13 results on '"Petar Duvnjak"'
Search Results
2. Multi-Site Concordance of Diffusion-Weighted Imaging Quantification for Assessing Prostate Cancer Aggressiveness
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Kurt Li, William A. See, David A. Hormuth, Wei Huang, Michael Brehler, Yuan Li, Savannah Duenweg, Amita Shukla-Dave, Daekeun You, Eve LoCastro, Keith Mcleod Hulsey, Andrey Fedorov, John D. Bukowy, Ananth J. Madhuranthakam, Mark Muzi, Laura C. Bell, Kenneth Jacobsohn, Yue Cao, Thomas L. Chenevert, Tatjana Antic, Kenneth A. Iczkowski, Sarah L. Hurrell, Kathleen M. Schmainda, Petar Duvnjak, Anjishnu Banerjee, Mark Hohenwalter, Allison K. Lowman, Gladell P. Paner, Michael A. Jacobs, Dariya I. Malyarenko, Yousef Mazaheri, Samuel Bobholz, Marja T. Nevalainen, Peter S. LaViolette, Watchareepohn Palangmonthip, Thomas E. Yankeelov, Stefanie J. Hectors, C. Chad Quarles, Meiyappan Solaiyappan, Michael Griffin, Bachir Taouli, Sean D. McGarry, and Melissa Prah
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Male ,education.field_of_study ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Prostate cancer ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,ROC Curve ,Multiple comparisons problem ,medicine ,Kurtosis ,Effective diffusion coefficient ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,education ,Diffusion MRI ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is commonly used to detect prostate cancer, and a major clinical challenge is differentiating aggressive from indolent disease. PURPOSE To compare 14 site-specific parametric fitting implementations applied to the same dataset of whole-mount pathologically validated DWI to test the hypothesis that cancer differentiation varies with different fitting algorithms. STUDY TYPE Prospective. POPULATION Thirty-three patients prospectively imaged prior to prostatectomy. FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE 3 T, field-of-view optimized and constrained undistorted single-shot DWI sequence. ASSESSMENT Datasets, including a noise-free digital reference object (DRO), were distributed to the 14 teams, where locally implemented DWI parameter maps were calculated, including mono-exponential apparent diffusion coefficient (MEADC), kurtosis (K), diffusion kurtosis (DK), bi-exponential diffusion (BID), pseudo-diffusion (BID*), and perfusion fraction (F). The resulting parametric maps were centrally analyzed, where differentiation of benign from cancerous tissue was compared between DWI parameters and the fitting algorithms with a receiver operating characteristic area under the curve (ROC AUC). STATISTICAL TEST Levene's test, P
- Published
- 2021
3. Utilization of Pelvic MRI for Nodal Staging in Rectal Cancer Staging
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Eric S Fair and Petar Duvnjak
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pelvic MRI ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,Rectal Neoplasms ,Nodal staging ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neoplasm staging ,Radiology ,Lymph Nodes ,business ,Neoplasm Staging - Published
- 2020
4. Radio-pathomic mapping model generated using annotations from five pathologists reliably distinguishes high-grade prostate cancer
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Kenneth Jacobsohn, John D. Bukowy, Mark D. Hohenwalter, Sean D. McGarry, Michael Brehler, Jackson G. Unteriner, Watchareepohn Palangmonthip, Petar Duvnjak, Kenneth A. Iczkowski, Tatjana Antic, Allison Lowman, Michael O. Griffin, Wei Huang, Alex W. Barrington, Samuel Bobholz, Peter S. LaViolette, Gladell P. Paner, Tucker Keuter, Anjishnu Banerjee, and Andrew S. Nencka
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Paper ,rad-path ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,prostate cancer ,Regression ,Computer-Aided Diagnosis ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,machine learning ,Disease severity ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Effective diffusion coefficient ,magnetic resonance imaging ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Abstract
