Sialic acids are found as terminal sugars on glycan structures on cellular surfaces. T cells carry these sialoglycans abundantly, and they are thought to serve multiple functions in cell adhesion, cell migration, and protection from complement attack. We studied the role of sialoglycans on T cells in a mouse model with a T cell-specific deletion of cytidine monophosphate-sialic acid synthase (CMAS), the enzyme that is crucial for the synthesis of sialoglycans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalcium phosphate cements (CPC) are currently widely used bone replacement materials with excellent bioactivity, but have considerable disadvantages like slow degradation. For critical-sized defects, however, an improved degradation is essential to match the tissue regeneration, especially in younger patients who are still growing. We demonstrate that a combination of CPC with mesoporous bioactive glass (MBG) particles led to an enhanced degradation and in a critical alveolar cleft defect in rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe size of actionable chemical spaces is surging, owing to a variety of novel techniques, both computational and experimental. As a consequence, novel molecular matter is now at our fingertips that cannot and should not be neglected in early-phase drug discovery. Huge, combinatorial, make-on-demand chemical spaces with high probability of synthetic success rise exponentially in content, generative machine learning models go hand in hand with synthesis prediction, and DNA-encoded libraries offer new ways of hit structure discovery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Digital collateral ligament injuries are common hand injuries that can cause significant pain and functional impairment. Ultrasonography can be useful in the evaluation of these ligamentous injuries, as it is both cost-effective and allows for easy, dynamic evaluation during imaging.
Case Report: We report a rare sonographic finding of an index finger radial collateral ligament injury that was found to have a flap of the ligament entrapped within the metacarpophalangeal joint, which to our knowledge has not been described previously.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a severe autoimmune disease that displays considerable heterogeneity not only in its symptoms, but also in its environmental and genetic causes. Studies in SLE patients have revealed that many genetic variants contribute to disease development. However, often its etiology remains unknown.
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