Publications by authors named "O Gallego"

Article Synopsis
  • The exocyst is a key protein complex that helps with the process of exocytosis by linking secretory vesicles to the plasma membrane and coordinating various proteins involved in cell trafficking.
  • Despite known structural details, its complex and adaptable roles make understanding its full function challenging.
  • The review discusses current and potential future experimental methods to study the exocyst, ranging from isolated lab experiments to real-time imaging in living cells, to better understand its dynamics and functions in a natural context.
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Objectives: To determine whether routinary walking activity and the derived neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio are associated with outcomes in patients with recurrent and/or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck.

Methods: This multicenter retrospective cohort study included 64 patients diagnosed with recurrent and/or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck and treated with immunotherapy (Programmed Death-1 and Programmed Death-ligand-1 proteins inhibitors) at two tertiary centers. We compared a group that performed uninterrupted physical activity for 1 h per day and controls who performed no activity.

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Clam shrimps are a group of freshwater crustaceans who prospered during the Late Triassic. They were abundant in lacustrine sedimentary records of continental basins distributed throughout Pangea during this time. However, they show significant taxonomic differences between the clamp shrimp faunas from the rift basins of central Pangea and the southern Gondwanan basins.

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Purpose: The impact of age on optimal management of glioblastoma remains unclear. A recent combined analysis of two randomised trials, GEINO14-01 and EX-TEM, found no benefit from extending post-radiation temozolomide in newly diagnosed glioblastoma. Here, we explore the impact of age.

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Structural knowledge of protein assemblies in their physiological environment is paramount to understand cellular functions at the molecular level. Protein interactions from Imaging Complexes after Translocation (PICT) is a live-cell imaging technique for the structural characterization of macromolecular assemblies in living cells. PICT relies on the measurement of the separation between labelled molecules using fluorescence microscopy and cell engineering.

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