96 results on '"Spielman A"'
Search Results
2. Depressive symptoms, HIV-related stigma and ART adherence among caregivers of children in vulnerable households in rural southern Malawi.
- Author
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Kathryn L Spielman, Erica Soler-Hampejsek, Adamson S Muula, Lyson Tenthani, and Paul C Hewett
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundFew studies have explored the association between depressive symptoms, HIV infection and stigma in vulnerable populations. The objective of this study is to examine factors associated with depressive symptoms among caregivers living in vulnerable households in Malawi and assess how reported depressive symptoms and other factors affect ART adherence among caregivers who report testing positive for HIV and currently on ART.MethodsWe interviewed 818 adult caregivers of children aged 0-17 years living in vulnerable households in 24 health facility catchment areas in five districts in rural southern Malawi in 2016-2017. Vulnerable households had either economic and food insecurity, or chronic illness. Questions on five depressive symptoms were used. ART adherence was self-report of not forgetting to take ART medication in the last week. Perceived and anticipated measures of stigma were used. Multivariable linear and logistic regressions documented relationships between depressive symptoms, self-reported HIV status, HIV-related stigma, and ART adherence.ResultsMost caregivers were women (86.2%); about one third had no spouse or live-in partner. Fifty-seven percent of caregivers reported having three or more depressive symptoms. Forty-one percent of caregivers reported testing positive for HIV. Self-reported HIV positive status was associated with depressive symptoms (adjusted coeff = 0.355, p-value ConclusionsAddressing mental health among caregivers in vulnerable households may be an important step toward achieving viral suppression among vulnerable populations living with HIV in Malawi. Integrating depression screening into HIV care and treatment protocols could be a promising intervention to improve longer-term outcomes.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Return of individual research results: What do participants prefer and expect?
- Author
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Sabina Sayeed, Robert Califf, Robert Green, Celeste Wong, Kenneth Mahaffey, Sanjiv Sam Gambhir, Jessica Mega, Bray Patrick-Lake, Kaylyn Frazier, Michael Pignone, Adrian Hernandez, Svati H Shah, Alice C Fan, Sarah Krüg, Terry Shaack, Scarlet Shore, Susie Spielman, Julie Eckstrand, Charlene A Wong, and Project Baseline Health Study Research Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Newer data platforms offer increased opportunity to share multidimensional health data with research participants, but the preferences of participants for which data to receive and how is evolving. Our objective is to describe the preferences and expectations of participants for the return of individual research results within Project Baseline Health Study (PBHS). The PBHS is an ongoing, multicenter, longitudinal cohort study with data from four initial enrollment sites. PBHS participants are recruited from the general population along with groups enriched for heart disease and cancer disease risk. Cross-sectional data on return of results were collected in 2017-2018 from an (1) in-person enrollment survey (n = 1,890), (2) benchmark online survey (n = 1,059), and (3) participant interviews (n = 21). The main outcomes included (1) preferences for type of information to be added next to returned results, (2) participant plans for sharing returned results with a non-study clinician, and (3) choice to opt-out of receiving genetic results. Results were compared by sociodemographic characteristics. Enrollment and benchmark survey respondents were 57.1% and 53.5% female, and 60.0% and 66.2% white, respectively. Participants preferred the following data types be added to returned results in the future: genetics (29.9%), heart imaging, (16.4%), study watch (15.8%), and microbiome (13.3%). Older adults (OR 0.60, 95% CI: 0.41-0.87) were less likely to want their genetic results returned next. Forty percent of participants reported that they would not share all returned results with their non-study clinicians. Black (OR 0.64, 95% CI 0.43-0.95) and Asian (OR 0.47, 95% CI 0.30-0.73) participants were less likely, and older participants more likely (OR 1.45-1.61), to plan to share all results with their clinician than their counterparts. At enrollment, 5.8% of participants opted out of receiving their genetics results. The study showed that substantial heterogeneity existed in participant's preferences and expectations for return of results, and variations were related to sociodemographic characteristics.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Gaining traction: Promising shifts in gender norms and intimate partner violence in the context of a community-based HIV prevention trial in South Africa.
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Ann Gottert, Julie Pulerwitz, Nicole Haberland, Rhandzekile Mathebula, Dumisani Rebombo, Kathryn Spielman, Rebecca West, Aimée Julien, Rhian Twine, Dean Peacock, Mi-Suk Kang Dufour, F Xavier Gómez-Olivé, Audrey Pettifor, Sheri A Lippman, and Kathleen Kahn
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundHIV and violence prevention programs increasingly seek to transform gender norms among participants, yet how to do so at the community level, and subsequent pathways to behavior change, remain poorly understood. We assessed shifts in endorsement of equitable gender norms, and intimate partner violence (IPV), during the three-year community-based trial of Tsima, an HIV 'treatment as prevention' intervention in rural South Africa.MethodsCross-sectional household surveys were conducted with men and women ages 18-49 years, in 8 intervention and 7 control communities, at 2014-baseline (n = 1,149) and 2018-endline (n = 1,189). Endorsement of equitable gender norms was measured by the GEM Scale. Intent-to-treat analyses assessed intervention effects and change over time. Qualitative research with 59 community members and 38 staff examined the change process.ResultsNearly two-thirds of men and half of women in intervention communities had heard of the intervention/seen the logo; half of these had attended a two-day workshop. Regression analyses showed a 15% improvement in GEM Scale score over time, irrespective of the intervention, among men (pConclusionsThere was a population-level shift towards greater endorsement of equitable gender norms between 2014-2018, potentially linked with rapid escalation in media access. There was also an intervention effect on reported IPV among young women, likely owing to improved couple communication. Societal-level gender norm shifts may create enabling environments for interventions to find new traction for violence and HIV-related behavior change.
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- 2020
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5. Nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive factors associated with mid-upper arm circumference as a measure of nutritional status in pregnant Ethiopian women: Implications for programming in the first 1000 days.
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Shibani Ghosh, Kathryn Spielman, Meghan Kershaw, Kidane Ayele, Yitbarek Kidane, Krista Zillmer, Leslie Wentworth, Ashish Pokharel, Jeffrey K Griffiths, Tefera Belachew, and Eileen Kennedy
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Poor nutritional status in pregnancy expressed as low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) is associated with low birth weight. The study aims were to assess the nutritional status of pregnant Ethiopian women using MUAC and examine association with nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive factors, using baseline data of a prospective longitudinal observational birth cohort study conducted in three rural districts in the Oromia region of Ethiopia. Recruitment into the cohort was rolling over a period of nine months, and the data used for this analysis were collected while the women were between 12-32 weeks of gestation. Detailed household socio-demographics, agricultural production, women's health, morbidity and diets, with weights, heights and MUAC, and anemia prevalence (HemoCue) were collected. The prevalence of low MUAC (< 23 cm) was 41%. Controlling for location and clustering, wealth quintile (OR = 0.88, CI = 0.82 to 0.96, p
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Transgenic cotton and farmers' health in Pakistan.
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Shahzad Kouser, David J Spielman, and Matin Qaim
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Despite substantial research on the economic effects of transgenic insect-resistant Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton, there is still limited work on this technology's impacts on human health. Due to the inbuilt insect resistance, Bt cotton requires fewer pesticide sprays than conventional cotton, which is not only advantageous from economic and environmental perspectives, but may also result in health benefits for farmers. Using socioeconomic and biophysical data from Pakistan, we provide the first evidence of a direct association between Bt gene expression in the plant and health benefits. A key feature of this study is that Bt cotton cultivation in Pakistan occurs in a poorly regulated market: farmers are often mistaken in their beliefs about whether they have planted Bt cotton or conventional cotton, which may affect their pesticide-use strategies and thus their pesticide exposure. We employ a cost-of-illness approach and variations in the measurement of Bt adoption to estimate the relationship between Bt cotton and farmers' health. Bt adoption based on farmers' beliefs does not reduce the pesticide-induced cost of illness. However, adoption based on measuring Bt gene expression is associated with significant health cost savings. Extrapolating the estimates for true Bt seeds to Pakistan's entire Bt cotton area results in annual health cost savings of around US$ 7 million. These findings have important implications for the regulation of seed markets in Pakistan and beyond: improved regulations that ensure claimed crop traits are really expressed can increase the benefits for farmers and society at large.
