serial recall tasks. Among various auditory backgrounds, speech typically acts as the strongest distractor. Based on the changing-state hypothesis, speech is a disruptive background because it is more complex than other nonspeech backgrounds.

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Purpose: Human auditory nerve (AN) activity estimated from the amplitude of the first prominent negative peak (N1) of the compound action potential (CAP) is typically quantified using either a peak-to-peak measurement or a baseline-corrected measurement. However, the reliability of these 2 common measurement techniques has not been evaluated but is often assumed to be relatively poor, especially for older adults. To address this question, the current study (a) compared test-retest reliability of these 2 methods and (b) tested the extent to which measurement type affected the relationship between N1 amplitude and experimental factors related to the stimulus (higher and lower intensity levels) and participants (younger and older adults).

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Human follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) exhibits both macro- and microheterogeneity in its carbohydrate moieties. Macroheterogeneity results in three physiologically relevant FSHβ subunit variants, two that possess a single N-linked glycan at either one of the two βL1 loop glycosylation sites or one with both glycans. Microheterogeneity is characterized by 80 to over 100 unique oligosaccharide structures attached to each of the 3 to 4 occupied N-glycosylation sites.

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Declines in auditory nerve (AN) function contribute to suprathreshold auditory processing and communication deficits in individuals with normal hearing, hearing loss, hyperacusis, and tinnitus. Procedures to characterize AN loss or dysfunction in humans are limited. We report several novel complementary metrics using the compound action potential (CAP), a direct measure of summated AN activity.

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Gonadotropin receptors belong to the highly conserved subfamily of the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily, the so-called Rhodopsin-like family (class A), which is the largest class of GPCRs and currently a major drug target. Both the follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR) and the luteinizing hormone/chorionic gonadotropin hormone receptor (LHCGR) are mainly located in the gonads where they play key functions associated to essential reproductive functions. As any other protein, gonadotropin receptors must be properly folded into a mature tertiary conformation compatible with quaternary assembly and endoplasmic reticulum export to the cell surface plasma membrane.

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