Purpose: Our study predictively maps epithelium density in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) space while varying the ground truth labels provided by five pathologists to quantify the downstream effects of interobserver variability. Approach: Clinical imaging and postsurgical tissue from 48 recruited prospective patients were used in our study. Tissue was sliced to match the MRI orientation and whole-mount slides were stained and digitized. Data from 28 patients (n = 33 slides) were sent to five pathologists to be annotated. Slides from the remaining 20 patients (n = 123 slides) were annotated by one of the five pathologists. Interpathologist variability was measured using Krippendorff’s alpha. Pathologist-specific radiopathomic mapping models were trained using a partial least-squares regression using MRI values to predict epithelium density, a known marker for disease severity. An analysis of variance characterized intermodel means difference in epithelium density. A consensus model was created and evaluated using a receiver operator characteristic classifying high grade versus low grade and benign, and was statistically compared to apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). Results: Interobserver variability ranged from low to acceptable agreement (0.31 to 0.69). There was a statistically significant difference in mean predicted epithelium density values (p
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- 2020
5. Multiparametric Prostate MR Imaging: Impact on Clinical Staging and Decision Making
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Petar Duvnjak, Thomas J. Polascik, Rajan T. Gupta, Ariel Schulman, Jamie N. Holtz, and Jiaoti Huang
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Clinical Decision-Making ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical decision making ,Prostate ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical physics ,Neoplasm Staging ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Mr imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Prostate cancer staging ,business - Abstract
Meaningful changes to the approach of prostate cancer staging and management have been made over the past decade with increasing demand for high-quality multiparametric MR imaging (mpMRI) of the prostate. This article focuses on the evolving paradigm of prostate cancer staging, with emphasis on the role of mpMRI on staging and its integration into clinical decision making. Current prostate cancer staging systems are defined and mpMRI's role in the detection of non-organ-confined disease and how it has an impact on the selection of appropriate next steps are discussed. Several imaging pitfalls, limitations, and future directions of mpMRI also are discussed.
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- 2018
6. Renal Lesion Characterization with Spectral CT: Determining the Optimal Energy for Virtual Monoenergetic Reconstruction
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Rendon C. Nelson, Christoph Schabel, Juan Carlos Ramirez-Giraldo, Bhavik N. Patel, Daniele Marin, Scott Harring, Konstantin Nikolaou, Petar Duvnjak, and Alfredo E. Farjat
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Male ,Renal lesion ,Radiography ,Contrast Media ,Diagnostic accuracy ,Kidney ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Radiographic image interpretation ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Radiography, Dual-Energy Scanned Projection ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Virtual monoenergetic imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Energy (signal processing) ,Iodine - Abstract
Purpose To investigate the relationship between energy level of virtual monoenergetic (VM) imaging and sensitivity in the detection of minimally enhancing renal lesions. Materials and Methods Phantoms simulating unenhanced and contrast material-enhanced renal parenchyma were equipped with inserts containing different concentrations of iodine (range, 0-1.15 mg iodine per milliliter). A total of 180 patients (117 men; mean age, 65.2 years ± 13.0 [standard deviation]) with 194 (62 solid, 132 cystic) renal lesions larger than 10 mm in diameter underwent unenhanced single-energy CT and contrast-enhanced dual-energy CT. VM imaging data sets were created for 70, 80, 90, and 100 keV. Renal lesions were measured, and enhancement was calculated. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) for renal lesion characterization was determined by using the DeLong method. Results The AUC was highest at 70 keV and decreased as energy increased toward 100 keV. AUC in the phantom decreased from 98% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 95, 100) at 70 keV to 88% (95% CI: 79, 96) at 100 keV (P = .004). AUC in patients decreased from 96% (95% CI: 94, 98) at 70 keV to 79% (95% CI: 71, 86) at 100 keV (P = .001). In patients with an enhancement threshold of 15 HU, sensitivity in the detection of solid renal lesions decreased between from 91% (49 of 62 [95% CI: 78, 97]) at 70 keV to 48% (33 of 62 [95% CI: 25, 71]) at 100 keV (P.05), with no change in specificity (93% [120 of 132 {95% CI: 87, 97}] at 70 keV, 97% [125 of 132 {95% CI: 92, 99}] at 100 keV). Conclusion There is a reduction in diagnostic accuracy for renal lesion characterization with increasing VM imaging energy. The 70-keV setting may provide an optimal trade-off between sensitivity and specificity.
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- 2018
7. Skype as a Tool for Resident Education on Call
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Petar Duvnjak, Parag Tolat, Saivenkat H. Vagvala, and Mark D. Hohenwalter
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Medical education ,Internet ,Teleradiology ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Internship and Residency ,Resident education ,Pediatrics ,Workflow ,Radiology Information Systems ,After-Hours Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Radiology ,Software - Published
- 2019
8. Gleason Probability Maps: A Radiomics Tool for Mapping Prostate Cancer Likelihood in MRI Space
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Mark D. Hohenwalter, Jackson G. Unteriner, Alex W. Barrington, Marja T. Nevalainen, William A. See, Anjishnu Banerjee, John D. Bukowy, Sarah Hurrell, Allison Lowman, Tucker Keuter, Halle Foss, Kenneth Jacobsohn, Kenneth A. Iczkowski, Sean D. McGarry, Peter S. LaViolette, Petar Duvnjak, and Michael O. Griffin
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Risk Assessment ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,prostate Cancer ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,High morbidity ,0302 clinical medicine ,radio-pathomics ,Radiomics ,Prostate ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Effective diffusion coefficient ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Research Articles ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Aged ,rad-path ,Prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,radiomics ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,3. Good health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,ROC Curve ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiology ,Neoplasm Grading ,business ,Preclinical imaging - Abstract
Prostate cancer is the most common noncutaneous cancer in men in the United States. The current paradigm for screening and diagnosis is imperfect, with relatively low specificity, high cost, and high morbidity. This study aims to generate new image contrasts by learning a distribution of unique image signatures associated with prostate cancer. In total, 48 patients were prospectively recruited for this institutional review board–approved study. Patients underwent multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging 2 weeks before surgery. Postsurgical tissues were annotated by a pathologist and aligned to the in vivo imaging. Radiomic profiles were generated by linearly combining 4 image contrasts (T2, apparent diffusion coefficient [ADC] 0-1000, ADC 50-2000, and dynamic contrast-enhanced) segmented using global thresholds. The distribution of radiomic profiles in high-grade cancer, low-grade cancer, and normal tissues was recorded, and the generated probability values were applied to a naive test set. The resulting Gleason probability maps were stable regardless of training cohort, functioned independent of prostate zone, and outperformed conventional clinical imaging (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.79). Extensive overlap was seen in the most common image signatures associated with high- and low-grade cancer, indicating that low- and high-grade tumors present similarly on conventional imaging.
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- 2019
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9. Energy-Specific Optimization of Attenuation Thresholds for Low-Energy Virtual Monoenergetic Images in Renal Lesion Evaluation
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Achille Mileto, Daniele Marin, Petar Duvnjak, Alfredo E. Farjat, Bhavik N. Patel, Christoph Schabel, and Juan Carlos Ramirez-Giraldo
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Male ,Renal lesion ,Contrast Media ,Signal-To-Noise Ratio ,Kidney ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Low energy ,Vascularity ,Multidetector computed tomography ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,business.industry ,Phantoms, Imaging ,Attenuation ,Virtual monoenergetic imaging ,General Medicine ,equipment and supplies ,Kidney Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Dual energy ct ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Energy (signal processing) ,Biomedical engineering ,Iodine - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine in vitro and in vivo the optimal threshold for renal lesion vascularity at low-energy (40-60 keV) virtual monoenergetic imaging.A rod simulating unenhanced renal parenchymal attenuation (35 HU) was fitted with a syringe containing water. Three iodinated solutions (0.38, 0.57, and 0.76 mg I/mL) were inserted into another rod that simulated enhanced renal parenchyma (180 HU). Rods were inserted into cylindric phantoms of three different body sizes and scanned with single- and dual-energy MDCT. In addition, 102 patients (32 men, 70 women; mean age, 66.8 ± 12.9 [SD] years) with 112 renal lesions (67 nonvascular, 45 vascular) measuring 1.1-8.9 cm underwent single-energy unenhanced and contrast-enhanced dual-energy CT. Optimal threshold attenuation values that differentiated vascular from nonvascular lesions at 40-60 keV were determined.Mean optimal threshold values were 30.2 ± 3.6 (standard error), 20.9 ± 1.3, and 16.1 ± 1.0 HU in the phantom, and 35.9 ± 3.6, 25.4 ± 1.8, and 17.8 ± 1.8 HU in the patients at 40, 50, and 60 keV. Sensitivity and specificity for the thresholds did not change significantly between low-energy and 70-keV virtual monoenergetic imaging (sensitivity, 87-98%; specificity, 90-91%). The AUC from 40 to 70 keV was 0.96 (95% CI, 0.93-0.99) to 0.98 (95% CI, 0.95-1.00).Low-energy virtual monoenergetic imaging at energy-specific optimized attenuation thresholds can be used for reliable characterization of renal lesions.