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- 2019
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7. Targeted inactivation of dipeptidyl peptidase 9 enzymatic activity causes mouse neonate lethality.
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Margaret G Gall, Yiqian Chen, Ana Julia Vieira de Ribeiro, Hui Zhang, Charles G Bailey, Derek S Spielman, Denise M T Yu, and Mark D Gorrell
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Dipeptidyl Peptidase (DPP) 4 and related dipeptidyl peptidases are emerging as current and potential therapeutic targets. DPP9 is an intracellular protease that is regulated by redox status and by SUMO1. DPP9 can influence antigen processing, epidermal growth factor (EGF)-mediated signaling and tumor biology. We made the first gene knock-in (gki) mouse with a serine to alanine point mutation at the DPP9 active site (S729A). Weaned heterozygote DPP9 (wt/S729A) pups from 110 intercrosses were indistinguishable from wild-type littermates. No homozygote DPP9 (S729A/S729A) weaned mice were detected. DPP9 (S729A/S729A) homozygote embryos, which were morphologically indistinguishable from their wild-type littermate embryos at embryonic day (ED) 12.5 to ED 17.5, were born live but these neonates died within 8 to 24 hours of birth. All neonates suckled and contained milk spots and were of similar body weight. No gender differences were seen. No histological or DPP9 immunostaining pattern differences were seen between genotypes in embryos and neonates. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from DPP9 (S729A/S729A) ED13.5 embryos and neonate DPP9 (S729A/S729A) mouse livers collected within 6 hours after birth had levels of DPP9 protein and DPP9-related proteases that were similar to wild-type but had less DPP9/DPP8-derived activity. These data confirmed the absence of DPP9 enzymatic activity due to the presence of the serine to alanine mutation and no compensation from related proteases. These novel findings suggest that DPP9 enzymatic activity is essential for early neonatal survival in mice.
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- 2013
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8. FTO and MC4R gene variants are associated with obesity in polycystic ovary syndrome.
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Kathryn G Ewens, Michelle R Jones, Wendy Ankener, Douglas R Stewart, Margrit Urbanek, Andrea Dunaif, Richard S Legro, Angela Chua, Ricardo Azziz, Richard S Spielman, Mark O Goodarzi, and Jerome F Strauss
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the leading cause of anovulatory infertility in women. It is also associated with metabolic disturbances that place women at increased risk for obesity and type 2 diabetes. There is strong evidence for familial clustering of PCOS and a genetic predisposition. However, the gene(s) responsible for the PCOS phenotypes have not been elucidated. This two-phase family-based and case-control genetic study was designed to address the question of whether SNPs identified as susceptibility loci for obesity in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are also associated with PCOS and elevated BMI. Members of 439 families having at least one offspring with PCOS were genotyped for 15 SNPs previously shown to be associated with obesity. Linkage and association with PCOS was assessed using the transmission/disequilibrium test (TDT). These SNPs were also analyzed in an independent case-control study involving 395 women with PCOS and 176 healthy women with regular menstrual cycles. Only one of these 15 SNPs (rs2815752 in NEGR1) was found to have a nominally significant association with PCOS (χ(2) = 6.11, P = 0.013), but this association failed to replicate in the case-control study. While not associated with PCOS itself, five SNPs in FTO and two in MC4R were associated with BMI as assessed with a quantitative-TDT analysis, several of which replicated association with BMI in the case-control cohort. These findings demonstrate that certain SNPs associated with obesity contribute to elevated BMI in PCOS, but do not appear to play a major role in PCOS per se. These findings support the notion that PCOS phenotypes are a consequence of an oligogenic/polygenic mechanism.
