512 results on '"Sierra, J. P."'
Search Results
2. Transduction of an immortalized olfactory ensheathing glia cell line with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene: evaluation of its neuroregenerative capacity as a proof of concept
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Plaza, N, Simón, D, Sierra, J, and Moreno-Flores, MT
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Quantitative Biology - Cell Behavior - Abstract
Olfactory ensheathing glia (OEG) cells are known to foster axonal regeneration of central nervous system (CNS) neurons. Several lines of reversibly immortalized human OEG (ihOEG) have been previously established that enabled to develop models for their validation in vitro and in vivo. In this work, a constitutively GFP-expressing ihOEG cell line was obtained, and named Ts14-GFP. Ts14-GFP neuroregenerative ability was similar to that found for the parental line Ts14 and it can be assayed using in vivo transplantation experimental paradigms, after spinal cord or optic nerve damage. Additionally, we have engineered a low-regenerative ihOEG line, hTL2, using lentiviral transduction of the large T antigen from SV40 virus, denominated from now on Ts12. Ts12 can be used as a low regeneration control in these experiments., Comment: 22 pages, 3 Figures
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- 2024
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3. Protocol description and initial experience in kidney graft perfusion using infrared thermography
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Ciappara Paniagua, M., Gutierrez Hidalgo, B., Gomez Rivas, J., Redondo Gonzalez, E., De la Parra Sanchez, I., Galindo Herrero, I., Martin Monterrubio, J., Bañuelos Marco, B., Tueti Silva, D., Galante Romo, M. I., and Moreno Sierra, J.
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- 2024
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4. Adolescent alcohol exposure persistently alters orbitofrontal cortical encoding of Pavlovian conditional stimulus components in female rats
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Pochapski, Jose A., Gómez-A, Alexander, Stringfield, Sierra J., Jaggers, Hannah, Boettiger, Charlotte A., Da Cunha, Claudio, and Robinson, Donita L.
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- 2024
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5. Adolescent alcohol exposure persistently alters orbitofrontal cortical encoding of Pavlovian conditional stimulus components in female rats
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Jose A. Pochapski, Alexander Gómez-A, Sierra J. Stringfield, Hannah Jaggers, Charlotte A. Boettiger, Claudio Da Cunha, and Donita L. Robinson
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Exposure to alcohol during adolescence impacts cortical and limbic brain regions undergoing maturation. In rodent models, long-term effects on behavior and neurophysiology have been described after adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE), especially in males. We hypothesized that AIE in female rats increases conditional approach to a reward-predictive cue and corresponding neuronal activity in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and nucleus accumbens (NAc). We evaluated behavior and neuronal firing after AIE (5 g/kg intragastric) or water (CON) in adult female rats. Both AIE and CON groups expressed a ST phenotype, and AIE marginally increased sign-tracking (ST) and decreased goal-tracking (GT) metrics. NAc neurons exhibited phasic firing patterns to the conditional stimulus (CS), with no differences between groups. In contrast, neuronal firing in the OFC of AIE animals was greater at CS onset and offset than in CON animals. During reward omission, OFC responses to CS offset normalized to CON levels, but enhanced OFC firing to CS onset persisted in AIE. We suggest that the enhanced OFC neural activity observed in AIE rats to the CS could contribute to behavioral inflexibility. Ultimately, AIE persistently impacts the neurocircuitry of reward-motivated behavior in female rats.
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- 2024
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6. A Scoping Review of the Components of Moral Resilience: Its Role in Addressing Moral Injury or Moral Distress for High-Risk Occupation Workers
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Osifeso, Temitope, Crocker, Sierra J., Lentz, Liana, Smith-MacDonald, Lorraine, Seliman, Merna, Limenih, Gojjam, MacPhee, Renée S., Anderson, Gregory S., Brémault-Phillips, Suzette, Malloy, David, and Carleton, R. Nicholas
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- 2023
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7. Obesity worsens mitochondrial quality control and does not protect against skeletal muscle wasting in murine cancer cachexia
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Thomas D. Cardaci, Brandon N. VanderVeen, Brooke M. Bullard, Sierra J. McDonald, Christian A. Unger, Reilly T. Enos, Daping Fan, Kandy T. Velázquez, Norma Frizzell, Espen E. Spangenburg, and E. Angela Murphy
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Autophagy ,High fat diet ,Lewis lung carcinoma ,Mitochondrial dysfunction ,Mitophagy ,Muscle atrophy ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 ,Human anatomy ,QM1-695 - Abstract
Abstract Background More than 650 million people are obese (BMI > 30) worldwide, which increases their risk for several metabolic diseases and cancer. While cachexia and obesity are at opposite ends of the weight spectrum, leading many to suggest a protective effect of obesity against cachexia, mechanistic support for obesity's benefit is lacking. Given that obesity and cachexia are both accompanied by metabolic dysregulation, we sought to investigate the impact of obesity on skeletal muscle mass loss and mitochondrial dysfunction in murine cancer cachexia. Methods Male C57BL/6 mice were given a purified high fat or standard diet for 16 weeks before being implanted with 106 Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells. Mice were monitored for 25 days, and hindlimb muscles were collected for cachexia indices and mitochondrial assessment via western blotting, high‐resolution respirometry and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Results Obese LLC mice experienced significant tumour‐free body weight loss similar to lean (−12.8% vs. −11.8%, P = 0.0001) but had reduced survival (33.3% vs. 6.67%, χ2 = 10.04, P = 0.0182). Obese LLC mice had reduced muscle weights (−24%, P
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- 2024
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8. Changes in dorsomedial striatum activity during expression of goal-directed vs. habit-like cue-induced cocaine seeking
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Brooke N. Bender, Sierra J. Stringfield, and Mary M. Torregrossa
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Dorsal striatum ,Cue extinction ,Cocaine ,Dopamine ,habit ,Goal-directed ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
A preclinical model of cue exposure therapy, cue extinction, reduces cue-induced cocaine seeking that is goal-directed but not habit-like. Goal-directed and habitual behaviors differentially rely on the dorsomedial striatum (DMS) and dorsolateral striatum (DLS), but the effects of cue extinction on dorsal striatal responses to cue-induced drug seeking are unknown. We used fiber photometry in rats trained to self-administer cocaine paired with an audiovisual cue to examine how dorsal striatal intracellular calcium and extracellular dopamine activity differs between goal-directed and habit-like cue-induced cocaine seeking and how it is impacted by cue extinction. After minimal fixed-ratio training, rats showed enhanced DMS and DLS calcium responses to cue-reinforced compared to unreinforced lever presses. After rats were trained on goal-promoting fixed ratio schedules or habit-promoting second-order schedules of reinforcement, different patterns of dorsal striatal calcium and dopamine responses to cue-reinforced lever presses emerged. Rats trained on habit-promoting second-order schedules showed reduced DMS calcium responses and enhanced DLS dopamine responses to cue-reinforced lever presses. Cue extinction reduced calcium responses during subsequent drug seeking in the DMS, but not in the DLS. Therefore, cue extinction may reduce goal-directed behavior through its effects on the DMS, whereas habit-like behavior and the DLS are unaffected.
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- 2024
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9. A cold wave of winter 2021 in central South America: characteristics and impacts
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Marengo, J., Espinoza, J. C., Bettolli, L., Cunha, A. P., Molina-Carpio, J., Skansi, M., Correa, K., Ramos, A. M., Salinas, R., and Sierra, J.-P.
