Publications by authors named "P Hogan"

Background: In anaesthetised horses, bradycardia secondary to high vagal tone can reduce cardiac output and blood pressure. The use of anticholinergics in horses is limited due to concerns about ileus and abdominal discomfort. This retrospective study sought to determine the prevalence of post-operative abdominal discomfort in healthy horses that received atropine under isoflurane anaesthesia.

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The conformational change in STIM1 that communicates sensing of ER calcium-store depletion from the STIM ER-luminal domain to the STIM cytoplasmic region and ultimately to ORAI channels in the plasma membrane is broadly understood. However, the structural basis for the STIM luminal-domain dimerization that drives the conformational change has proven elusive. A recently published study has approached this question via molecular dynamics simulations.

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The chemokine co-receptors CXCR4 and CCR5 mediate HIV entry and signal transduction necessary for viral infection. However, to date only the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc is approved for treating HIV-1 infection. Given that approximately 50% of late-stage HIV patients also develop CXCR4-tropic virus, clinical anti-HIV CXCR4 antagonists are needed.

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Background: Patients from the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer plus (LGBTQ +) community face various health inequalities and report poor healthcare experiences. Little is known about how knowledgeable and confident UK doctors are around LGBTQ + health, and previous research demonstrates that UK medical schools rarely deliver teaching in this area. This research evaluated the level of knowledge, awareness and confidence of LGBTQ + health among Internal Medical Trainees (IMTs) in London.

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Signaling pathways that drive gene expression are typically depicted as having a dozen or so landmark phosphorylation and transcriptional events. In reality, thousands of dynamic post-translational modifications (PTMs) orchestrate nearly every cellular function, and we lack technologies to find causal links between these vast biochemical pathways and genetic circuits at scale. Here we describe the high-throughput, functional assessment of phosphorylation sites through the development of PTM-centric base editing coupled to phenotypic screens, directed by temporally resolved phosphoproteomics.

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