Publications by authors named "Sanford R"

Article Synopsis
  • Large diurnal temperature changes (DTR) in surface soils, ranging from 5°C to over 20°C, significantly impact microbial processes related to carbon and nitrogen cycling, yet are often overlooked in research.
  • The study reveals that these temperature fluctuations affect microbial respiration rates, mineralization rates, and redox potentials, leading to higher process rates compared to those observed under constant temperature conditions in laboratory settings.
  • To better understand the effects of climate change on soil processes, the authors propose a shift in research methods to incorporate natural diurnal temperature variations into modeling and laboratory studies.
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  • The study focuses on the under-explored microbial interactions and (bio)geochemical processes in alkaline mine environments, specifically in iron mines located in the Panxi mining area of Southwest China.
  • Compared to less impacted river samples, the iron ore samples revealed higher levels of various minerals and elements, indicating significant changes in water chemistry due to mining activity, with particular emphasis on sulfate concentrations.
  • The research identified specific microbial communities, mainly Serpentinimonas spp. and Thiobacillus spp., that thrive in high pH conditions, suggesting that these microbes play important roles in the evolution of these alkaline mine ecosystems and might help in strategies for mine restoration.
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  • Leadership is really important in medicine because it helps doctors provide better care and improve healthcare quality.
  • A study involved talking to 40 experienced doctors to understand how their views on leadership matched with popular leadership theories.
  • The study found a new way to look at physician leadership, called the "Four Cs of Physician Leadership," which highlights key skills and traits important for success in their field.
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Background: Malignant wounds can present in up to 14.5% of patients with advanced cancer, significantly reducing quality of life (QoL). Management of malignant wounds is generally palliative, with the goal of improving or maintaining QoL.

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  • This study explores viral communities in strongly alkaline environments (pH 10.4-12.4), which are less understood, specifically focusing on their diversity, functions, and interactions with host microbes.
  • The research identifies key viral families such as Herelleviridae and Inoviridae, which are linked to dominant prokaryotic hosts and suggests that viruses may enhance host fitness through auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs) that aid in cofactor biosynthesis and carbon cycling.
  • The study validates the role of viruses in synthesizing essential cofactors, particularly through a viral gene that restores growth in a mutant strain, indicating that these viral functionalities may be widespread across different ecosystems.
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Nitrous oxide is a potent greenhouse gas whose production is catalyzed by nitric oxide reductase (NOR) members of the heme-copper oxidoreductase (HCO) enzyme superfamily. We identified several previously uncharacterized HCO families, four of which (eNOR, sNOR, gNOR, and nNOR) appear to perform NO reduction. These families have novel active-site structures and several have conserved proton channels, suggesting that they might be able to couple NO reduction to energy conservation.

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Despite most studies on the neurobiology of language demonstrating the central part of the perisylvian network involved in language and speech function, this review attempts to complement this view by focusing on the role of the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC). This region is primarily involved in goal-directed adaptive behavior. Recently, there has been increasing evidence that the OFC is involved in language and speech tasks.

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Radioimmunoconjugates targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) have shown potential to noninvasively visualize HER2-positive tumors. However, the stochastic approach that has been traditionally used to radiolabel these antibodies yields poorly defined and heterogeneous products with suboptimal in vivo performance. Here, we describe a first-in-human PET study on patients with HER2-positive breast cancer evaluating the safety, biodistribution, and dosimetry of Zr-site-specific (ss)-pertuzumab PET, a site-specifically labeled radioimmunoconjugate designed to circumvent the limitations of random stochastic lysine labeling.

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Antimony (Sb), a non-essential metalloid, can be released into the environment through various industrial activities. Sb(III) is considered more toxic than Sb(V), but Sb(III) can be immobilized through the precipitation of insoluble SbS or SbO. In the subsurface, Sb redox chemistry is largely controlled by microorganisms; however, the exact mechanisms of Sb(V) reduction to Sb(III) are still unclear.

