7 results match your criteria: "The Ohio StateUniversity[Affiliation]"

Despite improved cardiometabolic outcomes following bariatric surgery, its long-term impact on colorectal cancer (CRC) risk remains uncertain. In parallel, the influence of bariatric surgery on the host microbiome and relationships with disease outcomes is beginning to be appreciated. Therefore, we investigated the impact of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) and vertical sleeve gastrectomy (VSG) on the patterns of sulfide-reducing and butyrate-producing bacteria, which are hypothesized to modulate CRC risk after bariatric surgery.

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Guest Editorial.

Nurs Adm Q

September 2021

Head of Clinical Innovation, Trusted Health Clinical Assistant Professor, The Ohio StateUniversity College of Nursing.

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Background: In patients who receive a nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking drug (NMBD) during anesthesia, undetected postoperative residual neuromuscular block is a common occurrence that carries a risk of potentially serious adverse events, particularly postoperative pulmonary complications. There is abundant evidence that residual block can be prevented when real-time (quantitative) neuromuscular monitoring with measurement of the train-of-four ratio is used to guide NMBD administration and reversal. Nevertheless, a significant percentage of anesthesiologists fail to use quantitative devices or even conventional peripheral nerve stimulators routinely.

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Peptide deformylase (PDF) is an enzyme that is responsible for removing the formyl group from nascently synthesized polypeptides in bacteria, attracting much attention as a potential target for novel antibacterial agents. Efforts to develop potent inhibitors of the enzyme have progressed on the basis of classical medicinal chemistry, combinatorial chemistry, and structural approaches, yet the validity of PDF as an antibacterial target hangs, in part, on the ability of inhibitors to selectively target this enzyme in favor of structurally related metallohydrolases. We have used (15)N NMR spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry to investigate the high-affinity interaction of EcPDF with actinonin, a naturally occurring potent EcPDF inhibitor.

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Laboratory and clinical studies of cancer chemoprevention by antioxidants in berries.

Carcinogenesis

September 2008

Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, The Ohio StateUniversity, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are a major cause of cellular injury in an increasing number of diseases, including cancer. Most ROS are created in the cell through normal cellular metabolism. They can be produced by environmental insults such as ultraviolet light and toxic chemicals, as well as by the inflammatory process.

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Peptide deformylase: a target for novel antibiotics?

Expert Opin Ther Targets

February 2001

Department of Chemistry and Ohio State Biochemistry Program, The Ohio StateUniversity, 100 West 18th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.

Peptide deformylase (PDF) catalyses the hydrolytic removal of the N-terminal formyl group from nascent ribosome-synthesised polypeptides. Its activity is essential and it is present in all eubacteria. It is also present in the organelles of some eukaryotes.

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The human DEVH-box protein Ski2w from the HLA is localized in nucleoli and ribosomes.

Nucleic Acids Res

September 1998

Children's Hospital Research Foundation, Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology Program, Department of Pediatrics, The Ohio StateUniversity, Columbus, OH 43205-2696, USA.

The human helicase gene SKI2W is located between RD and RP1 in the class III region of the major histocompatibility complex. Transcripts of SKI2W are detectable in RNA samples isolated from multiple tissues. The protein product Ski2w shares striking amino acid sequence similarities to the yeast antiviral protein Ski2p that controls the translation of mRNAs, probably based on the mRNA structural integrity.

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