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- 2011
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9. Depressive symptoms, HIV-related stigma and ART adherence among caregivers of children in vulnerable households in rural southern Malawi
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Spielman, Kathryn L., primary, Soler-Hampejsek, Erica, additional, Muula, Adamson S., additional, Tenthani, Lyson, additional, and Hewett, Paul C., additional
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Gaining traction: Promising shifts in gender norms and intimate partner violence in the context of a community-based HIV prevention trial in South Africa
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Gottert, Ann, primary, Pulerwitz, Julie, additional, Haberland, Nicole, additional, Mathebula, Rhandzekile, additional, Rebombo, Dumisani, additional, Spielman, Kathryn, additional, West, Rebecca, additional, Julien, Aimée, additional, Twine, Rhian, additional, Peacock, Dean, additional, Kang Dufour, Mi-Suk, additional, Gómez-Olivé, F. Xavier, additional, Pettifor, Audrey, additional, Lippman, Sheri A., additional, and Kahn, Kathleen, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Reversed metabolic reprogramming as a measure of cancer treatment efficacy in rat C6 glioma model
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Daniel M. Spielman, Keshav Datta, Lawrence Recht, Taichang Jang, Shie-Chau Liu, Milton Merchant, Ralph E. Hurd, and Mette H. Lauritzen
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Male ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Cancer Treatment ,Biochemistry ,Oxidative Phosphorylation ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Diagnostic Radiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,Drug Metabolism ,Glucose Metabolism ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Metabolites ,Glycolysis ,Neurological Tumors ,Multidisciplinary ,Brain Neoplasms ,Radiology and Imaging ,Magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging ,Brain ,Glioma ,Prognosis ,Warburg effect ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,3. Good health ,Survival Rate ,Chemistry ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,Neurology ,Physical Sciences ,Medicine ,Carbohydrate Metabolism ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Imaging Techniques ,Science ,Bicarbonate ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,In vivo ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Pharmacokinetics ,Lactic Acid ,Rats, Wistar ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Euthanasia ,Chemical Compounds ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Bicarbonates ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biomarkers ,Neoplasm Transplantation - Abstract
BackgroundMetabolism in tumor shifts from oxidative phosphorylation to inefficient glycolysis resulting in overproduction of lactate (Warburg effect), and cancers may be effectively treated if this imbalance were corrected. The aim of this longitudinal study of glioblastoma in a rat model was to determine whether the ratio of lactate (surrogate marker for glycolysis) to bicarbonate (for oxidative phosphorylation), as measured via in vivo magnetic resonance imaging of hyperpolarized 13C-labeled pyruvate accurately predicts survival.MethodsC6 Glioma implanted male Wistar rats (N = 26) were treated with an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor antibody B20.4.1.1 in a preliminary study to assess the efficacy of the drug. In a subsequent longitudinal survival study, magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) was used to estimate [1-13C]Lactate and [1-13C]Bicarbonate in tumor and contralateral normal appearing brain of glioma implanted rats (N = 13) after injection of hyperpolarized [1-13C]Pyruvate at baseline and 48 hours post-treatment with B20.4.1.1.ResultsA survival of ~25% of B20.4.1.1 treated rats was noted in the preliminary study. In the longitudinal imaging experiment, changes in 13C Lactate, 13C Bicarbonate and tumor size measured at baseline and 48 hours post-treatment did not correlate with survival. 13C Lactate to 13C Bicarbonate ratio increased in all the 6 animals that succumbed to the tumor whereas the ratio decreased in 6 of the 7 animals that survived past the 70-day observation period.Conclusions13C Lactate to 13C Bicarbonate ratio (Lac/Bic) at 48 hours post-treatment is highly predictive of survival (p = 0.003). These results suggest a potential role for the 13C Lac/Bic ratio serving as a valuable measure of tumor metabolism and predicting therapeutic response.