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- 2023
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10. Alleviating expansion-induced mechanical degradation in lithium-ion battery silicon anodes via morphological design
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Gross, Sierra J, Hsieh, Meng-Ting, Mumm, Daniel R, Valdevit, Lorenzo, and Mohraz, Ali
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- 2022
11. Workplace Experiences of University Staff Governance Members in the University of Wisconsin System
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Sierra J. Schafelke
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The evolution and bureaucratic nature of higher education has created organizational structures and practices that contribute to experiences of inequality for university staff, an employee group scarcely researched. The purpose of this study was to investigate and document the workplace experiences in university staff governance members in the University of Wisconsin System. The research questions were as follows: 1) What are the workplace experiences of university staff governance members in in the University of Wisconsin System? 2) How are these experiences connected to the institution's organizational structures and practices? The conceptual framework focused on how organizational structures and practices create opportunities of inequity for university staff in higher education, viewing the organization from Bolman and Deal's Four-Frame Model. This qualitative study applied a critical, phenomenological approach by recruiting 231 university staff governance members from all thirteen Wisconsin state universities to complete an anonymous survey with option to conduct a confidential interview and reviewing public documents to corroborate and critically examine participant experiences. Forty-four surveys were completed; four interviews were conducted, one unanticipated faculty response, and seventy-one state laws and UW policies or documents were connected to participant experiences. Participants indicated feeling left out of many campus activities and described ways campus leaders/managers showed support for university staff inclusion in governance matters. Participants indicated forty-five microaggressive perspectives regarding how their internal culture views them. Recent studies related to workplace satisfaction and equity suggested that dissatisfied employees produce lower returns and find lower enrollment as consequential to workplace inequality. Institutional stakeholders can look inward for expertise, data, and collaboration to contribute to the field of higher education because the need for additional research and evidence-based best practices in organizational leadership in higher education has never been more important. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
12. Native amphibian toxin reduces invasive crayfish feeding with potential benefits to stream biodiversity
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Bucciarelli, Gary M., Smith, Sierra J., Choe, Justin J., Shin, Phoebe D., Fisher, Robert N., and Kats, Lee B.
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- 2023
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13. Response to MHC‐based olfactory cues in a mate choice context in two species of darter (Percidae: Etheostoma)
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Kara M. Million, Melissa R. Proffit, and Sierra J. Reese
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darters ,Etheostoma ,mate choice ,MHC ,olfactory cues ,opposites‐attract hypothesis ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Mate choice is hypothesized to play an important role in maintaining high diversity at major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes in vertebrates. Many studies have revealed that females across taxa prefer the scent of males with MHC genotypes different to their own. In this study we tested the “opposites‐attract” hypothesis in two species of darter with known differences in female criteria used in mate choice: in the fantail darters (a paternal‐care species), females prefer males with visual traits related to nest guarding and egg tending, while in rainbow darters (not a paternal‐care species) female mate choice criteria are unknown. In dichotomous mate‐choice trials, we presented females of both species with the scents of conspecific males with MHC class IIb genotypes that were either similar or dissimilar to that of the focal female. We evaluated the proportion of time each female spent with each male and calculated the average strength of female preference for both species. Female fantail darters demonstrated a preference for the scent of males with similar (rather than dissimilar) MHC genotypes, but this result was not statistically significant. Rainbow darter females showed no preference for the scent of males with similar or dissimilar MHC genotypes. Our results do not support the “opposites‐attract” hypothesis in darters.
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- 2024
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14. A natural experiment identifies an impending ecological trap for a neotropical amphibian in response to extreme weather events
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Clark, Morgan A, Ota, William M, Smith, Sierra J, Muramoto, Brett K, Ngo, Summer, Chan, Gabriella E, Kenyon, Maxwell A, Sturtevant, Matthew C, Diamond, Max G, Bucciarelli, Gary M, and Kats, Lee B
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Ecological Applications ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Zoology ,Environmental Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Life on Land ,Climate Action ,amphibians ,Costa Rica ,disturbance ,natural experiment ,trade offs ,ultraviolet radiation ,Evolutionary Biology ,Evolutionary biology ,Ecological applications - Abstract
Extreme weather events are predicted to increase as a result of climate change, yet amphibian responses to extreme disturbance events remain understudied, especially in the Neotropics. Recently, an unprecedented windstorm within a protected Costa Rican rainforest opened large light gaps in sites where we have studied behavioral responses of diurnal strawberry poison frogs (Oophaga pumilio) to ultraviolet radiation for nearly two decades. Previous studies demonstrate that O. pumilio selects and defends perches where ultraviolet radiation (UV-B) is relatively low, likely because of the lethal and sublethal effects of UV-B. In this natural experiment, we quantified disturbance to O. pumilio habitat, surveyed for the presence of O. pumilio in both high-disturbance and low-disturbance areas of the forest, and assessed UV-B levels and perch selection behavior in both disturbance levels. Fewer frogs were detected in high-disturbance habitat than in low-disturbance habitat. In general, frogs were found vocalizing at perches in both disturbance levels, and in both cases, in significantly lower UV-B levels relative to ambient adjacent surroundings. However, frogs at perches in high-disturbance areas were exposed to UV-B levels nearly 10 times greater than males at perches in low-disturbance areas. Thus, behavioral avoidance of UV-B may not reduce the risks associated with elevated exposure under these novel conditions, and similarly, if future climate and human-driven land-use change lead to sustained analogous environments.
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- 2022
15. Native amphibian toxin reduces invasive crayfish feeding with potential benefits to stream biodiversity
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Gary M. Bucciarelli, Sierra J. Smith, Justin J. Choe, Phoebe D. Shin, Robert N. Fisher, and Lee B. Kats
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Santa Monica Mountains ,Taricha torosa ,Crayfish ,Procambarus clarkii ,Tetrodotoxin ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Abstract Background Biodiversity is generally reduced when non-native species invade an ecosystem. Invasive crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, populate California freshwater streams, and in the Santa Monica Mountains (Los Angeles, USA), their introduction has led to trophic cascades due to omnivorous feeding behavior and a rapid rate of population growth. The native California newt, Taricha torosa, possesses a neurotoxin, tetrodotoxin (TTX), that affects freshwater animal behavior. Given P. clarkii has a limited evolutionary history with TTX, we hypothesized that TTX may affect crayfish feeding behaviors. To determine if TTX affects P. clarkii behavior, we measured cumulative movement and various feeding behaviors of P. clarkii exposed to (i) waterborne, ecologically realistic concentrations of TTX (~ 3.0 × 10− 8 moles/L), (ii) an anuran chemical cue to account for intraguild cues, or (iii) a T. torosa chemical cue with quantitated TTX in it (~ 6.2 × 10− 8 moles/L). Results We found that the presence of TTX in any form significantly reduced crayfish movement and decreased the amount of food consumed over time. Crayfish responses to the anuran treatment did not significantly differ from controls. Conclusion Our laboratory results show that naturally occurring neurotoxin from native California newts limits invasive crayfish foraging and feeding rates, which may play a role in preserving local stream ecosystems by limiting invasive crayfish behaviors that are detrimental to biodiversity.
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- 2023
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16. Orthogonal Bioluminescent Probes from Disubstituted Luciferins
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Williams, Sierra J, Hwang, Clare S, and Prescher, Jennifer A
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological Sciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,Generic health relevance ,Firefly Luciferin ,HEK293 Cells ,Humans ,Luciferases ,Luminescent Agents ,Luminescent Measurements ,Molecular Structure ,Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry ,Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical biochemistry and metabolomics ,Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry - Abstract
Bioluminescence imaging with luciferase-luciferin pairs is routinely used to monitor cellular functions. Multiple targets can be visualized in tandem using luciferases that process unique substrates, but only a handful of such orthogonal probes are known. Multiplexed studies require additional robust, light-emitting molecules. In this work, we report new luciferins for orthogonal imaging that comprise disubstituted cores. These probes were found to be bright emitters with various engineered luciferases. The unique patterns of light output also provided insight into enzyme-substrate interactions necessary for productive emission. Screening studies identified mutant luciferases that could preferentially process the disubstituted analogues, enabling orthogonal imaging with existing bioluminescent reporters. Further mutational analyses revealed the origins of substrate selectivity. Collectively, this work provides insights into luciferase-luciferin features relevant to bioluminescence and expands the number of probes for multicomponent tracking.