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Alkaline ferrous slags pose global environmental issues and long-term risks to ambient environments. To explore the under-investigated microbial structure and biogeochemistry in such unique ecosystems, combined geochemical, microbial, ecological and metagenomic analyses were performed in the areas adjacent to a ferrous slag disposal plant in Sichuan, China. Different levels of exposure to ultrabasic slag leachate had resulted in a significant geochemical gradient of pH (8.

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Salinity can influence microbial communities and related functional groups in lacustrine sediments, but few studies have examined temporal variability in salinity and associated changes in lacustrine microbial communities and functional groups. To better understand how microbial communities and functional groups respond to salinity, we examined geochemistry and functional gene amplicon sequence data collected from 13 lakes located in Kiritimati, Republic of Kiribati (2° N, 157° W) in July 2014 and June 2019, dates which bracket the very large El Niño event of 2015-2016 and a period of extremely high precipitation rates. Lake water salinity values in 2019 were significantly reduced and covaried with ecological distances between microbial samples.

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  • The study aimed to determine the best timing for exercise therapy to enhance cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) in women with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy.
  • The research involved a randomized trial with 158 participants divided into groups receiving different exercise regimens (during, after, or both) compared to usual care.
  • Results showed no significant difference in CRF improvement between the concurrent and sequential exercise groups, but continuous exercise over 32 weeks showed notable benefits, suggesting more research is needed.
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  • Increased CO emissions are causing significant climate issues, highlighting the need to understand the interactions between abiotic and biotic processes that affect CO behavior.
  • A study with an iron-reducing organism examined how varying levels of CO and minerals influenced microbial activity and pH, revealing that dolomite can mitigate CO stress by changing it into less harmful bicarbonate.
  • The findings suggest that the interplay between microbes and minerals could help in managing CO acidification and promoting carbon sequestration, offering practical insights for environmental remediation efforts.
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Purpose: Chemotherapy with or without immunotherapy remains the mainstay of treatment for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). A subset of TNBCs express the androgen receptor (AR), representing a potential new therapeutic target. This study assessed the feasibility of adjuvant enzalutamide, an AR antagonist, in early-stage, AR-positive (AR +) TNBC.

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Marine and lacustrine carbonate minerals preserve carbon cycle information, and their stable carbon isotope values (δ C) are frequently used to infer and reconstruct paleoenvironmental changes. However, multiple processes can influence the δ C values of bulk carbonates, confounding the interpretation of these values in terms of conditions at the time of mineral precipitation. Co-existing carbonate forms may represent different environmental conditions, yet few studies have analyzed δ C values of syndepositional carbonate grains of varying morphologies to investigate their origins.

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Background: Assessments of the soil microbiome provide valuable insight to ecosystem function due to the integral role microorganisms play in biogeochemical cycling of carbon and nutrients. For example, treatment effects on nitrogen cycling functional groups are often presented alongside one another to demonstrate how agricultural management practices affect various nitrogen cycling processes. However, the functional groups commonly evaluated in nitrogen cycling microbiome studies range from phylogenetically narrow (e.

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Veterans Health Administration (VHA) services are most frequently used by patients 65 years and older, an age group that is disproportionally affected by COVID-19. Here we describe a modular Clinical Trial Informatics Solution (CTIS) that was rapidly developed and deployed to support a multi-hospital embedded pragmatic clinical trial in COVID-19 patients within the VHA. Our CTIS includes tools for patient eligibility screening, informed consent tracking, treatment randomization, EHR data transformation for reporting and interfaces for patient outcome and adverse event tracking.

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Despite the clear ecological significance of the microbiomes inhabiting groundwater and connected ecosystems, our current understanding of their habitats, functionality, and the ecological processes controlling their assembly have been limited. In this study, an efficient pipeline combining geochemistry, high-throughput Fluidigm functional gene amplification and sequencing was developed to analyze the suspended and attached microbial communities inhabiting five groundwater monitoring wells in the Illinois Basin, USA. The dominant taxa in the suspended and the attached microbial communities exhibited significantly different spatial and temporal changes in both alpha- and beta-diversity.

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