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- 2019
12. Nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive factors associated with mid-upper arm circumference as a measure of nutritional status in pregnant Ethiopian women: Implications for programming in the first 1000 days
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Ashish Pokharel, Yitbarek Kidane, Jeffrey K. Griffiths, Eileen Kennedy, Kathryn Spielman, Krista Zillmer, Tefera Belachew, Leslie Wentworth, Kidane Ayele, Meghan Kershaw, and Shibani Ghosh
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Physiology ,Maternal Health ,Food Supply ,Geographical Locations ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Odds Ratio ,Medicine ,Birth Weight ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Young adult ,Sanitation ,Multidisciplinary ,Gestational age ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Agriculture ,Anemia ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Physiological Parameters ,Cohort ,Arm ,Gestation ,Female ,Seasons ,medicine.symptom ,Environmental Health ,Research Article ,Adult ,Livestock ,Adolescent ,Science ,030231 tropical medicine ,Nutritional Status ,Crops ,Gestational Age ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Literacy ,Humans ,Nutrition ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Health Care ,Low birth weight ,People and Places ,Africa ,Women's Health ,Ethiopia ,business ,Demography ,Crop Science - Abstract
Poor nutritional status in pregnancy expressed as low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) is associated with low birth weight. The study aims were to assess the nutritional status of pregnant Ethiopian women using MUAC and examine association with nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive factors, using baseline data of a prospective longitudinal observational birth cohort study conducted in three rural districts in the Oromia region of Ethiopia. Recruitment into the cohort was rolling over a period of nine months, and the data used for this analysis were collected while the women were between 12-32 weeks of gestation. Detailed household socio-demographics, agricultural production, women's health, morbidity and diets, with weights, heights and MUAC, and anemia prevalence (HemoCue) were collected. The prevalence of low MUAC (< 23 cm) was 41%. Controlling for location and clustering, wealth quintile (OR = 0.88, CI = 0.82 to 0.96, p
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- 2019
13. Depressive symptoms, HIV-related stigma and ART adherence among caregivers of children in vulnerable households in rural southern Malawi
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Adamson S Muula, Erica Soler-Hampejsek, Paul C. Hewett, Kathryn Spielman, and Lyson Tenthani
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RNA viruses ,Male ,Rural Population ,Malawi ,Social stigma ,Social Stigma ,HIV Infections ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Families ,Immunodeficiency Viruses ,Health facility ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Public and Occupational Health ,Signs and symptoms ,Child ,Children ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Virus Testing ,Family Characteristics ,Multidisciplinary ,Depression ,Vaccination and Immunization ,Caregivers ,Medical Microbiology ,Spouse ,Viral Pathogens ,Child, Preschool ,Viruses ,HIV clinical manifestations ,Female ,Pathogens ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Science ,Immunology ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Stigma (botany) ,Affect (psychology) ,Microbiology ,Medication Adherence ,Social support ,Antiviral Therapy ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,Retroviruses ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Microbial Pathogens ,Mood Disorders ,business.industry ,Lentivirus ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,HIV ,Social Support ,Mental health ,Health Care ,Age Groups ,Clinical medicine ,People and Places ,HIV-1 ,Population Groupings ,Preventive Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Few studies have explored the association between depressive symptoms, HIV infection and stigma in vulnerable populations. The objective of this study is to examine factors associated with depressive symptoms among caregivers living in vulnerable households in Malawi and assess how reported depressive symptoms and other factors affect ART adherence among caregivers who report testing positive for HIV and currently on ART. Methods We interviewed 818 adult caregivers of children aged 0–17 years living in vulnerable households in 24 health facility catchment areas in five districts in rural southern Malawi in 2016–2017. Vulnerable households had either economic and food insecurity, or chronic illness. Questions on five depressive symptoms were used. ART adherence was self-report of not forgetting to take ART medication in the last week. Perceived and anticipated measures of stigma were used. Multivariable linear and logistic regressions documented relationships between depressive symptoms, self-reported HIV status, HIV-related stigma, and ART adherence. Results Most caregivers were women (86.2%); about one third had no spouse or live-in partner. Fifty-seven percent of caregivers reported having three or more depressive symptoms. Forty-one percent of caregivers reported testing positive for HIV. Self-reported HIV positive status was associated with depressive symptoms (adjusted coeff = 0.355, p-value Conclusions Addressing mental health among caregivers in vulnerable households may be an important step toward achieving viral suppression among vulnerable populations living with HIV in Malawi. Integrating depression screening into HIV care and treatment protocols could be a promising intervention to improve longer-term outcomes.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Return of individual research results: What do participants prefer and expect?
