2,071 results match your criteria: "F-75015; University Paris Descartes[Affiliation]"

The integrity of the blood-retina barrier (BRB) is crucial for phototransduction and vision, by tightly restricting transport of molecules between the blood and surrounding neuronal cells. Breakdown of the BRB leads to the development of retinal diseases. Here, we show that Netrin-1/Unc5b and Norrin/Lrp5 signaling establish a zonated endothelial cell gene expression program that controls BRB integrity.

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Active learning for extracting rare adverse events from electronic health records: A study in pediatric cardiology.

Int J Med Inform

December 2024

Inserm, UMR_S1138, Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France; Inria, équipe HeKA, PariSantéCampus, Paris, France; Service d'informatique biomédicale, Hôpital Necker Enfants Malades, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, F-75015 Paris, France.

Objective: Automate the extraction of adverse events from the text of electronic medical records of patients hospitalized for cardiac catheterization.

Methods: We focused on events related to cardiac catheterization as defined by the NCDR-IMPACT registry. These events were extracted from the Necker Children's Hospital data warehouse.

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Our research group previously discovered CTN1122, an imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazine compound with promising antileishmanial activity against intramacrophage amastigotes of Leishmania major and L. donovani strains. CTN1122 effectively targets Leishmania casein kinase 1 (L-CK1.

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Radical S-adenosyl methionine enzymes catalyze a diverse repertoire of post-translational modifications in protein and peptide substrates. Among these, an exceptional and mechanistically obscure example is the installation of α-keto-β-amino acid residues by formal excision of a tyrosine-derived tyramine unit. The responsible spliceases are key maturases in a widespread family of natural products termed spliceotides that comprise potent protease inhibitors, with the installed β-residues being crucial for bioactivity.

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This paper introduces a prognostic method called FLASH that addresses the problem of joint modeling of longitudinal data and censored durations when a large number of both longitudinal and time-independent features are available. In the literature, standard joint models are either of the shared random effect or joint latent class type. Combining ideas from both worlds and using appropriate regularization techniques, we define a new model with the ability to automatically identify significant prognostic longitudinal features in a high-dimensional context, which is of increasing importance in many areas such as personalized medicine or churn prediction.

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Early exposure to Western Diet exacerbates visual outcomes in female mice.

bioRxiv

December 2024

Laboratory of Neurovascular Control of Homeostasis, Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.

Obesity, a growing pandemic in Western societies, significantly impacts metabolic health and contributes to visual disorders. While the systemic consequences of obesity, such as chronic inflammation and insulin resistance, are well-studied in adults, its early-life effects on retinal health remain underexplored. Using a maternal Western Diet (WD) exposure model, we investigated the developmental impact of early-life metabolic disturbances on retinal and cognitive function.

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Vaccine policies in France and Europe.

Curr Opin Immunol

February 2025

CERMES3 (INSERM, CNRS, EHESS, Université de Paris), Villejuif, France.

This review outlines the outcome of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign in France and assesses the respective roles of information and coercion in its overall success. These data are then put into perspective of the evolution of vaccination acceptance in France.

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Multiple antibiotic resistances are a major global health threat. The predominant tool for adaptation in Gram-negative bacteria is the integron. Under stress, it rearranges gene cassettes to offer an escape using the tyrosine recombinase IntI, recognizing folded DNA hairpins, the sites.

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ABCG1 orchestrates adipose tissue macrophage plasticity and insulin resistance in obesity by rewiring saturated fatty acid pools.

Sci Transl Med

December 2024

Sorbonne Université, INSERM, Foundation for Innovation in Cardiometabolism and Nutrition (ICAN), UMR_S1166, F-75013 Paris, France.

The mechanisms governing adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) metabolic adaptation during diet-induced obesity (DIO) are poorly understood. In obese adipose tissue, ATMs are exposed to lipid fluxes, which can influence the activation of specific inflammatory and metabolic programs and contribute to the development of obesity-associated insulin resistance and other metabolic disorders. In the present study, we demonstrate that the membrane ATP-binding cassette g1 (Abcg1) transporter controls the ATM functional response to fatty acids (FAs) carried by triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, which are abundant in high-energy diets.