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- 2021
17. Phase 3 Study of Subcutaneous Versus Intravenous Ravulizumab in Eculizumab-Experienced Adult Patients with PNH: Primary Analysis and 1-Year Follow-Up
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Yenerel, Mustafa N., Sicre de Fontbrune, Flore, Piatek, Caroline, Sahin, Fahri, Füreder, Wolfgang, Ortiz, Stephan, Ogawa, Masayo, Ozol-Godfrey, Ayca, Sierra, J. Rafael, and Szer, Jeff
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- 2023
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18. Emodin reduces surgical wounding‐accelerated tumor growth and metastasis via macrophage suppression in a murine triple‐negative breast cancer model
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Sierra J. McDonald, Brooke M. Bullard, Brandon N. VanderVeen, Thomas D. Cardaci, Ioulia Chatzistamou, Daping Fan, and E. Angela Murphy
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breast cancer ,emodin ,lung metastasis ,macrophages ,surgical wounding ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract It has been suspected that tumor resection surgery itself may accelerate breast cancer (BC) lung metastasis in some patients. Emodin, a natural anthraquinone found in the roots and rhizomes of various plants, exhibits anticancer activity. We examined the perioperative use of emodin in our established surgery wounding murine BC model. Emodin reduced primary BC tumor growth and metastasis in the lungs in both sham and surgical wounded mice, consistent with a reduction in proliferation and enhanced apoptosis (primary tumor and lungs). Further, emodin reduced systemic inflammation, most notably the number of monocytes in the peripheral blood and reduced pro‐tumoral M2 macrophages in the primary tumor and the lungs. Consistently, we show that emodin reduces gene expression of select macrophage markers and associated cytokines in the primary tumor and lungs of wounded mice. Overall, we demonstrate that emodin is beneficial in mitigating surgical wounding accelerated lung metastasis in a model of triple‐negative BC, which appears to be mediated, at least in part, by its actions on macrophages. These data support the development of emodin as a safe, low‐cost, and effective agent to be used perioperatively to alleviate the surgery triggered inflammatory response and consequential metastasis of BC to the lungs.
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- 2023
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19. Spin communication over 30 $\mu$m long channels of chemical vapor deposited graphene on SiO$_2$
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Gebeyehu, Z. M., Parui, S., Sierra, J. F., Timmermans, M., Esplandiu, M. J., Brems, S., Huyghebaert, C., Garello, K., Costache, M. V., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We demonstrate a high-yield fabrication of non-local spin valve devices with room-temperature spin lifetimes of up to 3 ns and spin relaxation lengths as long as 9 $\mu$m in platinum-based chemical vapor deposition (Pt-CVD) synthesized single-layer graphene on SiO$_2$/Si substrates. The spin-lifetime systematically presents a marked minimum at the charge neutrality point, as typically observed in pristine exfoliated graphene. However, by studying the carrier density dependence beyond n ~ 5 x 10$^{12}$ cm$^{-2}$, via electrostatic gating, it is found that the spin lifetime reaches a maximum and then starts decreasing, a behavior that is reminiscent of that predicted when the spin-relaxation is driven by spin-orbit interaction. The spin lifetimes and relaxation lengths compare well with state-of-the-art results using exfoliated graphene on SiO$_2$/Si, being a factor two-to-three larger than the best values reported at room temperature using the same substrate. As a result, the spin signal can be readily measured across 30 $\mu$m long graphene channels. These observations indicate that Pt-CVD graphene is a promising material for large-scale spin-based logic-in-memory applications.
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- 2019
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20. Building Biological Flashlights: Orthogonal Luciferases and Luciferins for in Vivo Imaging
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Williams, Sierra J and Prescher, Jennifer A
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Generic health relevance ,Animals ,Firefly Luciferin ,Humans ,Luciferases ,Luminescent Agents ,Luminescent Measurements ,Optical Imaging ,Chemical Sciences ,General Chemistry - Abstract
Bioluminescence is widely used for real-time imaging in living organisms. This technology features a light-emitting reaction between enzymes (luciferases) and small molecule substrates (luciferins). Photons produced from luciferase-luciferin reactions can penetrate through heterogeneous tissue, enabling readouts of physiological processes. Dozens of bioluminescent probes are now available and many are routinely used to monitor cell proliferation, migration, and gene expression patterns in vivo. Despite the ubiquity of bioluminescence, traditional applications have been largely limited to imaging one biological feature at a time. Only a handful of luciferase-luciferin pairs can be easily used in tandem, and most are poorly resolved in living animals. Efforts to develop spectrally distinct reporters have been successful, but multispectral imaging in large organisms remains a formidable challenge due to interference from surrounding tissue. Consequently, a lack of well-resolved probes has precluded multicomponent tracking. An expanded collection of bioluminescent probes would provide insight into processes where multiple cell types drive physiological tasks, including immune function and organ development. We aimed to expand the bioluminescent toolkit by developing substrate-resolved imaging agents. The goal was to generate multiple orthogonal (i.e., noncross-reactive) luciferases that are responsive to unique scaffolds and could be used concurrently in living animals. We adopted a parallel engineering approach to genetically modify luciferases to accept chemically modified luciferins. When the mutants and analogs are combined, light is produced only when complementary enzyme-substrate partners interact. Thus, the pairs can be distinguished based on substrate selectivity, regardless of the color of light emitted. Sequential administration of the luciferins enables the unique luciferases to be illuminated (and thus resolved) within complex environments, including whole organisms. This Account describes our efforts to develop orthogonal bioluminescent probes, crafting custom luciferases (or "biological flashlights") that can selectively process luciferin analogs (or "batteries") to produce light. In the first section, we describe synthetic methods that were key to accessing diverse luciferin architectures. The second section focuses on identifying complementary luciferase enzymes via a combination of mutagenesis and screening. To expedite the search for orthogonal enzymes and substrates, we developed a computational algorithm to sift through large data sets. The third section features examples of the parallel engineering approach. We identified orthogonal enzyme-substrate pairs comprising two different classes of luciferins. The probes were vetted both in cells and whole organisms. This expanded collection of imaging agents is applicable to studies of immune function and other multicomponent processes. The final section of the Account highlights ongoing work toward building better bioluminescent tools. As ever-brighter and more selective probes are developed, the frontiers of what we can "see" in vivo will continue to expand.
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- 2019
21. Obesity reduced survival with 5-fluorouracil and did not protect against chemotherapy-induced cachexia or immune cell cytotoxicity in mice
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Brandon N. VanderVeen, Thomas D. Cardaci, Sierra J. McDonald, Sarah S. Madero, Christian A. Unger, Brooke M. Bullard, Reilly T. Enos, Kandy T. Velázquez, Jason L. Kubinak, Daping Fan, and E. Angela Murphy
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chemotherapy ,inflammation ,skeletal muscle ,adipose tissue ,liver toxicity ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Fluorouracil/5-flourouracil (5FU) is a first-line chemotherapy drug for many cancer types; however, its associated toxicities contribute to poor quality of life and reduced dose intensities negatively impacting patient prognosis. While obesity remains a critical risk factor for most cancers, our understanding regarding how obesity may impact chemotherapy’s toxicities is extremely limited. C56BL/6 mice were given high fat (Obese) or standard diets (Lean) for 4 months and then subjected to three cycles of 5FU (5d-40 mg/kg Lean Mass, 9d rest) or PBS vehicle control. Shockingly, only 60% of Obese survived 3 cycles compared to 100% of Lean, and Obese lost significantly more body weight. Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD), the enzyme responsible for 5FU catabolism, was reduced in obese livers. Total white blood cells, neutrophils, and lymphocytes were reduced in Obese 5FU compared to Lean 5FU and PBS controls. While adipocyte size was not affected by 5FU in Obese, skeletal muscle mass and myofibrillar cross section area were decreased following 5FU in Lean and Obese. Although adipose tissue inflammatory gene expression was not impacted by 5FU, distinct perturbations to skeletal muscle inflammatory gene expression and immune cell populations (CD45+ Immune cells, CD45+CD11b+CD68+ macrophages and CD45+CD11b+Ly6clo/int macrophage/monocytes) were observed in Obese only. Our evidence suggests that obesity induced liver pathologies and reduced DPD exacerbated 5FU toxicities. While obesity has been suggested to protect against cancer/chemotherapy-induced cachexia and other toxicities, our results demonstrate that obese mice are not protected, but rather show evidence of increased susceptibility to 5FU-induced cytotoxicity even when dosed for relative lean mass.