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- 2018
10. Left Anterior Descending Coronary Artery and Multiple Peripheral Mycotic Aneurysms Due to Mycobacterium Bovis Following Intravesical Bacillus Calmette-Guerin Therapy: A Case Report
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Petar Duvnjak and Mario Laguna
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antitubercular Agents ,Femoral artery ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Anterior Descending Coronary Artery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Aneurysm ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Popliteal Artery ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiac Imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Ethambutol ,Carcinoma, Transitional Cell ,Groin ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Abdominal aorta ,Coronary Aneurysm ,Middle Aged ,Mycotic aneurysm ,medicine.disease ,Mycobacterium bovis ,Popliteal artery ,Surgery ,Femoral Artery ,Administration, Intravesical ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ,BCG Vaccine ,cardiovascular system ,business ,Aneurysm, Infected ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The use of live attenuated intravesicular Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) therapy is a generally accepted safe and effective method for the treatment of superficial transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder. Although rare, < 5% of patient’s treated with intravesicular BCG therapy may develop potentially serious complications, including localized infections to the genitourinary tract, mycotic aneurysms and osteomyelitis. We present here a case of a 63-year-old male who developed left coronary and multiple peripheral M. Bovis mycotic aneurysms as a late complication of intravesicular BCG therapy for superficial bladder cancer. The patient initially presented with acute onset pain and swelling in the left knee > 2 years following initial therapy, and initial workup revealed a ruptured saccular aneurysm of the left popliteal artery as well as incidental bilateral common femoral artery aneurysms. Following endovascular treatment and additional workup, the patient was discovered to have additional aneurysms in the right popliteal artery and left anterior descending artery (LAD). Surgical pathology and bacterial cultures obtained from the excised femoral aneurysms and surgical groin wounds were positive for Mycobacterium Bovis, and the patient was initiated on a nine-month antimycobacterial course of isoniazid, rifampin and ethambutol. Including the present case, there has been a total of 32 reported cases of mycotic aneurysms as a complication from intravesicular BCG therapy, which we will review here. The majority of reported cases involve the abdominal aorta; however, this represents the first known reported case of a coronary aneurysm.
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- 2016
11. Rapid, robotic, small-scale protein production for NMR screening and structure determination
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Davin R. Jensen, Lai F. Bergeman, Petar Duvnjak, Ronnie O. Frederick, Brian F. Volkman, Margie Li, M. Cassidy, Francis C. Peterson, and Christopher Woytovich
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Protein structure ,Biochemistry ,Pipeline (computing) ,Protein purification ,PDZ domain ,Computational biology ,Folding (DSP implementation) ,Biology ,Molecular Biology ,Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Structural genomics ,Protein Structure Initiative - Abstract
Three-dimensional protein structure determination is a costly process due in part to the low success rate within groups of potential targets. Conventional validation methods eliminate the vast majority of proteins from further consideration through a time-consuming succession of screens for expression, solubility, purification, and folding. False negatives at each stage incur unwarranted reductions in the overall success rate. We developed a semi-automated protocol for isotopically-labeled protein production using the Maxwell-16, a commercially available bench top robot, that allows for single-step target screening by 2D NMR. In the span of a week, one person can express, purify, and screen 48 different (15)N-labeled proteins, accelerating the validation process by more than 10-fold. The yield from a single channel of the Maxwell-16 is sufficient for acquisition of a high-quality 2D (1)H-(15)N-HSQC spectrum using a 3-mm sample cell and 5-mm cryogenic NMR probe. Maxwell-16 screening of a control group of proteins reproduced previous validation results from conventional small-scale expression screening and large-scale production approaches currently employed by our structural genomics pipeline. Analysis of 18 new protein constructs identified two potential structure targets that included the second PDZ domain of human Par-3. To further demonstrate the broad utility of this production strategy, we solved the PDZ2 NMR structure using [U-(15)N,(13)C] protein prepared using the Maxwell-16. This novel semi-automated protein production protocol reduces the time and cost associated with NMR structure determination by eliminating unnecessary screening and scale-up steps.