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Genomic perspective on the bacillus causing paratyphoid B fever.

Nat Commun

December 2024

Institut Pasteur, Université Paris Cité, Unité des Bactéries pathogènes entériques, Paris, F-75015, France.

Paratyphoid B fever (PTB) is caused by an invasive lineage (phylogroup 1, PG1) of Salmonella enterica serotype Paratyphi B (SPB). However, little was known about the global population structure, geographic distribution, and evolution of this pathogen. Here, we report a whole-genome analysis of 568 historical and contemporary SPB PG1 isolates, obtained globally, between 1898 and 2021.

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Background: Arterial spin labeling (ASL) is a noninvasive brain perfusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique that has not been assessed in dogs with meningoencephalitis of unknown origin (MUO).

Hypothesis/objectives: Assess brain perfusion changes characteristics before and after medical treatment, and investigate the role of ASL perfusion in the diagnosis and prognosis of MUO in dogs.

Animals: Thirty-one dogs with presumed MUO.

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Long term noninvasive respiratory support in children with OSA-I and OSA-II: Data of a nation-wide study.

Sleep Med

February 2025

Pediatric Noninvasive Ventilation and Sleep Unit, AP-HP, Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades, F-75015, Paris, France; Université de Paris Cité, EA 7330 VIFASOM, F-75004, Paris, France. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to analyze characteristics of healthy children with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA-I) and those with OSA and non-syndromic obesity (OSA-II) in France who were treated with CPAP or NIV in 2019.
  • Data from a national survey focused on CPAP/NIV initiation criteria, duration, age at initiation, equipment used, settings, and compliance were examined.
  • Results showed that OSA-II patients were older at initiation and treated longer than OSA-I patients, with both groups mainly using CPAP, but having similar compliance rates.
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Recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB) is a rare and most often severe genodermatosis characterized by recurrent blistering and erosions of the skin and mucous membranes after minor trauma, leading to major local and systemic complications. RDEB is caused by loss-of-function mutations in COL7A1 encoding type VII collagen (C7), the main component of anchoring fibrils which form attachment structures stabilizing the cutaneous basement membrane zone. Most of the previously reported COL7A1 mutations are located in the coding or intronic regions.

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The discovery of endothelial progenitor cells has revolutionized our understanding of postnatal blood vessel formation, with endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs) emerging as key players in vasculogenesis. Among various ECFC sources, cord blood-derived ECFCs (CB-ECFCs) are of particular interest due to their superior proliferative and clonogenic potential and their ability to promote vascular network formation. Human embryonic stem cell-derived endothelial cells (hESC-ECs) have also shown potential in regenerative medicine, though their vasculogenic efficacy remains unclear compared to CB- and adult blood-derived ECFCs (AB-ECFCs).

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Background: The Rho kinases 1 and 2 (ROCK1/2) are serine-threonine specific protein kinases that control actin cytoskeleton dynamics. They are expressed in all cells throughout the body, including cardiomyocytes, smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells, and intimately involved in cardiovascular health and disease. Pharmacological ROCK inhibition is beneficial in mouse models of hypertension, atherosclerosis, and neointimal thickening that display overactivated ROCK.

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Cell adhesion regulates specific migratory patterns, location, communication with other cells, physical interactions with the extracellular matrix, and the establishment of effector programs. Proper immune control of cancer strongly depends on all these events occurring in a highly accurate spatiotemporal sequence. In response to cancer-associated inflammatory signals, effector immune cells navigating the bloodstream shift from their patrolling exploratory migration mode to establish adhesive interactions with vascular endothelial cells.

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Supervised multiple kernel learning approaches for multi-omics data integration.

BioData Min

November 2024

Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse, UMR5219, CNRS, UPS, Université de Toulouse, Cedex 9, Toulouse, 31062, France.

Background: Advances in high-throughput technologies have originated an ever-increasing availability of omics datasets. The integration of multiple heterogeneous data sources is currently an issue for biology and bioinformatics. Multiple kernel learning (MKL) has shown to be a flexible and valid approach to consider the diverse nature of multi-omics inputs, despite being an underused tool in genomic data mining.

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Roundabout (ROBO) 1 and 2 are transmembrane receptors that bind secreted SLIT ligands through their extracellular domains (ECDs) and signal through their cytoplasmic domains to modulate the cytoskeleton and regulate cell migration, adhesion, and proliferation. SLIT-ROBO signaling regulates pathological ocular neovascularization, which is a major cause of vision loss worldwide, but pharmacological tools to prevent SLIT-ROBO signaling are lacking. Here, we developed human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against the ROBO1 and ROBO2 ECDs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Neural stem cells (NSCs) in adult vertebrate brains, particularly in zebrafish, can generate neurons throughout life by making balanced decisions about their fate, including direct conversions without dividing.
  • Researchers reanalyzed imaging data and found that both NSCs and neuronal progenitors share similar delamination dynamics, indicating a direct connection in how these cells transition to neurons.
  • They discovered that non-apoptotic caspase activation (Caspase3/7) in NSCs, influenced by the transcription factor Atf3, plays a significant role in determining the fate of these stem cells, especially during injury, leading to increased neuron formation and maintaining NSC population stability.
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The Optiflow™ interface for chronic CPAP in infants.

Sleep Med

January 2025

Pediatric Noninvasive Ventilation and Sleep Unit, AP-HP Necker Hospital, F-75015, Paris, France; Université de Paris Cité, EA 7330 VIFASOM, F-75004, Paris, France.

Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is increasingly used in infants. However, the limited number of commercially masks available for infants is challenging. The use of the Optiflow™ nasal cannula (Fisher & Paykel) with a regular CPAP device has been recently reported for chronic CPAP in children, with an objective improvement in polysomnographic events.

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HIV-1 budding requires cortical actin disassembly by the oxidoreductase MICAL1.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

November 2024

Membrane Traffic and Cell Division Unit, Institut Pasteur, Université Paris Cité, CNRS UMR3691, Paris F-75015, France.

Many enveloped viruses bud from the plasma membrane that is tightly associated with a dense and thick actin cortex. This actin network represents a significant challenge for membrane deformation and scission, and how it is remodeled during the late steps of the viral cycle is largely unknown. Using superresolution microscopy, we show that HIV-1 buds in areas of the plasma membrane with low cortical F-actin levels.

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Hydrogen peroxide diffusion across the red blood cell membrane occurs mainly by simple diffusion through the lipid fraction.

Free Radic Biol Med

January 2025

Laboratorio de Fisicoquímica Biológica, Instituto de Química Biológica, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, 11400, Uruguay; Centro de Investigaciones Biomédicas (CEINBIO), Universidad de la República, Montevideo, 11800, Uruguay. Electronic address:

Hydrogen peroxide (HO) is an oxidant produced endogenously by several enzymatic pathways. While it can cause molecular damage, HO also plays a role in regulating cell proliferation and survival through redox signaling pathways. In the vascular system, red blood cells (RBCs) are notably efficient at metabolizing HO.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study aimed to improve the identification of malignancy risk and genetic status in patients with primary paraganglioma or pheochromocytoma (PPGL) by assessing various biomarkers.
  • Conducted over four years with 231 patients, the study found that tumor analysis was better than germline testing for determining genetic status, with specific biomarkers like plasma succinate levels and miR-483-5p showing promise in predicting metastasis.
  • The combination of biomarkers, such as SDHB immunostaining and TERT promoter methylation, significantly enhanced the predictive accuracy for both SDHx genetic status and metastatic potential.
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Article Synopsis
  • Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of severe respiratory diseases like influenza and COVID-19, primarily due to glycemic variability rather than average blood glucose levels.
  • A study used blood samples and continuous glucose monitoring from individuals with type 1 diabetes to examine how glycemic variability affects T cell responses to influenza.
  • Higher glycemic variability was linked to a decreased proportion of specific T cells responding to the influenza virus, indicating the importance of monitoring glycemic variability for understanding immune responses in diabetic individuals.
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