Publications by authors named "W Brent Clayton"

Article Synopsis
  • Black women have the highest breast cancer mortality rates, prompting a study on the VEGF-hypoxia gene expression signature across diverse populations, specifically focusing on breast tumors from Nigeria and Chicago.
  • A new gene expression panel was used to find that the VEGF-hypoxia signature is most prevalent in the basal-like subtype of breast cancer, particularly in Black women, and is associated with necrotic tumors showing links to proliferation.
  • The study highlights the need for targeted interventions addressing the VEGF-hypoxia signature and the immune microenvironment to improve survival rates in aggressive breast cancers affecting Black women.
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The activities of the phospholipase C gamma (PLCγ) 1 and 2 enzymes are essential for numerous cellular processes. Unsurprisingly, dysregulation of PLCγ1 or PLCγ2 activity is associated with multiple maladies including immune disorders, cancers, and neurodegenerative diseases. Therefore, the modulation of either of these two enzymes has been suggested as a therapeutic strategy to combat these diseases.

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Breeding target traits can be broadened to include nutritive value and plant breeder's rights traits in perennial ryegrass by using in-field regression-based spectroscopy phenotyping and genomic selection. Perennial ryegrass breeding has focused on biomass yield, but expansion into a broader set of traits is needed to benefit livestock industries whilst also providing support for intellectual property protection of cultivars. Numerous breeding objectives can be targeted simultaneously with the development of sensor-based phenomics and genomic selection (GS).

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When humans face probabilistic outcomes, their choices often depend on whether the choice is framed in terms of losses or gains. In the present research, we gave pigeons a choice between risky (variable) outcomes and safe (constant) outcomes that resulted in the same net reward. In Experiment 1, in which the outcomes represented a loss, the pigeons preferred the risky alternative.

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In the visual alternation task, pigeons learn to alternate between two stimuli (e.g., red and green) that vary randomly in location from trial to trial.

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