Publications by authors named "Paula Hayes"

Objective: The commensal microbiota, host immunity and metabolism participate in a signalling network, with diet influencing each component of this triad. In addition to diet, many elements of a modern lifestyle influence the gut microbiota but the degree to which exercise affects this population is unclear. Therefore, we explored exercise and diet for their impact on the gut microbiota.

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Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common functional gastrointestinal disorder that affects approximately 10% to 20% of the general adult population in Europe and the Americas and is characterized by abdominal pain and altered bowel habits in the absence of reliable biomarkers. The pathophysiology of IBS is poorly understood and is currently thought to represent a complex interplay among the gut microbiota, low-grade inflammation, impaired mucosal barrier function, visceral hypersensitivity, gut motility, and alterations in the gut-brain axis. In any individual patient, 1 or more of these factors may interact to generate symptoms.

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Peptide deformylase activity was thought to be limited to ribosomal protein synthesis in prokaryotes, where new peptides are initiated with an N-formylated methionine. We describe here a new human peptide deformylase (Homo sapiens PDF, or HsPDF) that is localized to the mitochondria. HsPDF is capable of removing formyl groups from N-terminal methionines of newly synthesized mitochondrial proteins, an activity previously not thought to be necessary in mammalian cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Three variants of the CWR22 human prostate cancer xenograft model (CWR22LD1, LD2, LD3) show reduced dependence on androgens when grown in noncastrate conditions but can't grow in castrated mice, while new castrate-resistant variants (CWR22Rv1, RC, RS) were developed from the original CWR22 model under castrated conditions.
  • - The androgen receptor (AR) gene remained active and unchanged in the CWR22LD variants, while significant gene expression differences were observed, with a low number of dysregulated genes, unlike the castrate-resistant variants, which exhibited overexpressed AR and a higher number of dysregulated genes.
  • - The variations in
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