- Published
- 2010
12. A whole-animal microplate assay for metabolic rate using zebrafish
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Ramani Ramchandran, Alan N. Mayer, Khadijah Makky, Kallal Pramanik, and Petar Duvnjak
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Aging ,Genotype ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Energy homeostasis ,Analytical Chemistry ,medicine ,Bioassay ,Animals ,Secretion ,Gene ,Zebrafish ,Sirolimus ,Mutation ,biology ,Temperature ,Metabolism ,biology.organism_classification ,Phenotype ,Larva ,Molecular Medicine ,Biological Assay ,2,4-Dinitrophenol ,Energy Metabolism ,Chemical genetics ,Acids ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Regulation of whole-body metabolism and energy homeostasis has been shown to require signaling between multiple organs. To identify genetic programs that determine metabolic rate, and compounds that can modify it, a whole-animal assay amenable to large-scale screening was developed. The direct correlation of acid production with metabolic rate was exploited to use a noninvasive colorimetric assay for acid secretion by individual zebrafish larvae in a 96-well plate format. A 3-fold increase in metabolic rate was detected that accompanied development between 24 and 96 h postfertilization. Dynamic changes in metabolic rate were also detected in response to different conditions such as temperature and drug treatments, in general agreement with the rate of oxygen consumption measured concomitantly. This assay was used to measure metabolic rate in the progeny of fish known to carry a recessive mutation in a gene required for ribosome biogenesis ( npo(fW07-g)), which would be expected to reduce energy consumption. A strong correlation was found (p < 10(-6) ) between reduced metabolic rate and genotype even before the developmental defect was visually evident. These studies support the conclusion that whole-animal acid secretion can be used as a readout for energy metabolism, thus enabling large-scale screening for genetic and chemical regulators of metabolic rate in a vertebrate.
- Published
- 2008
13. Enhanced bacterial protein expression during auto-induction obtained by alteration of lac repressor dosage and medium composition
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Paul G. Blommel, Petar Duvnjak, Katie J. Becker, and Brian G. Fox
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Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Repressor ,lac operon ,Lac repressor ,Biology ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Plasmid ,Escherichia coli ,Luciferase ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Regulation of gene expression ,Growth medium ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Carbon ,Culture Media ,Oxygen ,Diauxic growth ,Luciferases, Bacterial ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Lac Operon ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Biotechnology ,Plasmids - Abstract
The auto-induction method of protein expression in E. coli is based on diauxic growth resulting from dynamic function of lac operon regulatory elements (lacO and LacI) in mixtures of glucose, glycerol, and lactose. The results show that successful execution of auto-induction is strongly dependent on the plasmid promoter and repressor construction, on the oxygenation state of the culture, and on the composition of the auto-induction medium. Thus expression hosts expressing high levels of LacI during aerobic growth exhibit reduced ability to effectively complete the auto-induction process. Manipulation of the promoter to decrease the expression of LacI altered the preference for lactose consumption in a manner that led to increased protein expression and partially relieved the sensitivity of the auto-induction process to the oxygenation state of the culture. Factorial design methods were used to optimize the chemically defined growth medium used for expression of two model proteins, Photinus luciferase and enhanced green fluorescent protein, including variations for production of both unlabeled and selenomethionine-labeled samples. The optimization included studies of the expression from T7 and T7-lacI promoter plasmids and from T5 phage promoter plasmids expressing two levels of LacI. Upon the basis of the analysis of over 500 independent expression results, combinations of optimized expression media and expression plasmids that gave protein yields of greater than 1000 mug/mL of expression culture were identified.
- Published
- 2007
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