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Sayeed, Sabina, Califf, Robert, Green, Robert, Wong, Celeste, Mahaffey, Kenneth, Gambhir, Sanjiv Sam, Mega, Jessica, Patrick-Lake, Bray, Frazier, Kaylyn, Pignone, Michael, Hernandez, Adrian, Shah, Svati H., Fan, Alice C., Krüg, Sarah, Shaack, Terry, Shore, Scarlet, Spielman, Susie, Eckstrand, Julie, and Wong, Charlene A.
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DISEASE risk factors ,CARDIAC imaging ,MEDICAL personnel ,HUMAN research subjects ,OLDER people - Abstract
Newer data platforms offer increased opportunity to share multidimensional health data with research participants, but the preferences of participants for which data to receive and how is evolving. Our objective is to describe the preferences and expectations of participants for the return of individual research results within Project Baseline Health Study (PBHS). The PBHS is an ongoing, multicenter, longitudinal cohort study with data from four initial enrollment sites. PBHS participants are recruited from the general population along with groups enriched for heart disease and cancer disease risk. Cross-sectional data on return of results were collected in 2017–2018 from an (1) in-person enrollment survey (n = 1,890), (2) benchmark online survey (n = 1,059), and (3) participant interviews (n = 21). The main outcomes included (1) preferences for type of information to be added next to returned results, (2) participant plans for sharing returned results with a non-study clinician, and (3) choice to opt-out of receiving genetic results. Results were compared by sociodemographic characteristics. Enrollment and benchmark survey respondents were 57.1% and 53.5% female, and 60.0% and 66.2% white, respectively. Participants preferred the following data types be added to returned results in the future: genetics (29.9%), heart imaging, (16.4%), study watch (15.8%), and microbiome (13.3%). Older adults (OR 0.60, 95% CI: 0.41–0.87) were less likely to want their genetic results returned next. Forty percent of participants reported that they would not share all returned results with their non–study clinicians. Black (OR 0.64, 95% CI 0.43–0.95) and Asian (OR 0.47, 95% CI 0.30–0.73) participants were less likely, and older participants more likely (OR 1.45–1.61), to plan to share all results with their clinician than their counterparts. At enrollment, 5.8% of participants opted out of receiving their genetics results. The study showed that substantial heterogeneity existed in participant's preferences and expectations for return of results, and variations were related to sociodemographic characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Validation of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) as a screening tool for depression in pregnant women: Afaan Oromo version
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Yitbarek Kidane Woldetensay, Veronika Scherbaum, Eva Johanna Kantelhardt, Markos Tesfaye, Kathryn Spielman, Hans Konrad Biesalski, and Tefera Belachew
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Questionnaires ,Psychometrics ,Maternal Health ,Culture ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,Likelihood ratios in diagnostic testing ,Geographical Locations ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sociology ,Pregnancy ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Psychology ,030212 general & internal medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Language ,Multidisciplinary ,Depression ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,humanities ,Research Design ,Female ,Clinical psychology ,Research Article ,Adult ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Cronbach's alpha ,Rating scale ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,Humans ,Mini-international neuropsychiatric interview ,Rasch model ,Survey Research ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Mood Disorders ,lcsh:R ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Patient Health Questionnaire ,Pregnancy Complications ,People and Places ,Africa ,Women's Health ,Cognitive Science ,lcsh:Q ,Ethiopia ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Background Semantic, technical, content, criterion and conceptual equivalence must be examined in order to validate a psychological rating scale in a new cultural setting. Few validation studies have been conducted in sub-Saharan Africa for scales seeking to detect depression in pregnant women. The aim of this study is to validate the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) as a screening instrument for depression among Afaan Oromo speaking pregnant Ethiopian women. Methods A random sample of 246 pregnant women were recruited in Seka Chekorsa District, Ethiopia during their first, second or third trimester. One week later, 29 participants were selected to answer the questionnaire for a second time to evaluate test retest reliability. The Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI-Plus) scale was used as a gold standard to evaluate validity. PHQ-9 was compared with MINI-Plus and sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive likelihood ratio, negative likelihood ratio and Receiver Operating Characteristic Curves (ROC) for PHQ-9 were calculated. Rasch analysis was also carried out using Winsteps version 3.81.0. Results The reliability coefficient, Cronbach's alpha, for the PHQ-9 total score was 0.84. Both the agreement and consistency Intra-class Correlation coefficients (ICC) for the one-week test-retest reliability were 0.98. The cut-off point of a summed score of eight resulted in a sensitivity of 80.8% and a specificity of 79.5%. The calculated area under the curve (AUC) for the PHQ-9 score versus the MINI-Plus was excellent, 0.88 (SE = 0.04; CI = 0.81-0.95). The PHQ-9 meets the criteria established by Linacre for rating scale effectiveness. Conclusions The PHQ-9 proved to be a reliable and valid instrument that may be used to screen major depressive disorders among Afaan Oromo speaking Ethiopian pregnant women.
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- 2018
16. Reversed metabolic reprogramming as a measure of cancer treatment efficacy in rat C6 glioma model
- Author
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Datta, Keshav, primary, Lauritzen, Mette H., additional, Merchant, Milton, additional, Jang, Taichang, additional, Liu, Shie-Chau, additional, Hurd, Ralph, additional, Recht, Lawrence, additional, and Spielman, Daniel M., additional
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- 2019
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17. Transgenic cotton and farmers’ health in Pakistan
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Kouser, Shahzad, primary, Spielman, David J., additional, and Qaim, Matin, additional
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- 2019
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- View/download PDF
18. Nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive factors associated with mid-upper arm circumference as a measure of nutritional status in pregnant Ethiopian women: Implications for programming in the first 1000 days
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Ghosh, Shibani, primary, Spielman, Kathryn, additional, Kershaw, Meghan, additional, Ayele, Kidane, additional, Kidane, Yitbarek, additional, Zillmer, Krista, additional, Wentworth, Leslie, additional, Pokharel, Ashish, additional, Griffiths, Jeffrey K., additional, Belachew, Tefera, additional, and Kennedy, Eileen, additional
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- 2019
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19. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (CHRN) expression and function in cultured human adult fungiform (HBO) taste cells
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John R. Grider, Mehmet Hakan Ozdener, Vijay Lyall, Shobha Mummalaneni, Andrew I. Spielman, Jie Qian, and James D Larsen
