150 results match your criteria: "The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia-Research Institute[Affiliation]"

Actin is the most abundant protein in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and interacts with hundreds of proteins to perform essential functions, including cell motility and cytokinesis. Numerous diseases are caused by mutations in actin, but studying the biochemistry of actin mutants is difficult without a reliable method to obtain recombinant actin. Moreover, biochemical studies have typically used tissue-purified α-actin, whereas humans express six isoforms that are nearly identical but perform specialized functions and are difficult to obtain in isolation from natural sources.

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Hydroxychloroquine and immunosuppressant adherence patterns and their association with subsequent hospitalization rates among children with systemic lupus erythematosus.

Semin Arthritis Rheum

October 2022

Division of Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115, United States; Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck St, Boston, MA 02115, United States.

Objectives: Using a representative sample of children with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in the United States, we characterized prescription claim-based hydroxychloroquine and immunosuppressant adherence estimates and evaluated their concurrent and predictive validity.

Methods: We identified children ages 5-18 with SLE in the Truven Health MarketScan® Commercial and Medicaid claims databases (2013-2018). Among new users of hydroxychloroquine and immunosuppressant medications, we calculated proportion of days covered (PDC) over 365 days to estimate adherence by user group (mycophenolate, azathioprine, methotrexate, and any immunosuppressant use).

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There is little data to inform use of renin angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS) inhibitors in pediatric patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Here, we sought to characterize RAAS inhibitor use in pediatric SLE and determine whether early RAAS inhibitor initiation among children with incident lupus nephritis is associated with decreased duration of chronic glucocorticoid exposure. A retrospective cohort study was performed of children (ages 5-18) with SLE and/or lupus nephritis in the Truven MarketScan™ Medicaid and Commercial databases (2013-2018) and estimated RAAS inhibitor use.

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Background: A neurodevelopmental syndrome was recently reported in four patients with heterozygous missense variants in the high-mobility-group (HMG) DNA-binding domain. The present study aimed to consolidate clinical and genetic knowledge of this syndrome.

Methods: We newly identified 17 patients with variants, predicted variant pathogenicity using in silico tests and in vitro functional assays and analysed the patients' phenotypes.

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Spatially and temporally controlled delivery of biologicals, including gene vectors, represents an unmet need for regenerative medicine and gene therapy applications. Here we describe a method of reversible attachment of serotype 2 adeno-associated viral vectors (AAV2) to metal surfaces. This technique enables localized delivery of the vector to the target cell population in vitro and in vivo with the subsequent effective transduction of cells adjacent to the metal substrate.

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RNA interference (RNAi) for spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 can prevent and reverse behavioral deficits and neuropathological readouts in mouse models, with safety and benefit lasting over many months. The RNAi trigger, expressed from adeno-associated virus vectors (AAV.miS1), also corrected misregulated microRNAs (miRNA) such as miR150.

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Objectives: Socioeconomic factors may impact healthcare resource use and health-related quality of life, but their association with postcritical illness outcomes is unknown. This study examines the associations between socioeconomic status, resource use, and health-related quality of life in a cohort of children recovering from acute respiratory failure.

Design: Secondary analysis of data from the Randomized Evaluation of Sedation Titration for Respiratory Failure clinical trial.

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Osteosarcoma has a guarded prognosis. A major hurdle in developing more effective osteosarcoma therapies is the lack of disease-specific biomarkers to predict risk, prognosis, or therapeutic response. Exosomes are secreted extracellular microvesicles emerging as powerful diagnostic tools.

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Article Synopsis
  • CD22 serves as an alternative target for immunotherapy in B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), especially after patients relapse from CD19-directed CAR T cell treatments.
  • In two pilot clinical trials (NCT02588456 and NCT02650414), researchers evaluated a CD22-targeting CAR T cell using a 4-1BB-based design, focusing on safety and antileukemic efficacy, but found unexpectedly low response rates.
  • Further investigation revealed that modifying the CAR's linker led to improved receptor function through autonomous signaling, suggesting that this signaling enhances CAR T cell efficacy and informing the development of a new CAR construct for clinical testing.
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Teebi hypertelorism syndrome (THS; OMIM 145420) is a rare craniofacial disorder characterized by hypertelorism, prominent forehead, short nose with broad or depressed nasal root. Some cases of THS have been attributed to SPECC1L variants. Homozygous variants in CDH11 truncating the transmembrane and intracellular domains have been implicated in Elsahy-Waters syndrome (EWS; OMIM 211380) with hypertelorism.

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Visceral myopathy: clinical syndromes, genetics, pathophysiology, and fall of the cytoskeleton.

Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol

June 2021

Department of Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute and the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Abramson Research Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Visceral smooth muscle is a crucial component of the walls of hollow organs like the gut, bladder, and uterus. This specialized smooth muscle has unique properties that distinguish it from other muscle types and facilitate robust dilation and contraction. Visceral myopathies are diseases where severe visceral smooth muscle dysfunction prevents efficient movement of air and nutrients through the bowel, impairs bladder emptying, and affects normal uterine contraction and relaxation, particularly during pregnancy.

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Although many loci have been associated with height in European ancestry populations, very few have been identified in African ancestry individuals. Furthermore, many of the known loci have yet to be generalized to and fine-mapped within a large-scale African ancestry sample. We performed sex-combined and sex-stratified meta-analyses in up to 52,764 individuals with height and genome-wide genotyping data from the African Ancestry Anthropometry Genetics Consortium (AAAGC).

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Neurokinin-1 receptor signaling induces a pro-inflammatory transcriptomic profile in CD16+ monocytes.

J Neuroimmunol

April 2021

The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute, 3401 Civic Center Blvd., Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA; Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Civic Center Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. Electronic address:

Neurokinin-1 receptor (NK1R) signaling can be immunomodulatory and it can lead to preferential transmigration of CD14+CD16+ monocytes across the blood brain barrier, potentially promoting the development of inflammatory neurological diseases, such as neuroHIV. To evaluate how NK1R signaling alters monocyte biology, RNA sequencing was used to define NK1R-mediated transcriptional changes in different monocyte subsets. The data show that NK1R activation induces a greater number of changes in CD14+CD16+ monocytes (152 differentially expressed genes), than in CD14+CD16- monocytes (36 genes), including increases in the expression of NF-κB and components of the NLRP3 inflammasome pathway.

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Objectives: Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) can provide quantitative perfusion metrics and may be useful to detect cerebral pathology in neonates and premature infants, particularly in extrauterine environments. The effect of hemodynamics on cerebral perfusion metrics is unknown, which limits the clinical application of this technology. We aimed to determine associations between systemic hemodynamics and concurrently measured brain perfusion parameters in an animal model of extrauterine support.

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Sympathetic Input to Multiple Cell Types in Mouse and Human Colon Produces Region-Specific Responses.

Gastroenterology

March 2021

Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Pittsburgh Center for Pain Research, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Center for Neuroscience at the University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Background & Aims: The colon is innervated by intrinsic and extrinsic neurons that coordinate functions necessary for digestive health. Sympathetic input suppresses colon motility by acting on intrinsic myenteric neurons, but the extent of sympathetic-induced changes on large-scale network activity in myenteric circuits has not been determined. Compounding the complexity of sympathetic function, there is evidence that sympathetic transmitters can regulate activity in non-neuronal cells (such as enteric glia and innate immune cells).

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A Rabbit Model for Optimization of Amniotic Fluid Components in the EXTrauterine Environment for Newborn Development (EXTEND) System.

Fetal Diagn Ther

November 2021

The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute and the Department of Surgery, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Abramson Research Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA,

Article Synopsis
  • This study presents a protocol for continuous amniotic fluid exchange in pregnant rabbits to examine the impact of a growth factor-deficient, synthetic fluid on fetal bowel development.
  • The EXTrauterine Environment for Neonatal Development (EXTEND) aims to better support extremely premature infants by understanding the role of amniotic fluid and its growth factors.
  • Results indicated that reduced protein levels in amniotic fluid did not significantly affect fetal growth or bowel development, suggesting the potential for developing alternative synthetic fluids.
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Psychological Reactance is a Novel Risk Factor for Adolescent Antiretroviral Treatment Failure.

AIDS Behav

May 2021

Department of Medicine and Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA.

Psychological reactance is an aversive response to perceived threats against personal agency. For adolescents receiving HIV treatment in Botswana, we utilized a two-question, medication-specific reactance tool to assess whether: (1) verbal reminders to take medicines made adolescents want to avoid taking them, and, (2) whether adolescents felt anger when reminded to take medicines. Reactant adolescents had 2.

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Glial Cell-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Induces Enteric Neurogenesis and Improves Colon Structure and Function in Mouse Models of Hirschsprung Disease.

Gastroenterology

November 2020

Département des Sciences Biologiques, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM), Montréal, Québec, Canada; Centre d'excellence en recherche sur les maladies orphelines-Fondation Courtois (CERMO-FC), Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada; Département de pédiatrie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada. Electronic address:

Background & Aims: Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) is a life-threatening birth defect in which the distal colon is devoid of enteric neural ganglia. HSCR is treated by surgical removal of aganglionic bowel, but many children continue to have severe problems after surgery. We studied whether administration of glial cell derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) induces enteric nervous system regeneration in mouse models of HSCR.

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Objectives: Motility and functional disorders are common in children and often debilitating, yet these disorders remain challenging to treat effectively. At the 2018 Annual North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition meeting, the Neurogastroenterology and Motility Committee held a full day symposium entitled, 2018 Advances In Motility and In NeuroGastroenterology - AIMING for the future. The symposium aimed to explore clinical paradigms in pediatric gastrointestinal motility disorders and provided a foundation for advancing new scientific and therapeutic research strategies.

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Both immature and mature dendritic cells (DCs) can process and present foreign Ags to CD4 T cells; however, the mechanism by which MHC class II (MHC-II) in mature DCs acquires antigenic peptides remains unknown. To address this, we have studied Ag processing and presentation of two distinct CD4 T cell epitopes of the influenza virus hemagglutinin coat protein by both immature and mature mouse DCs. We find that immature DCs almost exclusively use newly synthesized MHC-II targeted to DM late endosomes for presentation to influenza virus-specific CD4 T cells.

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Assembly of infectious influenza A viruses (IAV) is a complex process involving transport from the nucleus to the plasma membrane. Rab11A-containing recycling endosomes have been identified as a platform for intracellular transport of viral RNA (vRNA). Here, using high spatiotemporal resolution light-sheet microscopy (~1.

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Although degenerative disc disease (DDD) and related low back pain (LBP) are growing public health problems, the underlying disease mechanisms remain unclear. An increase in the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) levels in DDD has been reported. This study aimed to examine the role of VEGF receptors (VEGFRs) in DDD, using a mouse model of DDD.

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Background/objectives: Short sleep is an obesity risk factor, however, little is known about its interplay with genetic predisposition and pathways involved in obesity pathogenesis, especially in the longitudinal setting. We aimed to investigate a possible sleep-gene interaction for childhood obesity risk, and whether the interaction in childhood longitudinally contributes to obesity risk at a 10-year follow-up and further to test if there is any mediation through the leptin pathway.

Subjects/methods: A total of 3211 children from China (6-18 years) at baseline and 848 participants at 10-year follow-up from the Beijing Child and Adolescent Metabolic Syndrome (BCAMS) cohort study were analyzed.

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The treatment of lymphatic anomaly, a rare devastating disease spectrum of mostly unknown etiologies, depends on the patient manifestations. Identifying the causal genes will allow for developing affordable therapies in keeping with precision medicine implementation. Here we identified a recurrent gain-of-function ARAF mutation (c.

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