Publications by authors named "James McQuillan"

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  • Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma with varied clinical outcomes, often requiring multiple treatment lines, but resulting in shorter disease control periods over time.
  • Novel treatments like chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapies and bispecific antibodies may be effective but are usually given late in the treatment process, potentially missing chances to help patients with more aggressive forms of the disease.
  • A study of 389 patients over 10 years revealed that mortality from MCL increases with each treatment line, highlighting the need for earlier trials of innovative therapies for high-risk patients, especially older individuals and those relapsing early.
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The mechanism by which arcuate nucleus kisspeptin (ARN) neurons co-expressing glutamate, neurokinin B, and dynorphin intermittently synchronize their activity to generate pulsatile hormone secretion remains unknown. An acute brain slice preparation maintaining synchronized ARN neuron burst firing was used alongside in vivo GCaMP GRIN lens microendoscope and fiber photometry imaging coupled with intra-ARN microinfusion. Studies in intact and gonadectomized male mice revealed that ARN neuron synchronizations result from near-random emergent network activity within the population and that this was critically dependent on local glutamate-AMPA signaling.

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  • Researchers investigated how estrogen affects the GnRH pulse generator in mice, revealing significant changes in pulse generator activity influenced by estradiol.
  • Mice lacking the ESR1 receptor specifically in kisspeptin neurons exhibited altered GnRH activity resembling that of ovariectomized mice, suggesting the importance of ESR1 in this feedback mechanism.
  • Using CRISPR-Cas9, the team showed that reduced ESR1 expression in arcuate nucleus kisspeptin neurons led to altered GnRH pulse patterns, highlighting estrogen's role in regulating fertility through these neurons.
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  • The study uses ATR FTIR to examine how the food protein β-lactoglobulin (BLG) and bile salts (TCA and GCA) interact with titanium dioxide nanoparticles, which could inform our understanding of digestion and bioavailability.
  • TCA shows weak retention on TiO nanoparticles, while GCA binds more strongly through two mechanisms, with one form being particularly resistant to removal.
  • BLG displays irreversible binding and structural changes depending on pH, suggesting that conditions in the stomach and small intestine affect its behavior, and coadsorption studies highlight how TCA and GCA’s binding can change in the presence of BLG.
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The necessity and functional significance of neurotransmitter co-transmission remains unclear. The glutamatergic 'KNDy' neurons co-express kisspeptin, neurokinin B (NKB), and dynorphin and exhibit a highly stereotyped synchronized behavior that reads out to the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neuron dendrons to drive episodic hormone secretion. Using expansion microscopy, we show that KNDy neurons make abundant close, non-synaptic appositions with the GnRH neuron dendron.

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Adsorption of carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) in aqueous solution onto a titania nanoparticle film has been studied using in situ attenuated total reflectance infrared spectroscopy (ATR-IR). CMC was adsorbed onto the positively charged titania surface in neutral, partially charged, and fully charged state. The response of the adsorbed polyelectrolyte layer was monitored upon changing the electrolyte pH and ionic strength.

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A subpopulation of kisspeptin neurons located in the arcuate nucleus (ARN) operate as the GnRH pulse generator. The activity of this population of neurons can be monitored in real-time for long periods using kisspeptin neuron-selective GCaMP6 fiber photometry. Using this approach, we find that ARN kisspeptin neurons exhibit brief (∼50 seconds) periods of synchronized activity that precede pulses of LH in intact female mice.

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Polyethoxylated (PEO) surfactant adsorption to silica under aqueous conditions is an important physical process in a multitude of industries. Consequently, a considerable number of spectroscopic and other studies have been carried out to ascertain the molecular/structural details of the adsorbed surfactant and the kinetics of PEO surfactant adsorption. However, the use of infrared spectroscopy to probe surfactant adsorption at the silica/aqueous solution interface has been limited because of the instability of silica particle films under aqueous conditions and the opacity of silicon prisms below 1300 cm typically employed for these studies.

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  • The study explores adhesives from two seaweed species, Durvillaea antarctica and Hormosira banksii, to understand how they bond in wet conditions.
  • Both species release a primary adhesive (carbohydrate-based) and a secondary adhesive (protein-based), but D. antarctica's secretions contain sulfated compounds leading to stronger bonding over time.
  • The release rate and quantity of adhesives differ, with D. antarctica showing faster and more effective adhesion, highlighting the importance of both quantity and quality in adhesive performance.
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  • Anodization of titanium-zirconium (TiZr) surfaces can promote faster bone formation by influencing how osteoblast cells behave, improving osseointegration.
  • The study involved testing anodized Ti and TiZr discs in sheep femurs for four weeks, using various advanced analysis techniques to evaluate surface characteristics and bone integration.
  • Results showed that anodized implants had better bone contact compared to unmodified ones, with no significant difference in osseointegration between the two types of anodized surfaces studied.
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Using a multimodal biospectroscopic approach, we settle several long-standing controversies over the molecular mechanisms that lead to brain damage in cerebral malaria, which is a major health concern in developing countries because of high levels of mortality and permanent brain damage. Our results provide the first conclusive evidence that important components of the pathology of cerebral malaria include peroxidative stress and protein oxidation within cerebellar gray matter, which are colocalized with elevated nonheme iron at the site of microhemorrhage. Such information could not be obtained previously from routine imaging methods, such as electron microscopy, fluorescence, and optical microscopy in combination with immunocytochemistry, or from bulk assays, where the level of spatial information is restricted to the minimum size of tissue that can be dissected.