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- 2022
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22. Consenso Delphi sobre Estrategias Terapéuticas y de Prevención Sanitaria de la hipovitaminosis D
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Aguilar del Rey J, Jódar Gimeno E, Brañas F, Gómez Alonso C, González Lama Y, Malouf-Sierra J, Sánchez Borrego R, Segura de la Morena J, Suárez Pérez JA, and Valdés y Llorca C
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consenso delphi ,suplementación vitamina d ,vitamina d ,hipovitaminosis d ,acciones esqueléticas y extraesqueléticas ,Medicine ,Osteopathy ,RZ301-397.5 - Abstract
Antecedentes: La elevada prevalencia de hipovitaminosis D en España es considerada una verdadera epidemia con importantes implicaciones para la salud por las múltiples funciones que ejerce la vitamina D tanto a nivel esquelético como extraesquelético. Para que las personas con insuficiencia o deficiencia en vitamina D alcancen los niveles séricos más adecuados, deben recibir suplementos de vitamina D. Este estudio se realizó con la finalidad de evaluar si en la práctica clínica habitual, el manejo de la hipovitaminosis D era llevada a cabo según las recomendaciones internacionales establecidas por las sociedades científicas. Métodos: Se realizaron dos rondas de circulación de un cuestionario Delphi entre un panel formado por médicos prescriptores habituales de vitamina D. Resultados: En general, los médicos del panel reconocieron la alta prevalencia de la hipovitaminosis D en España, la necesidad del cribado en los distintos grupos de riesgo y los beneficios de la suplementación en los pacientes con insuficiencia o déficit de vitamina D. Sin embargo, no se alcanzó el consenso en algunas de las aseveraciones relacionadas con los métodos de cuantificación de la vitamina D o con las recomendaciones para el manejo de la hipovitaminosis D. Conclusiones: La ausencia de acuerdo para algunos de los ítems reveló la necesidad de realizar acciones formativas destinadas a proporcionar un conocimiento adecuado y actualizado sobre las evidencias científicas y las recomendaciones para la práctica clínica de la suplementación de vitamina D.
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- 2022
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23. Copper nanoparticles supported on biocarbon film from Sargassum spp. and its electrochemical activity in reducing CO2
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Velueta, D. A. Pantoja, Ramírez, S. J. Figueroa, Sierra, J. M., Escobar, B., Ucán, C. A. Aguilar, and Rosas, G.
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- 2022
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24. A strategic reflection for the management and implementation of CAR-T therapy in Spain: an expert consensus paper
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Zozaya, N., Villaseca, J., Abdalla, F., Calleja, M. A., Díez-Martín, J. L., Estévez, J., García-Sanz, R., Martínez-López, J., Sierra, J., Vera, R., and Hidalgo-Vega, A.
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- 2022
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25. Spin precession in anisotropic media
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Raes, B., Cummings, A. W., Bonell, F., Costache, M. V., Sierra, J. F., Roche, S., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We generalize the diffusive model for spin injection and detection in nonlocal spin structures to account for spin precession under an applied magnetic field in an anisotropic medium, for which the spin lifetime is not unique and depends on the spin orientation.We demonstrate that the spin precession (Hanle) line shape is strongly dependent on the degree of anisotropy and on the orientation of the magnetic field. In particular, we show that the anisotropy of the spin lifetime can be extracted from the measured spin signal, after dephasing in an oblique magnetic field, by using an analytical formula with a single fitting parameter. Alternatively, after identifying the fingerprints associated with the anisotropy, we propose a simple scaling of the Hanle line shapes at specific magnetic field orientations that results in a universal curve only in the isotropic case. The deviation from the universal curve can be used as a complementary means of quantifying the anisotropy by direct comparison with the solution of our generalized model. Finally, we applied our model to graphene devices and find that the spin relaxation for graphene on silicon oxide is isotropic within our experimental resolution.
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- 2018
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26. Leader-Follower Power-based Formation Control Applied to Differential-drive Mobile Robots
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Sanchez-Sanchez, A. G., Hernandez-Martinez, E. G., González-Sierra, J., Ramírez-Neria, M., Flores-Godoy, J. J., Ferreira-Vazquez, E. D., and Fernandez-Anaya, G.
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- 2023
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27. Spin precession and spin Hall effect in monolayer graphene/Pt nanostructures
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Torres, W. Savero, Sierra, J. F., Benítez, L. A., Bonell, F., Costache, M. V., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Spin Hall effects have surged as promising phenomena for spin logics operations without ferromagnets. However, the magnitude of the detected electric signals at room temperature in metallic systems has been so far underwhelming. Here, we demonstrate a two-order of magnitude enhancement of the signal in monolayer graphene/Pt devices when compared to their fully metallic counterparts. The enhancement stems in part from efficient spin injection and the large resistivity of graphene but we also observe 100% spin absorption in Pt and find an unusually large effective spin Hall angle of up to 0.15. The large spin-to-charge conversion allows us to characterise spin precession in graphene under the presence of a magnetic field. Furthermore, by developing an analytical model based on the 1D diffusive spin-transport, we demonstrate that the effective spin-relaxation time in graphene can be accurately determined using the (inverse) spin Hall effect as a means of detection. This is a necessary step to gather full understanding of the consequences of spin absorption in spin Hall devices, which is known to suppress effective spin lifetimes in both metallic and graphene systems., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Accepted in 2D Materials. https://doi.org/10.1088/2053-1583/aa8823
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- 2017
28. Surgical wounding enhances pro‐tumor macrophage responses and accelerates tumor growth and lung metastasis in a triple negative breast cancer mouse model
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Sierra J. McDonald, Brandon N. VanderVeen, Brooke M. Bullard, Thomas D. Cardaci, Sarah S. Madero, Ioulia Chatzistamou, Daping Fan, and E. Angela Murphy
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breast cancer ,inflammation ,macrophages ,metastasis ,surgical wounding ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract Approximately one‐third of all breast cancer mortality results from metastatic recurrence after initial success of surgery and/or therapy. Although primary tumor removal is widely accepted as beneficial, it has long been suspected that surgery itself contributes to accelerated metastatic recurrence. We investigated surgical wounding's impact on tumor progression and lung metastasis in a murine model of triple negative breast cancer (TNBC). Ten‐week‐old female mice were inoculated with 4 T1 cells (week 0) and were either subjected to a 2 cm long cutaneous contralateral incision (wounded) or control (non‐wounded) on week 2 and monitored for 3 weeks (week 5). Mice with surgical wounding displayed significantly accelerated tumor growth observable as early as 1‐week post wounding. This was confirmed by increased tumor volume and tumor weight, post‐mortem. Further, surgical wounding increased metastasis to the lungs, as detected by IVIS imaging, in vivo and ex vivo (week 5). As expected then, wounded mice displayed decreased apoptosis and increased proliferation in both the primary tumor and in the lungs. Flow cytometry revealed that primary tumors from wounded mice exhibited increased tumor associated macrophages and specifically M2‐like macrophages, which are important in promoting tumor development, maintenance, and metastasis. Immunofluorescence staining and gene expression data further confirms an increase in macrophages in both the primary tumor and the lungs of wounded mice. Our data suggests that surgical wounding accelerates tumor progression and lung metastasis in a mouse model of TNBC, which is likely mediated, at least in part by an increase in macrophages.
