Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is an autoimmune rheumatic disease that primarily affects the axial joints, with its etiology complex and still not fully understood. The unknown pathogenesis of AS limits the development of treatment strategies, so keeping up-to-date with the current research on AS can help in searching for potential therapeutic targets. In addition to the classic HLA-B27 genetic susceptibility and Th17-related inflammatory signals, increasing research is focusing on the influence of autoantigen-centered autoimmune responses and bone stromal cells on the onset of AS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Tuberculosis (TB) is known to result from a complex interaction between the host immune response and infection. The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) plays an important role in the processing and presentation pathways for the () antigen. To investigate the possible association of the and genes with TB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Res Behav Manag
February 2023
Introduction: Kindergarten teachers who empathize with toddlers experience a great risk of burnout and emotional disturbance. This is referred to as compassion fatigue, in which teachers' empathy experience is reduced. This study proposed a moderated mediation model to identify the risks of compassion fatigue and its protective factors for developing evidence-based clinical interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Immunopharmacol
March 2023
Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a chronic inflammatory rheumatic disease that mainly affects the axial skeleton, whose typical features are inflammatory back pain, bone structural damage and pathological new bone formation. The pathology of ectopic new bone formation is still little known. In this study, we found increased purine metabolites in plasma of patients with AS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFerroptosis is a form of regulated cell death that follows cell membrane damage and mostly depends on iron-mediated oxidative. Long non-coding RNAs (LncRNAs) are associated with the development of a variety of tumors. Till date, LncRNAs have been reported to intervene in ferroptosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Release of metallic wear particles from hip replacement implants is closely associated with aseptic loosening that affects the functionality and survivorship of the prostheses. Chromium oxide nanoparticles (CrNPs) are the dominant form of the wear particles found in the periprosthetic tissues. Whether CrNPs play a role in the clinically observed particle-induced osteolysis, tissue inflammatory reactions and functional activities of human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) remain unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Tuberculosis (TB), an infectious disease caused by , is a major public health concern. Chemokines and their receptors, such as RANTES, CXCR3, and CCR5, have been reported to play important roles in cell activation and migration in immune responses against TB infection.
Methods: To understand the correlations involving gene variations, infection, and TB disease progression, a case-control study comprising 450 patients with TB and 306 healthy controls from a Chinese Han population was conducted, along with the detection of polymorphisms in the promoter using a sequencing method.
Angiogenesis plays an important role in tumour progression. However, anti-angiogenesis therapy of inhibiting pro-angiogenic factors failed to meet expectations in certain types of tumour in clinical trials. Recent studies reveal that tumour-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) are essential in tumour angiogenesis and anti-angiogenesis drug resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngiogenesis is closely associated with tumorigenesis, invasion, and metastasis by providing oxygen and nutrients. Recently, increasing evidence indicates that cancer-derived exosomes which contain proteins, coding, and noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) were shown to have proangiogenic function in cancer. A 26-nt-long ncRNA (X26nt) is generated in the process of inositol-requiring enzyme 1 alpha (IRE1α)-induced unspliced XBP1 splicing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe host immune system plays a key role in the elimination of infected cells which depend on killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIR), human leucocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules and their combinations. To evaluate the roles of HLAclass I, KIR genes and their combination in Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection (CHC), a total of 301 CHCs and 239 controls in a Chinese Han population were included for HLA and KIR genotyping using next-generation sequencing and multiplex PCR sequence-specific priming, respectively. The allele frequency of HLA-C*08:01 was significantly higher in the CHCs than that of the controls (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Med (Zagreb)
June 2018
Introduction: In order to ensure the quality in clinical laboratories and meet the low risk requirements of patients and clinicians, a risk analysis and assessment model based on Sigma metrics and intended use was constructed, based on which differential sigma performance () expectations of 42 analytes were developed.
Materials And Methods: Failure mode and effects analysis was applied to produce an analytic risk rating based on three factors, each test of which was graded as follows: 1) Sigma metrics; 2) the severity of harm; 3) intended use. By multiplying the score of Sigma metrics by the score of severity of harm by the score of intended use, each was assigned a typical risk priority number (RPN), with RPN ≤ 25 rated as low risk.
Recently, we reported that the frequency of hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes and subtypes has rapidly changed among intravenous drug users (IDUs) in Yunnan Province over the last 5 years; this is especially true for subtype 6a which has increased in frequency from 5 to 15%. Here, we assessed 120 HCV-positive plasma samples from the general population (GP). HCV NS5B fragments were amplified and sequenced by PCR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZhonghua Jie He He Hu Xi Za Zhi
June 2011
Objective: To explore the clinical manifestations, the feature of chest X-ray, the clinical outcome, and the clinical treatments of severe pneumonic plague.
Methods: We observed the clinical course of primary pneumonic plague in 5 patients, who infected Yersinia pestis in Tibet during September 2010, including manifestations of chest X-ray, the antibiotic therapy, respiratory support and the prognosis.
Results: All of the 5 patients presented with high fever, bloody sputum and difficulty breathing.
Guang Pu Xue Yu Guang Pu Fen Xi
October 2005
In this paper a rapid and simple method using pyrolysis coupled with atomic absorption spectrometry for the analysis of total mercury in Chinese medicinal material and biological samples is presented. No sample digestion was needed and this greatly simplifies the analytical procedure and minimizes potential sources of contamination. Under optimum conditions, the reproducibility of the method was 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerein we present a novel method for preparation of surface molecularly imprinted size-monodisperse nanowires. The imprint molecule is immobilized on the pore walls of a silane-treated nanoporous alumina membrane. The nanopores are then filled with the monomer mixture, and the polymerization is initiated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, we report a simple procedure for applying molecular imprinting functional groups to the inner surfaces of the template-synthesized sol-gel nanotubes for chemical separation of estrone. The silica nanotubes were synthesized within the pores of nanopore alumina template membranes using a sol-gel method by simultaneous hydrolysis of a silica monomer-imprinted molecule complex and tetraethoxysilane (TEOS). A covalent imprinting strategy was employed by generating a sacrificial spacer through the reaction of the isocyanate group of 3-(triethoxysilyl)propyl isocyanate and a phenol moiety of estrone to form a thermally cleavable urethane bond.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe simultaneous entrapment of biological macromolecules and nanostructured silica-coated magnetite in sol-gel materials using a reverse-micelle technique leads to a bioactive, mechanically stable, nanometer-sized, and magnetically separable particles. These spherical particles have a typical diameter of 53 +/- 4 nm, a large surface area of 330 m(2)/g, an average pore diameter of 1.5 nm, a total pore volume of 1.
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