Publications by authors named "Ling-Yu E Chang"

Signaling through toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) plays an obligate role in burn-related myocardial dysfunction. We hypothesized that signaling through CD14, a cellular receptor for endotoxin that lacks a transmembrane domain but is coupled to TLR4, also plays a role in postburn myocardial inflammation and dysfunction. Burn covering 40% total body surface area (or sham burn for controls) was produced in wild-type (WT) and CD14 knockout (KO) as well as vehicle-treated and geldanamycin-treated WT mice (1 microg/g body weight) to inhibit CD14 signaling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Replication of statistically significant associations between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and disease phenotypes has been problematic. One reason for conflicting observations may be failure to consider confounding factors, including gene-gene (epistatic) interactions. Our experience with the insertion/deletion polymorphism at -688 in the promoter region of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) seems to support this contention and may foreshadow problems for genome-wide association scans, which tend to use unadjusted analytical methodologies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although comprehension of postburn pathophysiology has grown in recent years, we are still unable to accurately identify burn patients who are at an increased risk of infectious complications and death. This unexplained variation is likely influenced by heritable factors; the genetic predisposition for death from infection has been estimated as greater than that for cardiovascular disease or cancer. Identify genetic variants associated with increased mortality after burn injury.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To analyze allelic association with clinical outcome in a cohort of burn patients.

Patients: Two hundred twenty-eight individuals with burns > or =15% total body surface area without significant non-burn related trauma who survived >48 hours post-admission were enrolled. One hundred fifty-nine of these patients were analyzed previously.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Studies of color vision in marsupial mammals have been very limited. Two photoreceptor genes have been characterized from the tammar wallaby, but a third cone pigment was suggested by microspectrophotometric measurements on cone photoreceptors in two other species, including the fat-tailed dunnart, Sminthopsis crassicaudata. To determine the sequence and infer absorption maxima of the cone photoreceptor pigments of S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF