1,127 research outputs found
Assessment of antimicrobial and wound healing effects of Brevinin-2Ta against the bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae in dermally-wounded rats
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are regarded as promising alternatives for antibiotics due to their inherent capacity to prevent microbial drug resistance. Amphibians are rich source of bioactive molecules, which provide numerous AMPs with various structures as drug candidates. Here, we isolated and identified a novel AMP Brevinin-2Ta (B-2Ta) from the skin secretion of the European frog, Pelophylax kl. esculentus. In vitro studies revealed that it showed broad antimicrobial activities against S. aureus, E. coli and C. albicans with low cytotoxicity to erythrocytes. Furthermore, we examined the anti-inflammation effect in vivo by using Klebsiella pneumoniae-infected Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. The wound closure outcomes revealed that B-2Ta effectively restrained the bacterial infection at a dose of 10 times minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) during the 14 days of the wound healing process. Ultra-structure analyses showed that B-2Ta caused structural damage to the microorganism, and bacterial culture found that the number of microbes was significantly reduced by the end of treatment. Immunohistochemistry for the inflammatory marker IL-10 and the endothelial cell marker CD31 suggested positive effects on inflammatory status and epithelial migration and angiogenesis following treatment of the infected granulation tissues with B-2Ta. These results exhibited the continuous phase of inflammation reduction and wound healing acceleration in the B-2Ta-modulated re-epithelialisation of K. pneumoniae infected rats. Taken together, these data demonstrated that B-2Ta has great potential to be developed as antibacterial agents in clinic
Beyond conventional care : developing novel therapeutic approaches to combat arthritis
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disorder without a definitive cure. Although
RA is driven by systemic autoimmunity, its most pronounced manifestation is organspecific inflammation, particularly synovitis in joints. Persistent synovitis results in
progressive joint damage and deformity, ultimately compromising joint function. The
etiology of RA is multifaceted, intricately intertwining genetic, environmental, and
immunological elements. While autoreactive agents have traditionally been viewed as
pathogenic contributors to the development of arthritis, our research, utilizing multiple
experimental arthritis models, has pinpointed several pivotal autoreactive mediators,
which are surprisingly regulatory.
In study I, we established a cartilage antibody induced arthritis (CAIA) model. The
deficiency of Fc gamma receptor (FCGR) 2B enables swift onset of CAIA within a 12-hour
time frame, and overrides the resistance arising from complement C5 deficiency. Notably,
our results highlight that FCGR3 is essential and sufficient for CAIA development. The role
of FCGR4 remains to be further elucidated.
In Study II, we engineered a range of recombinant antibodies targeting the F4 epitope on
type-II collagen (COL2). One of these antibodies, denoted R69-4, not only prevented the
onset of CAIA, but also effectively suppressed the established disease. Further screening
revealed that R69-4 binds to numerous targets in the synovial fluid (SF), including the
complement C1q. As a result, R69-4 markedly dampens FCGR3 signaling in SF neutrophils,
thereby interrupting neutrophil self-orchestrated recruitment. Given this efficacy, R69-4
emerges as a promising therapeutic candidate for RA, particularly during its acute stage.
In study III, we introduced mutations to the immunodominant T cell epitope of COL2. A
mutation resulting in higher affinity to major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II)
confers resistance to collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). However, the absence of either
FCGR2B or neutrophil cytosolic factor 1 (NCF1) disrupts this tolerance. In particular, the
deficiency of NCF1 leads to a reduction of regulatory T cells (Tregs), and a decrease of
autoimmune regulator (AIRE) expression in medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs).