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- 2022
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29. Hot-Carrier Seebeck Effect: Diffusion and Remote Detection of Hot Carriers in Graphene
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Sierra, J. F., Neumann, I., Costache, M. V., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We investigate hot carrier propagation across graphene using an electrical nonlocal injection/detection method. The device consists of a monolayer graphene flake contacted by multiple metal leads. Using two remote leads for electrical heating, we generate a carrier temperature gradient that results in a measurable thermoelectric voltage VNL across the remaining (detector) leads. Due to the nonlocal character of the measurement, VNL is exclusively due to the Seebeck effect. Remarkably, a departure from the ordinary relationship between Joule power P and VNL, VNL ~ P, becomes readily apparent at low temperatures, representing a fingerprint of hot-carrier dominated thermoelectricity. By studying VNL as a function of bias, we directly determine the carrier temperature and the characteristic cooling length for hot-carrier propagation, which are key parameters for a variety of new applications that rely on hot-carrier transport.
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- 2015
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30. Enhanced spin accumulation at room temperature in graphene spin valves with amorphous carbon interfacial layers
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Neumann, I., Costache, M. V., Bridoux, G., Sierra, J. F., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We demonstrate a large enhancement of the spin accumulation in monolayer graphene following electron-beam induced deposition of an amorphous carbon layer at the ferromagnet-graphene interface. The enhancement is 10^4-fold when graphene is deposited onto poly(methyl metacrylate) (PMMA) and exposed with sufficient electron-beam dose to cross-link the PMMA, and 10^3-fold when graphene is deposited directly onto SiO2 and exposed with identical dose. We attribute the difference to a more efficient carbon deposition in the former case due to an increase in the presence of compounds containing carbon, which are released by the PMMA. The amorphous carbon interface can sustain very large current densities without degrading, which leads to very large spin accumulations exceeding 500 microeVs at room temperature.
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- 2015
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31. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Gemtuzumab Ozogamicin for First-Line Treatment of Patients with Cd-33 Positive Acute Myeloid Leukaemia in Spain
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Mareque M, Montesinos P, Font P, Guinea JM, de la Fuente A, Soto J, Oyagüez I, Brockbank J, Iglesias T, Llinares J, and Sierra J
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cost-effectiveness ,gemtuzumab ozogamicin ,acute myeloid leukaemia ,spain ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Maria Mareque,1 Pau Montesinos,2 Patricia Font,3 José María Guinea,4 Adolfo de la Fuente,5 Javier Soto,6 Itziar Oyagüez,1 James Brockbank,7 Tamara Iglesias,6 Julia Llinares,6 Jorge Sierra8 1Pharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Research Iberia (PORIB), Madrid, Spain; 2Hospital Universitario La Fe, Valencia, Spain; 3Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, Madrid, Spain; 4Organización Sanitaria Integrada Araba, País Vasco, Spain; 5Hospital MD Anderson, Madrid, Spain; 6Pfizer, Madrid, Spain; 7RTI Health Solutions, Manchester, UK; 8Hospital Universitario de La Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, SpainCorrespondence: Maria MarequePharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Research Iberia (PORIB), Paseo Joaquín Rodrigo 4-I, Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid, 28224, SpainTel + 34 91 715 91 47Fax + 34 91 715 94 69Email mmareque@porib.comObjective: To assess the incremental cost–utility ratio (ICUR) of gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) + standard of care (SOC) vs SOC alone for treatment of patients with de novo AML from a Spanish Health Service perspective.Methods: A cohort state-transition model, with 12 health-states, was used to estimate the lifetime accumulated cost and benefits in terms of quality-adjusted-life-years (QALYs) in AML patients with favourable, intermediate, and unknown cytogenetic profiles. Patient profile was defined based on the ALFA-0701 trial. Therapeutic regimens were defined by 5 haematologists. SOC was assumed to be idarubicin and cytarabine, the combination most used in Spain. QALYs were estimated by applying utilities for the time spent by the cohort in each health-state and utility decrements associated with adverse events (AE). Total cost (€,2020) included drug-acquisition, hematologic stem-cell transplantation, disease management, AE management and end-of-life costs. Unit costs were derived from local databases. All parameters were validated by haematologist. Costs and outcomes were discounted (3%/year).Results: Higher cost/patient (€ 177,618 vs € 151,434) and greater QALYs (5,70 vs 4,62) were obtained with GO+SOC vs SOC. The ICUR was € 24,203/QALY gained.Conclusion: This simulation suggests that GO + SOC could be a cost-effective option for treatment of patients with de novo AML in first line.Keywords: cost-effectiveness, gemtuzumab ozogamicin, acute myeloid leukaemia, Spain
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- 2021
32. Specific Cytotoxic Effect of an Auristatin Nanoconjugate Towards CXCR4+ Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma Cells
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Falgàs A, Pallarès V, Unzueta U, Núñez Y, Sierra J, Gallardo A, Alba-Castellón L, Mangues MA, Álamo P, Villaverde A, Vázquez E, Mangues R, and Casanova I
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nanomedicine ,targeted drug delivery ,mmae ,dlbcl ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Aïda Falgàs,1– 3 Victor Pallarès,1– 3 Ugutz Unzueta,1– 4 Yáiza Núñez,1,2 Jorge Sierra,2,5 Alberto Gallardo,1 Lorena Alba-Castellón,1,2 Maria Antonia Mangues,3,6 Patricia Álamo,1– 3 Antonio Villaverde,3,4,7 Esther Vázquez,3,4,7 Ramon Mangues,1– 3 Isolda Casanova1– 3 1Biomedical Research Institute Sant Pau (IIB-Sant Pau), Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, 08025, Spain; 2Josep Carreras Leukaemia Research Institute (IJC), Barcelona, 08916, Spain; 3CIBER de Bioingeniería Biomateriales y Nanomedicina (CIBER-BBN), Madrid, 28029, Spain; 4Department of Genetics and Microbiology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, 08193, Spain; 5Department of Hematology, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, 08025, Spain; 6Department of Pharmacy, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, 08025, Spain; 7Institute of Biotechnology and Biomedicine (IBB), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, 08193, SpainCorrespondence: Esther VázquezInstitute of Biotechnology and Biomedicine (IBB) and Department of Genetics and Microbiology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona and CIBER-BBN, Barcelona, SpainTel +34 935812148Email Esther.Vazquez@uab.esRamon ManguesBiomedical Research Institute Sant Pau (IIB-Sant Pau), Josep Carreras Leukaemia Research Institute (IJC) and CIBER-BBN, Barcelona, SpainTel +34 935537918Email RMangues@santpau.catBackground and Purpose: Around 40– 50% of diffuse large-B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients suffer from refractory disease or relapse after R-CHOP first-line treatment. Many ongoing clinical trials for DLBCL patients involve microtubule targeting agents (MTAs), however, their anticancer activity is limited by severe side effects. Therefore, we chose to improve the therapeutic window of the MTA monomethyl auristatin E developing a nanoconjugate, T22-AUR, that selectively targets the CXCR4 receptor, which is overexpressed in many DLBCL cells (CXCR4+) and associated with poor prognosis.Methods: The T22-AUR specificity towards CXCR4 receptor was performed by flow cytometry in different DLBCL cell lines and running biodistribution assays in a subcutaneous mouse model bearing CXCR4+ DLBCL cells. Moreover, we determined T22-AUR cytotoxicity using cell viability assays, cell cycle analysis, DAPI staining and immunohistochemistry. Finally, the T22-AUR antineoplastic effect was evaluated in vivo in an extranodal CXCR4+ DLBCL mouse model whereas the toxicity analysis was assessed by histopathology in non-infiltrated mouse organs and by in vitro cytotoxic assays in human PBMCs.Results: We demonstrate that the T22-AUR nanoconjugate displays CXCR4-dependent targeting and internalization in CXCR4+ DLBCL cells in vitro as well as in a subcutaneous DLBCL mouse model. Moreover, it shows high cytotoxic effect in CXCR4+ DLBCL cells, including induction of G2/M mitotic arrest, DNA damage, mitotic catastrophe and apoptosis. Furthermore, the nanoconjugate shows a potent reduction in lymphoma mouse dissemination without histopathological alterations in non-DLBCL infiltrated organs. Importantly, T22-AUR also exhibits lack of toxicity in human PBMCs.Conclusion: T22-AUR exerts in vitro and in vivo anticancer effect on CXCR4+ DLBCL cells without off-target toxicity. Thus, T22-AUR promises to become an effective therapy for CXCR4+ DLBCL patients.Keywords: nanomedicine, targeted drug delivery, MMAE, DLBCL
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- 2021
33. Biomarkers and intermediate-high risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer: a multivariate analysis of three different cellular pathways with pronostic implications
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Garde-García, H., Redondo-González, E., Maestro-de las Casas, M., Fernández-Pérez, C., and Moreno-Sierra, J.
