Background: Recent studies have reported mutations in the telomerase reverse transcriptase promoter (p) in meningiomas. We sought to determine the frequency, clonality and clinical significance of telomere gene alterations in a cohort of patients with progressive/higher-grade meningiomas.
Methods: We characterized 64 temporally- and regionally-distinct specimens from 26 WHO grade III meningioma patients.
Objective: To assess the safety and effectiveness of bis-chloroethylnitrosourea (BCNU) wafers in elderly patients with recurrent glioblastoma (GBM).
Methods: Patients with recurrent GBM operated on between 2007 and 2014 were divided into 3 groups: >65 years with BCNU wafer implantation, >65 years without BCNU wafer implantation, and ≤65 years with BCNU wafer implantation. We compared survival and complications.
Numerous RNA binding proteins are deposited onto an mRNA transcript to modulate post-transcriptional processing events ensuring proper mRNA maturation. Defining the interplay between RNA binding proteins that couple mRNA biogenesis events is crucial for understanding how gene expression is regulated. To explore how RNA binding proteins control mRNA processing, we investigated a role for the evolutionarily conserved polyadenosine RNA binding protein, Nab2, in mRNA maturation within the nucleus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConclusion: A large proportion of the mature otic capsule bone in cases of otosclerosis lies in plaques in direct contiguity with active otosclerosis and, because it shows significant structural defects, it should be regarded as part of the otosclerotic process. These appearances support our previously described suggestion that otosclerosis is an invasive osseous neoplasm, the mature atypical bone representing differentiation of earlier-formed invasive neoplastic osseous tissue.
Objectives: We sought structural features in differentiated bone within the otic capsules of cases of otosclerosis that might indicate a relation to the underlying disease process.
The 3' end of most eukaryotic transcripts is decorated by poly(A)-binding proteins (PABPs), which influence the fate of mRNAs throughout gene expression. However, despite the fact that multiple PABPs coexist in the nuclei of most eukaryotes, how functional interplay between these nuclear PABPs controls gene expression remains unclear. By characterizing the ortholog of the Nab2/ZC3H14 zinc finger PABP in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, we show here that the two major fission yeast nuclear PABPs, Pab2 and Nab2, have opposing roles in posttranscriptional gene regulation.
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