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Silica has been frequently studied using infrared and Raman spectroscopy due to its importance in many practical contexts where its surface chemistry plays a vital role. The majority of these studies have utilized chemical-vapor-deposited films in vacuo after high-temperature calcination. However, room-temperature hydration and dehydration of thin silica particle films has not been well characterized in spite of the importance of such films as substrates for polymer and surfactant adsorption.

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Titanium (Ti) and its alloys have been popularly used as implant biomaterial for decades. Recently, titanium-zirconium (TiZr) alloy has been developed as an alternative implant material with improved strength in load bearing areas. Surface modification is one of the key factors to alter the surface properties to hasten osseointegration.

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Gamma interferon (IFN-γ) drives antiparasite responses and immunopathology during infection with Plasmodium species. Immunity-related GTPases (IRGs) are a class of IFN-γ-dependent proteins that are essential for cell autonomous immunity to numerous intracellular pathogens. However, it is currently unknown whether IRGs modulate responses during malaria.

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Previous studies have shown that exposing young worker bees (Apis mellifera) to queen mandibular pheromone (QMP) reduces their aversive learning performance, while enhancing their attraction to QMP. As QMP has been found to reduce the rate of juvenile hormone (JH) synthesis in worker bees, we examined whether aversive learning in 2-day old workers exposed to QMP from the time of adult emergence could be improved by injecting JH (10 µg in a 2 µl volume) into the haemolymph. We examined in addition, the effects of JH treatment on worker attraction to QMP, and on the levels of expression of amine receptor genes in the antennae, as well as in the mushroom bodies of the brain.

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IR spectroelectrochemistry was used to examine the electro-oxidation behavior of carbon monoxide in methanol at a polycrystalline copper electrode. Under such neutral conditions copper electrodes are coated with ill-defined copper oxides and hydroxides and at the oxidative potentials can be expected to generate soluble copper species. The electrochemistry displayed complex behavior suggesting that methanol oxidation was one prominent reaction.

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Article Synopsis
  • Pneumococcal meningitis is a serious bacterial infection that affects the central nervous system and can lead to long-lasting neurological issues in survivors.
  • Researchers used a mouse model to study how two enzymes involved in tryptophan metabolism, IDO1 and TDO2, impact behavior and cognition after meningitis treatment.
  • Although blocking these enzymes didn't prevent death, it did influence certain behavioral changes, highlighting the kynurenine pathway's role in some neurological outcomes while indicating that other mechanisms may also contribute.
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  • The steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-E) negatively affects honeybees' ability to learn aversive odors associated with punishment, although it doesn't hinder their learning of scents linked to food rewards.
  • 20-E influences the expression of certain amine-receptor genes in the honeybee brain, particularly affecting dopamine receptor genes linked to memory formation.
  • The study suggests a crucial role of the putative dopamine/ecdysone receptor, AmGPCR19, in the hormonal regulation of associative olfactory learning in honeybees, especially during their early development stages.
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Phosphocreatine is a major cellular source of high energy phosphates, which is crucial to maintain cell viability under conditions of impaired metabolic states, such as decreased oxygen and energy availability (i.e., ischemia).

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The pathology associated with Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis results largely from activation of immune-associated pathways. We systematically investigated the production of IFN subtypes, as well as their influence on pathology, in a mouse model of S. pneumoniae meningitis.

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Dopamine and octopamine released in the mushroom bodies of the insect brain play a critical role in the formation of aversive and appetitive memories, respectively. As recent evidence suggests a complex relationship between the effects of these two amines on the output of mushroom body circuits, we compared the expression of dopamine- and octopamine-receptor genes in three major subpopulations of mushroom body intrinsic neurons (Kenyon cells). Using the brain of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, we found that expression of amine-receptor genes differs markedly across Kenyon cell subpopulations.

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The adsorption of two dextrin-based polymers, a regular wheat dextrin (TY) and a carboxymethyl-substituted (CM) dextrin, onto an anatase TiO(2) particle film has been studied using in situ attenuated total reflection (ATR) FTIR spectroscopy. Infrared spectra of the polymer solutions and the polymer adsorbed at the anatase surface were acquired for two solution conditions: pH 3 and pH 9; below and above the isoelectric point (IEP) of anatase, respectively. Comparison of the polymer solution spectra and the adsorbed layer spectra highlighted a number of spectral differences that were attributed to involvement of the carboxyl group of CM Dextrin interacting with the anatase surface directly and the adsorption of oxidized dextrin chains in the case of regular dextrin (TY) at high pH.

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Attenuated total reflectance infrared spectroscopy is used to monitor nanodiamond surface group transformations in the presence of aqueous IrCl(6)(2-). Electron transfer between the nanoparticle surface and the solution redox species results in oxidation of ∼8.5% of surface alcohol groups, with concomitant formation of unsaturated ketone or quinone-like moieties.

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The adsorption of alginic acid on a TiO(2) particle film from aqueous solution was investigated by attenuated total reflection infrared (ATR-IR) spectroscopy. ATR-IR spectra recorded at different pHs confirmed that alginate adsorption to TiO(2) is favored at pH 3.0 and no significant adsorption occurs above pH 5.

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