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- 2021
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34. Black Linguistic Justice from Theory to Practice.
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Franz, Hannah, Grue, Michelle Petty, Rowell, Angela, Tano, Marie, Johnson, Sierra J., and Hudley, Anne Charity
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LINGUISTICS ,AFRICAN American students ,STUDENT rights ,JUSTICE ,SCHOOL prose - Abstract
While writing studies and linguistic scholarship has interrogated race and college writing instruction over the last fifty years, we contend that explicit, actionable, and supportive guidance on giving feedback to Black students' writing is still needed. Building on the legacy of work visible in the Students' Right to Their Own Language original (Conference on College Composition and Communication, 1974) and updated (2006) annotated bibliography, as well as the crucial work done since then, our interdisciplinary team of linguists and writing studies scholars and students constructed the Students' Right to Their Own Writing website. We describe the research-based design of the website and share evaluations of the website from focus group sessions. Acknowledging the contingent and overburdened nature of the labor force in most writing programs, the focus group participants particularly appreciated the infographics, how-tos and how-not-tos, and samples of feedback. The result is a demonstration of how to actually take up the call to enact Black Linguistic Justice (Baker-Bell et al., "This Ain't Another Statement"). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. A natural experiment identifies an impending ecological trap for a neotropical amphibian in response to extreme weather events
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Morgan A. Clark, William M. Ota, Sierra J. Smith, Brett K. Muramoto, Summer Ngo, Gabriella E. Chan, Maxwell A. Kenyon, Matthew C. Sturtevant, Max G. Diamond, Gary M. Bucciarelli, and Lee B. Kats
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amphibians ,Costa Rica ,disturbance ,natural experiment ,trade offs ,ultraviolet radiation ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Extreme weather events are predicted to increase as a result of climate change, yet amphibian responses to extreme disturbance events remain understudied, especially in the Neotropics. Recently, an unprecedented windstorm within a protected Costa Rican rainforest opened large light gaps in sites where we have studied behavioral responses of diurnal strawberry poison frogs (Oophaga pumilio) to ultraviolet radiation for nearly two decades. Previous studies demonstrate that O. pumilio selects and defends perches where ultraviolet radiation (UV‐B) is relatively low, likely because of the lethal and sublethal effects of UV‐B. In this natural experiment, we quantified disturbance to O. pumilio habitat, surveyed for the presence of O. pumilio in both high‐disturbance and low‐disturbance areas of the forest, and assessed UV‐B levels and perch selection behavior in both disturbance levels. Fewer frogs were detected in high‐disturbance habitat than in low‐disturbance habitat. In general, frogs were found vocalizing at perches in both disturbance levels, and in both cases, in significantly lower UV‐B levels relative to ambient adjacent surroundings. However, frogs at perches in high‐disturbance areas were exposed to UV‐B levels nearly 10 times greater than males at perches in low‐disturbance areas. Thus, behavioral avoidance of UV‐B may not reduce the risks associated with elevated exposure under these novel conditions, and similarly, if future climate and human‐driven land‐use change lead to sustained analogous environments.
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- 2022
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36. Differential Effects of APOE Genotype on MicroRNA Cargo of Cerebrospinal Fluid Extracellular Vesicles in Females With Alzheimer’s Disease Compared to Males
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Ursula S. Sandau, Trevor J. McFarland, Sierra J. Smith, Douglas R. Galasko, Joseph F. Quinn, and Julie A. Saugstad
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Alzheimer’s disease ,cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) ,extracellular vesicle (EV) ,microRNA ,apolipoprotein E allele (APOE) ,sex difference ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Multiple biological factors, including age, sex, and genetics, influence Alzheimer’s disease (AD) risk. Of the 6.2 million Americans living with Alzheimer’s dementia in 2021, 3.8 million are women and 2.4 million are men. The strongest genetic risk factor for sporadic AD is apolipoprotein E-e4 (APOE-e4). Female APOE-e4 carriers develop AD more frequently than age-matched males and have more brain atrophy and memory loss. Consequently, biomarkers that are sensitive to biological risk factors may improve AD diagnostics and may provide insight into underlying mechanistic changes that could drive disease progression. Here, we have assessed the effects of sex and APOE-e4 on the miRNA cargo of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) extracellular vesicles (EVs) in AD. We used ultrafiltration (UF) combined with size exclusion chromatography (SEC) to enrich CSF EVs (e.g., Flotillin+). CSF EVs were isolated from female and male AD or controls (CTLs) that were either APOE-e3,4 or -e3,3 positive (n = 7/group, 56 total). MiRNA expression levels were quantified using a custom TaqMan™ array that assayed 190 miRNAs previously found in CSF, including 25 miRNAs that we previously validated as candidate AD biomarkers. We identified changes in the EV miRNA cargo that were affected by both AD and sex. In total, four miRNAs (miR-16-5p, -331-3p, -409-3p, and -454-3p) were significantly increased in AD vs. CTL, independent of sex and APOE-e4 status. Pathway analysis of the predicted gene targets of these four miRNAs with identified pathways was highly relevant to neurodegeneration (e.g., senescence and autophagy). There were also three miRNAs (miR-146b-5p, -150-5p, and -342-3p) that were significantly increased in females vs. males, independent of disease state and APOE-e4 status. We then performed a statistical analysis to assess the effect of APOE genotype in AD within each sex and found that APOE-e4 status affects different subsets of CSF EV miRNAs in females vs. males. Together, this study demonstrates the complexity of the biological factors associated with AD risk and the impact on EV miRNAs, which may contribute to AD pathophysiology.
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- 2022
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37. Evaluation of a new bead‐based assay to measure levels of human tissue factor antigen in extracellular vesicles in plasma
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Sierra J. Archibald, Yohei Hisada, Victoria L. Bae‐Jump, and Nigel Mackman
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biomarker ,COVID‐19 ,extracellular vesicle ,thrombosis ,tissue factor ,Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Circulating tissue factor (TF)‐expressing extracellular vesicles (EVs) are associated with thrombosis in several diseases, such as coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19). Activity assays have higher sensitivity and specificity compared to antigen assays for measuring TF+ EVs in plasma. The MACSPlex Exosome Kit is designed to detect 37 exosomal surface epitopes, including TF, on EVs in plasma using various fluorescently labeled beads. The different EV‐bead complexes are detected by flow cytometry. A recent study used the MACSPlex Exosome Kit to measure levels of TF+ EVs in serum from patients with COVID‐19. Objectives To evaluate the ability of the MACSPlex Exosome Kit to detect TF on EVs in plasma. Methods We measured levels of TF+ EVs isolated from plasma with or without TF detected using our in‐house EVTF activity assay and the MACSPlex Exosome Kit. Results The MACSPlex Exosome Kit gave a very low TF antigen signal (TF bead signal) compared to platelet‐derived CD41b+ EVs, which was used as a control. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) increased levels of EVTF activity but not TF bead signal in four donors. Inhibition of TF reduced levels of EVTF activity but did not affect the TF bead signal in EVs isolated from plasma from LPS‐treated blood. Finally, we found no correlation between levels of EVTF activity and TF bead signal in EVs isolated from plasma from ovarian cancer patients (r = .16, P = .62). Conclusion Our data suggest that the MACSPlex Exosome Kit gives a nonspecific signal for TF and does not have the sensitivity to detect TF+ EVs in plasma.
