Publications by authors named "Uylissa A Rodriguez"

Article Synopsis
  • - A lack of functional β-cells leads to diabetes, and there isn't an effective cell replacement therapy available yet.
  • - Researchers found that inhibiting focal adhesion kinase in adult mice enables certain acinar cells to transform into insulin-producing β-like cells.
  • - This transformation helps restore some β-cell mass and improves glucose control in diabetic mice, suggesting a potential new approach for diabetes treatment.
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Signals from the endothelium play a pivotal role in pancreatic lineage commitment. As such, the fate of the epithelial cells relies heavily on the spatiotemporal recruitment of the endothelial cells to the embryonic pancreas. Although it is known that VEGFA secreted by the epithelium recruits the endothelial cells to the specific domains within the developing pancreas, the mechanism that controls the timing of such recruitment is poorly understood.

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In contrast to the skin and the gut, where somatic stem cells and their niche are well characterized, a definitive pancreatic multipotent cell population in the adult pancreas has yet to be revealed. Of particular interest is whether such cells may be endogenous in patients with diabetes, and if so, can they be used for therapeutic purposes? In the current study, we used two separate reporter lines to target Cre-recombinase expression to the Lgr5- or glucagon-expressing cells in the pancreas. We provide evidence for the existence of a population of cells within and in the proximity of the ducts that transiently express the stem-cell marker Lgr5 during late gestational stages.

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Though there have been studies on the histopathological and behavioral effects of blast exposure, fewer have been dedicated to blast's cerebral vascular effects. Impact (i.e.

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To determine the effects of mild blast-induced traumatic brain injury (bTBI), several groups of rats were subjected to blast injury or sham injury in a compressed air-driven shock tube. The effects of bTBI on relative cerebral perfusion (laser Doppler flowmetry [LDF]), and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) cerebral vascular resistance were measured for 2 h post-bTBI. Dilator responses to reduced intravascular pressure were measured in isolated middle cerebral arterial (MCA) segments, ex vivo, 30 and 60 min post-bTBI.

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