In Study IV, we identified a subset of autoreactive B cells that are ubiquitously present
across species. These B cells target the C1 epitope on COL2. Transferring these C1 B cells
effectively suppressed arthritis of recipient mice in an antigen-specific manner. We
further discerned that the suppressive efficacy of C1 B cells stems from the activation of
Tregs and the functional integrity of CD72. In RA patients, we noted a reduced frequency
of C1 B cells, possibly attributed to their differentiation into plasma cells. Interventions
that can reverse this transition may contribute to preventing the onset of RA
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Tuberculosis burden in China: a high prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis in household contacts with and without symptoms
Background: In the context of decreasing tuberculosis prevalence in China, we examined the effectiveness of screening household contacts of tuberculosis patients. Methods: A tuberculosis survey was conducted in 2008. All 3,355 household contacts of notified tuberculosis cases were examined with a questionnaire interview, chest X-ray and three sputum smear tests. The effectiveness was examined by comparing the prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis in household contacts with or without presenting clinical symptoms against the respective notification rates. Regression models were used to evaluate the factors associated with pulmonary tuberculosis. Results: Of the 3,355 household contacts, 92 members (2.7%) had pulmonary tuberculosis, among which 46 cases were asymptomatic. The prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis and smear positive cases in household contacts without symptoms were 20 and 7 times higher than the notification rates in 2008, while those in household contacts with symptoms were 247 and 108 times higher than notification rates, respectively. The patients detected were mainly Index Cases’ spouses, sisters/brothers and those who were in contact with female Index Cases. Conclusions: The present study provides convincing evidence that household contacts of notified tuberculosis cases are at higher risk of developing tuberculosis. Routine screening for household contacts without any symptoms is recommended for sustained tuberculosis control in China as well as in the world
MM-NeRF: Multimodal-Guided 3D Multi-Style Transfer of Neural Radiance Field
3D style transfer aims to render stylized novel views of 3D scenes with the
specified style, which requires high-quality rendering and keeping multi-view
consistency. Benefiting from the ability of 3D representation from Neural
Radiance Field (NeRF), existing methods learn the stylized NeRF by giving a
reference style from an image. However, they suffer the challenges of
high-quality stylization with texture details for multi-style transfer and
stylization with multimodal guidance. In this paper, we reveal that the same
objects in 3D scenes show various states (color tone, details, etc.) from
different views after stylization since previous methods optimized by
single-view image-based style loss functions, leading NeRF to tend to smooth
texture details, further resulting in low-quality rendering. To tackle these
problems, we propose a novel Multimodal-guided 3D Multi-style transfer of NeRF,
termed MM-NeRF, which achieves high-quality 3D multi-style rendering with
texture details and can be driven by multimodal-style guidance. First, MM-NeRF
adopts a unified framework to project multimodal guidance into CLIP space and
extracts multimodal style features to guide the multi-style stylization. To
relieve the problem of lacking details, we propose a novel Multi-Head Learning
Scheme (MLS), in which each style head predicts the parameters of the color
head of NeRF. MLS decomposes the learning difficulty caused by the
inconsistency of multi-style transfer and improves the quality of stylization.
In addition, the MLS can generalize pre-trained MM-NeRF to any new styles by
adding heads with small training costs (a few minutes). Extensive experiments
on three real-world 3D scene datasets show that MM-NeRF achieves high-quality
3D multi-style stylization with multimodal guidance, keeps multi-view
consistency, and keeps semantic consistency of multimodal style guidance. Codes
will be released later
In vivo comparison of arterial lumen dimensions assessed by co-registered three-dimensional (3D) quantitative coronary angiography, intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography
