Publications by authors named "Michael Gelman"

Objective: To describe the clinical features and disease course of COVID-19 in veterans with spinal cord injury (SCI).

Design: Case series of consecutive veterans with SCI treated at a single center.

Setting: SCI Unit at an urban Veterans Administration hospital at the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Type III phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase (PI4KIIIβ) is an essential enzyme in mediating membrane trafficking and is implicated in a variety of pathogenic processes. It is a key host factor mediating replication of RNA viruses. The design of potent and specific inhibitors of this enzyme will be essential to define its cellular roles and may lead to novel antiviral therapeutics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper presents a new data infrastructure for measuring economic activity. The infrastructure records transactions and account balances, yielding measurements with scope and accuracy that have little precedent in economics. The data are drawn from a diverse population that overrepresents males and younger adults but contains large numbers of underrepresented groups.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Therapy for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is on the cusp of a new era. Until now, standard-of-care therapy has involved interferon (IFN) and ribavirin. With the first successful Phase III trials of specific targeted antiviral therapy for HCV (STAT-C) compounds, as well as three trials in progress giving the first glimpse of IFN-free combinations of STAT-C agents, this review looks ahead to the new classes of anti-HCV agents currently in clinical development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

[structure: see text] Poly(1) kills bacteria (Gram-positive and -negative) and lyses human erythrocytes; this biocidal profile is similar to that of the peptide toxin mellitin. Poly(1) has antibacterial activity comparable to that of a potent derivative of the host defense peptide magainin II, but lacks magainin's selectivity for bacteria over erythrocytes. An analogous N-quaternized polymer, poly(3), is less biocidal than poly(1), suggesting that reversible N-protonation leads to greater biocidal activity than does irreversible N-quaternization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

[structure: see text] The interaction between the HIV-1 Tat protein and the TAR RNA element in the nascent viral genomic transcript is required for viral replication. An 11-residue beta-peptide (1), an all-beta homologue of the Arg-rich region Tat 47-57, binds TAR RNA with K(d) = 29 +/- 4 nM. A control beta-peptide (2) in which all Arg side chains are replaced by Lys side chains shows increased affinity but decreased specificity for wild-type vs bulge-deleted TAR RNA, as do the alpha-peptide analogues of 1 and 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Short cationic peptides derived from DNA-binding proteins, of which HIV Tat is a prototype, can cross the membranes of living cells, and they can bring covalently attached moieties (proteins, drugs) along with them. We show that a beta-amino acid analogue of Tat 47-57 enters HeLa cells with comparable efficiency to Tat 47-57 itself (YGRKKRRQRRR). The beta-peptide is comprised of residues that bear the appropriate side chain at the beta-carbon.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF