7 results match your criteria: "Yale School of MedicineNew Haven[Affiliation]"
Arrhythm Electrophysiol Rev
March 2018
Yale School of MedicineNew Haven, CT, USA.
Context: Achievement of hypocortisolemia following transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) for Cushing's disease (CD) is associated with successful adenoma resection. However, up to one-third of these patients recur.
Objective: We assessed whether delay in reaching post-operative cortisol nadir may delineate patients at risk of recurrence for CD following TSS.
Am J Cancer Res
May 2017
Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale School of MedicineNew Haven, CT 06510, USA.
Tumor hypoxia is an independent prognostic indicator of tumor malignant progression and poor patient survival. Therefore, eradication of hypoxic tumor cells is of paramount importance for successful disease control. In this study, we have made a new discovery that nifurtimox, a clinically approved drug to treat Chagas disease caused by the parasitic protozoan trypanosomes, can function as a hypoxia-activated cytotoxin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Mol Biosci
May 2017
Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA.
Torsins are essential, disease-relevant AAA+ (ATPases associated with various cellular activities) proteins residing in the endoplasmic reticulum and perinuclear space, where they are implicated in a variety of cellular functions. Recently, new structural and functional details about Torsins have emerged that will have a profound influence on unraveling the precise mechanistic details of their yet-unknown mode of action in the cell. While Torsins are phylogenetically related to Clp/HSP100 proteins, they exhibit comparatively weak ATPase activities, which are tightly controlled by virtue of an active site complementation through accessory cofactors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
October 2016
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA; Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale School of MedicineNew Haven, CT, USA.
Front Cell Dev Biol
September 2016
Laboratory of Clinical Cytogenetics, Department of Genetics, Yale School of Medicine New Haven, CT, USA.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is a macromolecule recognition technology based on the complementary nature of DNA or DNA/RNA double strands. Selected DNA strands incorporated with fluorophore-coupled nucleotides can be used as probes to hybridize onto the complementary sequences in tested cells and tissues and then visualized through a fluorescence microscope or an imaging system. This technology was initially developed as a physical mapping tool to delineate genes within chromosomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neuroanat
March 2016
Department of Developmental Neuroscience, Croatian Institute for Brain Research, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb Zagreb, Croatia.
The cerebral wall of the human fetal brain is composed of transient cellular compartments, which show characteristic spatiotemporal relationships with intensity of major neurogenic events (cell proliferation, migration, axonal growth, dendritic differentiation, synaptogenesis, cell death, and myelination). The aim of the present study was to obtain new quantitative data describing volume, surface area, and thickness of transient compartments in the human fetal cerebrum. Forty-four postmortem fetal brains aged 13-40 postconceptional weeks (PCW) were included in this study.
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