1,206 research outputs found

    Combining Transfer of TTF-1 and Pax-8 Gene: a Potential Strategy to Promote Radioiodine Therapy of Thyroid Carcinoma

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    Cotransfer of TTF-1 and Pax-8 gene to tumor cells, resulting in the reexpression of iodide metabolism-associated proteins, such as sodium iodide symporter (NIS), thyroglobulin (Tg), thyroperoxidase (TPO), offers the possibility of radioiodine therapy to non-iodide-concentrating tumor because the expression of iodide metabolism-associated proteins in thyroid are mediated by the thyroid transcription factors TTF-1 and Pax-8. The human TTF-1 and Pax-8 gene were transducted into the human thyroid carcinoma (K1 and F133) cells by the recombinant adenovirus, AdTTF-1 and AdPax-8. Reexpression of NIS mRNA and protein, but not TPO and Tg mRNA and protein, was detected in AdTTF-1-infected F133 cells, following with increasing radioiodine uptake (6.1~7.4 times), scarcely iodide organification and rapid iodide efflux (t1/2≈8 min in vitro, t1/2≈4.7 h in vivo).
In contrast, all of the reexpression of NIS, TPO and Tg mRNA and proteins in F133 cells were induced by the synergetic effect of TTF-1 and Pax-8. AdTTF-1 and AdPax-8 coinfected K1 and F133 cells could effectively accumulate radioiodine (6.6-7.5 times) and obviously retarded radioiodine retention (t1/2≈25-30 min in vitro, t1/2≈12 h in vivo) (p<0.05).
Accordingly, the effect of radioiodine therapy of TTF-1 and Pax-8 cotransducted K1 and
F133 cells (21-25% survival rate in vitro) was better than that of TTF-1-transducted cells
(40% survival rate in vitro) (p<0.05). These results indicate that single TTF-1 gene transfer may have limited efficacy of radioiodine therapy because of rapid radioiodine efflux. The cotransduction of TTF-1 and Pax-8 gene, with resulting NIS-mediated radioiodine accumulation and TPO and Tg-mediated radioiodine organification and intracellular retention, may lead to effective radioiodine therapy of thyroid carcinoma

    Pontine infarction with pure motor hemiparesis or hemiplegia: A prospective study

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    BACKGROUND: The study aimed to prospectively observe the clinical and neuroimaging features of pontine infarction with pure motor hemiparesis (PMH) or hemiplegia at early stage. METHODS: In 118 consecutive selected patients with the first-ever ischemic stroke within 6 hours after onset, fifty of them presented with PMH or hemiplegia and had negative acute computed tomography (CT) scans, then magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) confirmed the corresponding infarcts in pons or cerebrum. The clinical and neuroimaging features of the pontine infarctions were compared with those of cerebral infarctions. RESULTS: The pontine infarction with PMH or hemiplegia accounted for 10.2% (12/118) of all first-ever ischemic stroke patients and 24% (12/50) of the patients with both PMH or hemiplegia and acute negative CT scans. Compared to the patients with cerebral infarction, the patients with pontine infarction had more frequency of diabetes mellitus (50.0% vs 5.3%, P = 0.001), nonvertiginous dizziness at onset (58.3% vs 21.1%, P = 0.036) and a progressive course (33.3% vs 2.6%, P = 0.011). CONCLUSION: The pontine infarction may present as PMH or hemiplegia with more frequency of nonvertiginous dizziness, a progressive course and diabetes mellitus. MRI can confirm the infarct location in the basal pons at early stage after stroke onset

    Recursion Operator and Local and Nonlocal Symmetries of a New Modified KdV Equation

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    The recursion operator of a new modified KdV equation and its inverse are explicitly given. Acting the recursion operator and its inverse on the trivial symmetry 0 related to the identity transformation, the infinitely many local and nonlocal symmetries are obtained. Using a closed finite dimensional symmetry algebra with both local and nonlocal symmetries of the original model, some symmetry reductions and exact solutions are found

    Study on the Molecular Mechanisms of dlk1 Stimulated Lung Cancer Cell Proliferation

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    Background and objective The imprinted gene dlk1 has been recognized as a cancer related gene since it aberrantly expressed in a series of cancer tissues, but its role in lung cancer is still unknown. The aim of this study is to examine dlk1’s expression in non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLCs) and investigate the molecular mechanism by which dlk1 could accelerate the proliferation of the cells in lung cancer cell lines (H520). Methods The relative expression of dlk1 among 30 NSCLC specimens and their adjacent normal lung tissues were analyzed by RT-PCR. A cell model that stably expressed exogenous dlk1 was established following that the dlk1 gene was cloned into a eukaryotic expression vector and then transfected into the lung cancer cells H520. CCK8 analysis and colony forming assay were employed to investigate the effect of dlk1 on cell proliferation. The expression of CyclinB1 was detected by Western blot. Results dlk1 aberrantly expressed in 36.7% (11/30) of the tumor tissues of NSCLC compared with their adjacent cancer lung tissues. CCK8 analysis showed that overexpression of dlk1 could promote the proliferation of H520 cells (P < 0.05) and the results was further confirmed by colony forming assay. Western blot analysis found that over expression of dlk1 could up-regulate the expression of CyclinB1 (P < 0.05). Conclusion dlk1 aberrantly expressed in NSCLCs. The Overexpression of dlk1 could accelerate the proliferation of lung cancer cells H520 in vitro, probably through up-regulating the expression of cell cycle protein CyclinB1

    ‘If I have wander’d in those paths’ : The reception of Robert Burns in China

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    This research represents the first extensive critical study of the relationship between Robert Burns, arguably the most renowned Scottish poet, and China. It examines the spectrum of Robert Burns’s reception in translation, criticism, music and Burns Night celebrations in China for over a century since Burns was initially mentioned in 1877 in the diary of Liu Xihong (d.1891), an ambassador of the Qing Dynasty (1636-1912). In 1908, Burns’s ‘A red red Rose’ was translated by Su Manshu (1884-1918) as the earliest rendition in China and it was continually translated throughout the 1920s, contributing to Burns’s reputation as a love and lyric poet before 1937. Since the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, for Burns’s Scottish identity in response to the need of fighting against Japanese aggression, Burns was shaped as a patriotic Scottish poet and a representative of the literature of ethnic minorities. In 1959, Burns’s reputation as ‘a great people’s poet’ reached its zenith for a consequence of his perceived peasant birth aligned with the political ideological demand of the New Folksong Movement (1958-9), and the celebration of the 200th anniversary of his birth. The subsequent Cultural Revolution (1966-76) disrupted the publication of commentaries and translations of Burns’s works. Since the policy of reform and opening up in 1978, the ideological tint in Burns’s reception began to diminish, marking a revaluation stage that spans approximately fifty years of comprehensive scholarship from the late 1970s to the present day. In this context, this thesis specifically scrutinizes the translation strategies of Wang Zuoliang, an influential Burns scholar and translator in China, including the comparisons between his various translated versions, and his translations with those of other translators. Furthermore, this thesis examines Burns’s appeal beyond text in mainland China and by the Chinese diaspora, not least through the celebration of Burns Night and Burns’s music. This thesis ultimately argues that the political ideology and Chinese traditional Confucianism have attributed to the trajectory of Burns translations and reception in China
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