This study sought to compare lumen dimensions as assessed by 3D quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) and by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) or optical coherence tomography (OCT), and to assess the association of the discrepancy with vessel curvature. Coronary lumen dimensions often show discrepancies when assessed by X-ray angiography and by IVUS or OCT. One source of error concerns a possible mismatch in the selection of corresponding regions for the comparison. Therefore, we developed a novel, real-time co-registration approach to guarantee the point-to-point correspondence between the X-ray, IVUS and OCT images. A total of 74 patients with indication for cardiac catheterization were retrospectively included. Lumen morphometry was performed by 3D QCA and IVUS or OCT. For quantitative analysis, a novel, dedicated approach for co-registration and lumen detection was employed allowing for assessment of lumen size at multiple positions along the vessel. Vessel curvature was automatically calculated from the 3D arterial vessel centerline. Comparison of 3D QCA and IVUS was performed in 519 distinct positions in 40 vessels. Correlations were r = 0.761, r = 0.790, and r = 0.799 for short diameter (SD), long diameter (LD), and area, respectively. Lumen sizes were larger by IVUS (P < 0.001): SD, 2.51 ± 0.58 mm versus 2.34 ± 0.56 mm; LD, 3.02 ± 0.62 mm versus 2.63 ± 0.58 mm; Area, 6.29 ± 2.77 mm2versus 5.08 ± 2.34 mm2. Comparison of 3D QCA and OCT was performed in 541 distinct positions in 40 vessels. Correlations were r = 0.880, r = 0.881, and r = 0.897 for SD, LD, and area, respectively. Lumen sizes were larger by OCT (P < 0.001): SD, 2.70 ± 0.65 mm versus 2.57 ± 0.61 mm; LD, 3.11 ± 0.72 mm versus 2.80 ± 0.62 mm; Area 7.01 ± 3.28 mm2versus 5.93 ± 2.66 mm2. The vessel-based discrepancy between 3D QCA and IVUS or OCT long diameters increased with increasing vessel curvature. In conclusion, our comparison of co-registered 3D QCA and invasive imaging data suggests a bias towards larger lume
Synergizing Human-AI Agency: A Guide of 23 Heuristics for Service Co-Creation with LLM-Based Agents
This empirical study serves as a primer for interested service providers to
determine if and how Large Language Models (LLMs) technology will be integrated
for their practitioners and the broader community. We investigate the mutual
learning journey of non-AI experts and AI through CoAGent, a service
co-creation tool with LLM-based agents. Engaging in a three-stage participatory
design processes, we work with with 23 domain experts from public libraries
across the U.S., uncovering their fundamental challenges of integrating AI into
human workflows. Our findings provide 23 actionable "heuristics for service
co-creation with AI", highlighting the nuanced shared responsibilities between
humans and AI. We further exemplar 9 foundational agency aspects for AI,
emphasizing essentials like ownership, fair treatment, and freedom of
expression. Our innovative approach enriches the participatory design model by
incorporating AI as crucial stakeholders and utilizing AI-AI interaction to
identify blind spots. Collectively, these insights pave the way for synergistic
and ethical human-AI co-creation in service contexts, preparing for workforce
ecosystems where AI coexists.Comment: V1.0 on Oct 25th, 202
Selenium intake help prevent age-related cataract formation: Evidence from NHANES 2001–2008
IntroductionCataract is one of the leading causes of blindness and visual impairment, about 16 million people around the world. Trace elements play an important role in a variety of the processes in human body. This study aimed to investigate the association between daily dietary intake of trace elements and age-related cataract incidence based on data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2001–2008.MethodsIron, zinc, copper, and selenium were conducted in this study among subjects aged 50 years and older for African Americans and 55 and older in US adults. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used in different models to investigate the association of trace elements intake and cataract.ResultsAfter screening, 7,525 subjects were ultimately included in this study. A significant negative association was found between selenium intake and cataract incidence in adjusted models using multivariate logistic regression analysis (model 1: OR = 0.998, 95% CI = 0.997–1.000; model 2: OR = 0.997, 95% CI = 0.995–1.000; and model 3: OR = 0.998, 95% CI = 0.995–1.000). After dividing selenium intake into quintiles, significant negative associations between selenium intake and cataract were observed in the first quintile of model 3, the fourth and fifth quintiles of all models. In subgroup analyses adjusted for age and sex, a significant negative association was observed only in women aged 65–74 years.DiscussionOur study points out that maintaining daily dietary selenium intake at higher levels is helpful for cataract prevention, and that increasing daily dietary selenium intake in American women aged 65–74 years may contribute to the prevention of age-related cataract. The intakes of iron, zinc, copper may not be associated with age-related cataract
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