Publications by authors named "Saifei Liu"

Background: Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive subtype with limited treatment options and high resistance to chemotherapy. Doxorubicin is commonly used, but its efficacy is limited by variable sensitivity and resistance. Bacopaside II, a saponin compound, has shown anti-cancer potential.

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Background: The association between cardiovascular disease and carcinogenesis is bidirectional and well-established. Furthermore, cancer treatment improves overall patient survival, potentially at the cost of incremental and fatal cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Aim: To evaluate (a) In a real-world cohort, the proportion of patients offered cancer chemotherapy who have antecedent CVD (CVD); (b) The rates of patient admission with subsequent development of CVD (CVD) requiring hospital admission post assignment to chemotherapy; (c) The impact of CVD and CVD on mortality rates relative to those seen in patients without overt CVD (CVD) and (d) The time course of mortality in CVD versus CVD patients.

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Background: Secreted Frizzled-Related Protein 5 (SFRP5) modulates Wnt signalling pathways, affecting diverse biological processes. We assessed the diagnostic and prognostic value of circulating SFRP5 (cSFRP5) in colorectal cancer (CRC) METHODS: Plasma cSFRP5 concentrations were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in healthy donors (n = 133), individuals diagnosed with CRC (n = 449), colorectal polyps (n = 85), and medical conditions in other organs including cancer, inflammation, and benign states (n = 64).

Results: Patients with CRC, polyps, and other conditions showed higher cSFRP5 levels than healthy individuals (p < 0.

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Citrus target spot, caused by , was formerly considered a cold-tolerant fungal disease. However, it has now spread from high-latitude regions to warmer low-latitude regions. Here, we conducted physiological observations on two different strains of the fungus collected from distinct regions, and evaluated their pathogenicity.

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Plants have evolved a sophisticated immunity system for specific detection of pathogens and rapid induction of measured defences. Over- or constitutive activation of defences would negatively affect plant growth and development. Hence, the plant immune system is under tight positive and negative regulation.

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Despite the high prevalence of heart failure in the western world, there are few effective treatments. Fibulin-3 is a protein involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) structural integrity, however its role in the heart is unknown. We have demonstrated, using single cell RNA-seq, that fibulin-3 was highly expressed in quiescent murine cardiac fibroblasts, with expression highest prior to injury and late post-infarct (from ~ day-28 to week-8).

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study identified 65 LysM family genes in bread wheat, classified into four categories based on their structures and functions in plant-microbe interactions.
  • - Key LysM proteins (TaCEBiP, TaLYK5, and TaCERK1) were found to interact with pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), enhancing wheat's resistance to diseases.
  • - The research revealed that wheat utilizes two chitin perception systems to recognize pathogens, highlighting the signaling pathways activated by these LysM proteins under biotic stress.
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Plants have the ability to recognize the essential chitin molecule present in the fungal cell wall, which stimulates the immune response. Phytopathogenic fungi have developed various strategies to inhibit the chitin-triggered immune response. Here, we identified a chitin deacetylase of Puccinia striiformis f.

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Perhexiline (Px) inhibits carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT1), which controls uptake of long chain fatty acids into mitochondria. However, occasional cases of hypoglycaemia have been reported in Px-treated patients, raising the possibility that Px may also increase sensitivity to insulin. Furthermore, Px increases anti-aggregatory responses to nitric oxide (NO), an effect which may theoretically parallel insulin sensitization.

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Article Synopsis
  • * It discusses specific compounds like -coumaroylagmatine and ferulic acid, detailing their antimicrobial effects and involvement in plant immune responses.
  • * Despite progress in understanding HCAAs, the complexity of their functions in plant defense is acknowledged, calling for more research to uncover remaining mysteries.
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Background And Purpose: The pathophysiology of coronary artery spasm (CAS), with its associated ischaemic crises, is currently poorly understood and treatment is frequently ineffective. In view of increasing evidence that platelet-based defects may occur in CAS patients, we investigated platelet reactivity in CAS patients and whether symptomatic crises reflect activation of platelet-endothelial interactions.

Experimental Approach: CAS patients were evaluated during acute and/or chronic symptomatic phases and compared with healthy control subjects.

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It is now 30 years since Japanese investigators first described Takotsubo Syndrome (TTS) as a disorder occurring mainly in ageing women, ascribing it to the impact of multivessel coronary artery spasm. During the intervening period, it has become clear that TTS involves relatively transient vascular injury, followed by prolonged myocardial inflammatory and eventually fibrotic changes. Hence symptomatic recovery is generally slow, currently an under-recognised issue.