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- 2022
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38. Intravenous self-administration of delta-9-THC in adolescent rats produces long-lasting alterations in behavior and receptor protein expression
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Stringfield, Sierra J. and Torregrossa, Mary M.
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- 2021
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39. Fingerprints of Inelastic Transport at the Surface of the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3: Role of Electron-Phonon Coupling
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Costache, M. V., Neumann, I., Sierra, J. F., Marinova, V., Gospodinov, M. M., Roche, S., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We report on electric-field and temperature dependent transport measurements in exfoliated thin crystals of Bi$_{2}$Se$_{3}$ topological insulator. At low temperatures ($< 50$ K) and when the chemical potential lies inside the bulk gap, the crystal resistivity is strongly temperature dependent, reflecting inelastic scattering due to the thermal activation of optical phonons. A linear increase of the current with voltage is obtained up to a threshold value at which current saturation takes place. We show that the activated behavior, the voltage threshold and the saturation current can all be quantitatively explained by considering a single optical phonon mode with energy $\hbar \Omega \approx 8$ meV. This phonon mode strongly interacts with the surface states of the material and represents the dominant source of scattering at the surface at high electric fields., Comment: Supplementary Material at: http://journals.aps.org/prl/supplemental/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.086601/TIPhonon_SM.pdf
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- 2014
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40. The gut microbiome of wild American marten in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
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Diana J. R. Lafferty, Erin A. McKenney, Sierra J. Gillman, Chris D. Kailing, Myles C. Walimaa, Macy J. Kailing, and Brian J. Roell
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Carnivores are ecologically important and sensitive to habitat loss and anthropogenic disruption. Here we measured trophic level and gut bacterial composition as proxies of carnivore ecological status across the Upper Peninsula, Michigan, for wild American marten (Martes americana; hereafter marten). In contrast to studies that have focused on omnivorous and herbivorous species, we find that marten, like other carnivore species without a cecum, are dominated by Firmicutes (52.35%) and Proteobacteria (45.31%) but lack Bacteroidetes. Additionally, a majority of the 12 major bacterial genera (occurring at ≥1%) are known hydrogen producers, suggesting these taxa may contribute to host energy requirements through fermentative production of acetate. Our study suggests that live trapping and harvest methods yield similar marten gut microbiome data. In addition, preserving undisturbed forest likely impacts marten ecology by measurably increasing marten trophic level and altering the gut microbiome. Our study underscores the utility of the gut microbiome as a tool to monitor the ecological status of wild carnivore populations.
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- 2022
41. Therapeutic Potential of Emodin for Gastrointestinal Cancers
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Sierra J. McDonald BS, Brandon N. VanderVeen PhD, Kandy T. Velazquez PhD, Reilly T. Enos PhD, Ciaran M. Fairman PhD, Thomas D. Cardaci MS, Daping Fan MD/PhD, and E. Angela Murphy PhD
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Gastrointestinal (GI) cancers cause one-third of all cancer-related deaths worldwide. Natural compounds are emerging as alternative or adjuvant cancer therapies given their distinct advantage of manipulating multiple pathways to both suppress tumor growth and alleviate cancer comorbidities; however, concerns regarding efficacy, bioavailability, and safety are barriers to their development for clinical use. Emodin (1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone), a Chinese herb-derived anthraquinone, has been shown to exert anti-tumor effects in colon, liver, and pancreatic cancers. While the mechanisms underlying emodin’s tumoricidal effects continue to be unearthed, recent evidence highlights a role for mitochondrial mediated apoptosis, modulated stress and inflammatory signaling pathways, and blunted angiogenesis. The goals of this review are to (1) highlight emodin’s anti-cancer properties within GI cancers, (2) discuss the known anti-cancer mechanisms of action of emodin, (3) address emodin’s potential as a treatment complementary to standard chemotherapeutics, (4) assess the efficacy and bioavailability of emodin derivatives as they relate to cancer, and (5) evaluate the safety of emodin.
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- 2022
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42. Cost-Effectiveness Of Midostaurin In The Treatment Of Acute Myeloid Leukemia With The FLT3 Mutation In Spain
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Arenaza A, Diez R, Esteve J, Di Nicolantonio R, Gostkorzewicz J, Martínez C, Martínez Llinàs D, Martinez-Lopez J, Montesinos P, Moure-Fernández A, Sierra J, and Vinent JL
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aml ,modeling ,efficiency ,health economics ,economic evaluation. ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Ainhoa Arenaza,1 Raúl Diez,2 Jordi Esteve,3 Roberta Di Nicolantonio,4 Joana Gostkorzewicz,4 Carlos Martínez,5 Diana Martínez Llinàs,6 Joaquin Martinez-Lopez,7 Pau Montesinos,8 Aída Moure-Fernández,6 Jorge Sierra,9 Joan Lluís Vinent10 1Pharmacy Department, Clínico San Carlos Hospital, Madrid, Spain; 2Pharmacy Department, University De Getafe Hospital, Madrid, Spain; 3Hematology Department, Clinic Hospital, Barcelona, Spain; 4Health Economics and Outcome Research, Novartis Farmacéutica S.A., Madrid, Spain; 5Pharmacy Department, University Hospital Araba, Vitoria, Spain; 6Oblikue Consulting, S.L., Barcelona, Spain; 7Hematology Department, University Hospital 12 de Octubre, CNIO, Complutense University, Madrid, Spain; 8Hematology Department, University Hospital La Fe, Valencia, & CIBERONC, Instituto Carlos III, Madrid, Spain; 9Hematology Department, University Hospital Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain; 10Pharmacy Department, Sant Joan de Déu Hospital, Barcelona, SpainCorrespondence: Diana Martínez LlinàsOblikue Consulting, S.L. C/Comte d’Urgell, 240, 2-D, Barcelona 08036, SpainTel +34 932521377Fax +34 93 737 9984Email diana.martinez@oblikue.comPurpose: The addition of midostaurin to standard chemotherapy (cytarabine and daunorubicin) has shown significant improvements in the survival of patients with acute myeloid leukemia with the FLT3 mutation (FLT3-AML). The objective of this study was to determine whether this intervention would be cost-effective in Spain.Methods: A partitioned survival model with five health states was developed (diagnosis and induction, complete remission, no complete remission, transplantation and death). A lifetime time horizon and the Spanish National Health System perspective were adopted. During the first three years, permanence in the different health states was determined according to the results of the RATIFY study. In successive years, the death rates of the Spanish population adjusted by a factor to reflect long-term disease-related mortality were used. Utilities were obtained from the literature. Pharmacological costs (first and second line) and the costs of other health resources (hospitalizations, visits and tests) were included. The robustness of the model was evaluated by deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses.Results: The addition of midostaurin resulted in 1.46 life years gained (LYG) and 1.23 quality-adjusted life years (QALY) gained and implied an additional cost of € 47,955, resulting in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of € 32,854/LYG and an incremental cost-utility ratio of € 38,985/QALY. In the univariate sensitivity analysis, the threshold of € 50,000/QALY was not exceeded in any case; taking into consideration potential discounts of 20-40% in the PVL of midostaurin the ICER would be below € 30,000/QALY, a commonly accepted threshold in Spain. In the probabilistic analysis, when the threshold was € 50,000/QALY, midostaurin was cost-effective in 82.3% of simulations.Conclusion: According to our modeling, midostaurin, in combination with standard chemotherapy, could be an efficient alternative for the treatment of FLT3-AML in Spain.Keywords: AML, modeling, efficiency, health economics, economic evaluation
