Publications by authors named "Prashanth Setty"

Lysozyme is a β-1,4-glycosidase that hydrolyzes the polysaccharide backbone of bacterial cell walls. With an additional bactericidal function mediated by a separate protein domain, lysozyme is considered a uniquely important antimicrobial molecule contributing to the host's innate immune response to infection. Elevated lysozyme production is found in various inflammatory conditions while patients with genetic risks for inflammatory bowel diseases demonstrate abnormal lysozyme expression, granule packaging, and secretion in Paneth cells.

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Background & Aims: Intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) provide a barrier that separates the mucosal immune system from the luminal microbiota. IECs constitutively express low levels of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II proteins, which are upregulated upon exposure to interferon gamma. We investigated the effects of deleting MHCII proteins specifically in mice with infectious, dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-, and T-cell-induced colitis.

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We previously developed attenuated rabbit enteropathogenic E. coli (rEPEC) strains which are effective oral vaccines against their parent pathogens by deleting ler, a global regulator of virulence genes. To use these strains as orally administered vectors to deliver other antigens we incorporated the B subunit of shiga-like toxin 1(Stx1) into the passenger domain of the autotransporter EspP expressed on a plasmid.

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Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), defined by the production of heat labile (LT) and/or heat stable (ST) toxins, are major causes of diarrhea in animals, children in developing countries and to travelers. No broadly protective ETEC vaccine is available, largely because of the difficulty in inducing immunity to the small ST molecule. To take advantage of the demonstration (Liu et al.

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The ability of gut microbes to bi-directionally communicate with the brain and vice versa form the basis of the gut microbiome-central nervous system axis. It has been shown that inoculation with pathogenic gut bacteria alters the behavior of mice; however, it is not known whether or not non-pathogenic resident microbes have similar effects. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the administration of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), a specific group of resident gut bacteria that generate hydrogen sulfide (H2S), impair learning and memory performance in mice tested in an 8-arm radial maze and Morris water maze.

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Pilocytic astrocytoma is the most frequently occurring brain tumor during childhood. It is classified as grade I by the World Health Organization and may rarely evolve into higher-grade tumors. Frequent genetic abnormalities documented in astrocytomas in children are gains on chromosomal arm 7q.

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Rosette-forming glioneuronal tumors (RGNT) of the fourth ventricle are rare mixed glio-neuronal tumors included in the revised WHO classification of CNS tumors and show histopathological features similar to pilocytic astrocytomas. To evaluate at molecular level potential affinities between these tumors, we investigated a case of RGNT, arising in the cerebellum of a young patient, for the presence of transcriptional products originating from the KIAA1549-BRAF fusion. However, the analysis did not show any fusion.

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Advances in understanding the molecular basis of primitive neuroectodermal tumors of the central nervous system (CNS-PNET) biology are critical to improve patient outcome. Recently, new data on their molecular features have been reported, suggesting that supratentorial PNET (s-PNET) in adult patients may represent a specific tumor entity among CNS-PNETs. In this study, we analyzed the clinicopathologic and molecular features of 12 cases of s-PNET in adult patients.

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Mutations of both the IDH1 and IDH2 (isocitratedehydrogenase enzyme 1 and 2) genes have recently been described in cases of human glioma. Since IDH1 mutations have been associated with better clinical outcome, they are suitable predictive markers for adult glioma patients. We have developed a pyrosequencing assay that allows both the sensitive and rapid detection of mutant IDH1 alleles in DNA extracted from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues.

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The total alkaloid fractions of the methanolic extracts of the leaves, ripe fruits, roots, seeds and stem of Solanum pseudocapsicum were subjected to in-vitro cytotoxicity, short-term toxicity and long-term survival studies. All the five fractions exhibited potent activity. The total alkaloid fraction of leaves was found to be the most potent.

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