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Aims: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) episodes are primarily initiated by 'pulse' release of catecholamines inducing neutrophil infiltration and myocardial inflammation in susceptible individuals (largely ageing women). Evidence of myocardial inflammation and associated energetic impairment persists for ≥ 3 months post-acute TTS episodes, suggesting the existence of additional 'perpetuating' mechanisms. The effects of B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) in suppressing superoxide (O ) release from neutrophils are transiently impaired in acute heart failure.

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Activation of neutrophils is a critically important component of the innate immune response to bacterial and chemical stimuli, and culminates in the "neutrophil burst", which facilitates neutrophil phagocytosis via the release of superoxide anion radical (O₂) from NADPH oxidase. Excessive and/or prolonged neutrophil activation results in substantial tissue injury and increases in vascular permeability-resulting in sustained tissue infiltration with neutrophils and monocytes, and persistent vasomotor dysfunction. Cardiovascular examples of such changes include acute and chronic systolic and diastolic heart failure ("heart failure with preserved ejection fraction"), and the catecholamine-induced inflammatory disorder takotsubo syndrome.

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Aims: To evaluate whether peripheral circulatory 'remodelling' as measured by changes in vascular compliance and in markers of nitric oxide signalling contributes to patient response to cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT).

Methods And Results: Effects of CRT were evaluated in 33 patients pre-procedure and 6 months post-procedure. Peak oxygen consumption, 6 min walk distance, New York Heart Association class, and quality of life score were evaluated.

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Background: Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and other forms of myocardial acute oxidative stress are associated with variable "shedding" of the endothelial glycocalyx (GCS) which can be quantitated ex vivo by release into plasma of glycocalyx components such as Syndecan-1 (SD-1). Previous studies have implicated release of both catecholamines and BNP as potential accentuating factors in GCS: since these are prominent aspects of the pathogenesis of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TTC), we hypothesised that TTC is associated with increased GCS and the extent of GCS is predictable on the basis of NT-proBNP and catecholamine releases.

Methods: SD-1 concentrations were measured in 48 TTC patients acutely and after 3months, and compared with those in 12 healthy controls, and 17 patients with AMI.

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Introduction: Vitamin D insufficiency, defined as 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels < 75nmol/L is associated with cardio-metabolic dysfunction. Vitamin D insufficiency is associated with inflammation and fibrosis, but it remains uncertain whether these anomalies are readily reversible. Therefore, we aimed to determine the effects of vitamin D supplementation on markers of: 1) nitric oxide (NO) signaling, 2) inflammation, and 3) fibrosis, in healthy volunteers with mild hypovitaminosis.

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Background: Risk of substantial haemorrhage represents a critically important limitation to effective anti-thrombotic treatment in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). While it is known that this risk is increased in anticoagulated patients either in the presence of anti-aggregatory drugs or concomitant renal insufficiency, there are currently few data on the potential interactions between endogenous platelet aggregability and bleeding risk.

Objective: We therefore evaluated in a cohort of AF patients: (1), the putative relationship between platelet aggregability and HAS-BLED score; (2), the potential biochemical bases for such a relationship.

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Aims: The release of the B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is increased in heart failure (HF), a condition associated with oxidative stress. BNP is known to exert anti-inflammatory effects including suppression of neutrophil superoxide (O2(-)) release. However, BNP-based restoration of homeostasis in HF is inadequate, and the equivocal clinical benefit of a recombinant BNP, nesiritide, raises the possibility of attenuated response to BNP.

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Background: Clinical factors associated with thromboembolic risk in AF patients are well characterized and include new onset AF. Biochemically, AF is associated with inflammatory activation and impairment of nitric oxide (NO) signalling, which may also predispose to thromboembolism: the bases for variability in these anomalies have not been identified. We therefore sought to identify correlates of impaired platelet NO signalling in patients hospitalized with atrial fibrillation (AF), and to evaluate the impact of acuity of AF.

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Background: Hyperglycemia in patients with acute coronary syndromes is associated with poor outcomes, and its rapid correction with insulin infusion has been shown to restore platelet responsiveness to nitric oxide and to suppress superoxide (O2(-)) generation. Thioredoxin-interacting protein has emerged recently as a pivotal modulator of hyperglycemia-induced inflammation, O2(-) production, and impairment of nitric oxide signaling, but it is not known whether its expression in platelets can be downregulated rapidly.

Methods: In 12 hyperglycemic patients with acute coronary syndrome, we evaluated the putative role of thioredoxin-interacting protein suppression in the platelet nitric oxide response after reversal of hyperglycemia with insulin infusion.

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