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- 2019
43. Quercetin Improved Muscle Mass and Mitochondrial Content in a Murine Model of Cancer and Chemotherapy-Induced Cachexia
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Brandon N. VanderVeen, Thomas D. Cardaci, Patrice Cunningham, Sierra J. McDonald, Brooke M. Bullard, Daping Fan, E. Angela Murphy, and Kandy T. Velázquez
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cancer ,chemotherapy ,cachexia ,skeletal muscle ,mitochondria ,complementary medicine ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
A cachexia diagnosis is associated with a doubling in hospital stay and increased healthcare cost for cancer patients and most cachectic patients do not survive treatment. Unfortunately, complexity in treating cachexia is amplified by both the underlying malignancy and the anti-cancer therapy which can independently promote cachexia. Quercetin, an organic polyphenolic flavonoid, has demonstrated anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties with promise in protecting against cancer and chemotherapy-induced dysfunction; however, whether quercetin is efficacious in maintaining muscle mass in tumor-bearing animals receiving chemotherapy has not been investigated. C26 tumor-bearing mice were given 5-fluorouracil (5FU; 30 mg/kg of lean mass i.p.) concomitant with quercetin (Quer; 50 mg/kg of body weight via oral gavage) or vehicle. Both C26 + 5FU and C26 + 5FU + Quer had similar body weight loss; however, muscle mass and cross-sectional area was greater in C26 + 5FU + Quer compared to C26 + 5FU. Additionally, C26 + 5FU + Quer had a greater number and larger intermyofibrillar mitochondria with increased relative protein expression of mitochondrial complexes V, III, and II as well as cytochrome c expression. C26 + 5FU + Quer also had increased MFN1 and reduced FIS1 relative protein expression without apparent benefits to muscle inflammatory signaling. Our data suggest that quercetin protected against cancer and chemotherapy-induced muscle mass loss through improving mitochondrial homeostatic balance.
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- 2022
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44. Incorporating posttransplant cyclophosphamide-based prophylaxis as standard-of-care outside the haploidentical setting: challenges and review of the literature
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García-Cadenas, I., Awol, R., Esquirol, A., Saavedra, S., Bosch-Vilaseca, A., Novelli, S., Garrido, A., López, J., Granell, M., Moreno, C., Briones, J., Brunet, S., Sierra, J., and Martino, R.
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- 2020
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45. Magnetism, spin dynamics, and quantum transport in two-dimensional systems
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Savero Torres, W., Sierra, J. F., Benítez, L. A., Bonell, F., García, J. H., Roche, S., and Valenzuela, S. O.
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- 2020
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46. Application of a digital PCR method for WT1 to myeloid neoplasms in CR and deep ELN WT1 molecular response (< 10 copies)
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Bussaglia, E., Pratcorona, M., Carricondo, M., Sansegundo, L., Rubio, M. A., Monter, A., Brell, A., Badell, I., Esteve, J., Arnan, M., Talarn, C., Tormo, M., García, A., Vall-Llovera, F., Ortin, X., Pedro, C., Bargay, J., Brunet, S., Sierra, J., and Nomdedéu, J.
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- 2020
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47. Efficacy and safety of denosumab vs. bisphosphonates in postmenopausal women previously treated with oral bisphosphonates
- Author
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Miller, P.D., Pannacciulli, N., Malouf-Sierra, J., Singer, A., Czerwiński, E., Bone, H.G., Wang, C., Huang, S., Chines, A., Lems, W., and Brown, J.P.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Disenfranchised: How Lower Income Mothers Navigated the Social Safety Net during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
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Sinikka Elliott, Sierra J. Satterfield, G. Solorzano, Sarah Bowen, Annie Hardison-Moody, and Latasha Williams
- Subjects
Social Sciences ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
Government programs and other forms of assistance act as critical safety nets in times of crisis. The federal government’s initial response to coronavirus disease 2019 represented a significant increase in the welfare state, but the provisions enacted were not permanent and did not reach all families. Drawing on interviews with 54 lower-income mothers and grandmothers, we analyze how families navigated the safety net to access food during the pandemic. Pandemic aid served as a critical support for many families, but participants also described gaps and barriers. Following the argument that food is a basic human right, we identify how mothers encountered three forms of disenfranchisement: being denied or experiencing delayed public benefits, being afraid to access assistance, and receiving paltry or inedible emergency food. We conclude by arguing for an expanded social safety net that broadens access to necessary food resources before, during, and after crises such as the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Hsp40/JDP Requirements for the Propagation of Synthetic Yeast Prions
- Author
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Sarah C. Miller, Andrea K. Wegrzynowicz, Sierra J. Cole, Rachel E. Hayward, Samantha J. Ganser, and Justin K. Hines
- Subjects
J-domain protein ,Hsp40 ,Sis1 ,yeast prion ,molecular chaperone ,amyloid ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Yeast prions are protein-based transmissible elements, most of which are amyloids. The chaperone protein network in yeast is inexorably linked to the spreading of prions during cell division by fragmentation of amyloid prion aggregates. Specifically, the core “prion fragmentation machinery” includes the proteins Hsp104, Hsp70 and the Hsp40/J-domain protein (JDP) Sis1. Numerous novel amyloid-forming proteins have been created and examined in the yeast system and occasionally these amyloids are also capable of continuous Hsp104-dependent propagation in cell populations, forming synthetic prions. However, additional chaperone requirements, if any, have not been determined. Here, we report the first instances of a JDP-Hsp70 system requirement for the propagation of synthetic prions. We utilized constructs from a system of engineered prions with prion-forming domains (PrDs) consisting of a polyQ stretch interrupted by a single heterologous amino acid interspersed every fifth residue. These “polyQX” PrDs are fused to the MC domains of Sup35, creating chimeric proteins of which a subset forms synthetic prions in yeast. For four of these prions, we show that SIS1 repression causes prion loss in a manner consistent with Sis1′s known role in prion fragmentation. PolyQX prions were sensitive to Sis1 expression levels to differing degrees, congruent with the variability observed among native prions. Our results expand the scope known Sis1 functionality, demonstrating that Sis1 acts on amyloids broadly, rather than through specific protein–protein interactions with individual yeast prion-forming proteins.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Temperature dependence of the emission linewidth in MgO-based spin torque nano-oscillators
- Author
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Sierra, J. F., Quinsat, M., Ebels, U., Gusakova, D., Joumard, I., Jenkins, A. S., Buda-Prejbeanu, L., Dieny, B., Cyrille, M. C., Zeltser, A., and Katine, J. A.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Spin transfer driven excitations in magnetic nanostructures are characterized by a relatively large microwave emission linewidth (10 -100 MHz). Here we investigate the role of thermal fluctuations as well as of the non-linear amplitude-phase coupling parameter and the amplitude relaxation rate to explain the linewidth broadening of in-plane precession modes induced in planar nanostructures. Experiments on the linewidth broadening performed on MgO based magnetic tunnel junctions are compared to the linewidth obtained from macrospin simulations and from evaluation of the phase variance. In all cases we find that the linewidth varies linearly with temperature when the amplitude relaxation rate is of the same order as the linewidth and when the amplitude-phase coupling parameter is relatively small. The small amplitude-phase coupling parameter means that the linewidth is dominated by direct phase fluctuations and not by amplitude fluctuations, explaining thus its linear dependence as a function of temperature.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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