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0301 basic medicine ,Sensory Receptors ,Protein Expression ,lcsh:Medicine ,Social Sciences ,Stimulation ,Artificial Gene Amplification and Extension ,Immunostaining ,Pharmacology ,Receptors, Nicotinic ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Biochemistry ,Nicotine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mecamylamine ,Psychology ,lcsh:Science ,Receptor ,Cells, Cultured ,Staining ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,Messenger RNA ,Taste Buds ,Nucleic acids ,Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ,Taste ,Physical Sciences ,Sensory Perception ,Acetylcholine ,medicine.drug ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction ,Adult ,Imaging Techniques ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Alkaloids ,Fluorescence Imaging ,medicine ,Gene Expression and Vector Techniques ,Humans ,TRPM5 ,Calcium Signaling ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Molecular Biology ,Brain-derived neurotrophic factor ,Molecular Biology Assays and Analysis Techniques ,Ethanol ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,lcsh:R ,Chemical Compounds ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Reverse Transcriptase-Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Cell Biology ,Protein Subunits ,030104 developmental biology ,HEK293 Cells ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Specimen Preparation and Treatment ,RNA ,lcsh:Q ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
In rodents, CHRNs are involved in bitter taste transduction of nicotine and ethanol. Currently, it is not clear if CHRNs are expressed in human taste cells and if they play a role in transducing the bitter taste of nicotine and ethanol or in the synthesis and release of neurohumoral peptides. Accordingly, we investigated the expression and functional role of CHRNs in HBO cells. Using molecular techniques, we demonstrate that a subset of HBO cells express CHRNs that also co-express TRPM5, T1R3 or T2R38. Exposing HBO cells to nicotine or ethanol acutely or to nicotine chronically induced a differential increase in the expression of CHRN mRNA and protein in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Acutely exposing HBO cells to a mixture containing nicotine plus ethanol induced a smaller increase in CHRN mRNAs relative to nicotine or ethanol treatment alone. A subset of HBO cells responded to nicotine, acetylcholine and ATP with a transient increase in [Ca2+]i. Nicotine effects on [Ca2+]i were mecamylamine sensitive. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) protein was detected in HBO cells using ELISA. Acute nicotine exposure decreased BDNF in HBO cells and increased BDNF release in the medium. CHRNs were also detected in HEK293 cells by RT-PCR. Unlike HBO cells, CHRNs were localized in most of HEK293 cells and majority of HEK293 cells responded to nicotine and ethanol stimulation with a transient increase in [Ca2+]i. BDNF levels in HEK293 cells were significantly higher than in HBO cells but the nicotine induced release of BDNF in the media was a fraction of the BDNF cellular content. We conclude that CHRNs are expressed in TRPM5 positive HBO cells. CHRN mRNA expression is modulated by exposure to nicotine and ethanol in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Nicotine induces the synthesis and release of BDNF in HBO cells.
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- 2017
20. What are farmers really planting? Measuring the presence and effectiveness of Bt cotton in Pakistan
- Author
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David J. Spielman, Rao Sohail Ahmad Khan, Patricia Zambrano, Shaukat Ali, Arshad Iqbal, Muhammad Amir Zia, Ghulam Muhammad Ali, Fatima Zaidi, Hina Nazli, H. Masooma Naseer Cheema, and Asif Ali Khan
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Leaves ,lcsh:Medicine ,Gene Expression ,Genetically modified crops ,Cotton ,Plant Science ,Gossypium ,01 natural sciences ,Toxicology ,Cottonseed ,Geographical Locations ,Plant Tissues ,Bacillus thuringiensis ,Pakistan ,lcsh:Science ,Flowering Plants ,Multidisciplinary ,Farmers ,biology ,Plant Anatomy ,Physics ,05 social sciences ,Agriculture ,Plants ,Physical Sciences ,050202 agricultural economics & policy ,Research Article ,Crops, Agricultural ,Asia ,Biophysics ,Crops ,0502 economics and business ,Genetics ,Pest Control, Biological ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Pest control ,Organisms ,Sowing ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Fiber Crops ,biology.organism_classification ,Biotechnology ,Bt cotton ,People and Places ,lcsh:Q ,Pest Control ,business ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Crop Science - Abstract
Genetically modified, insect-resistant Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton is cultivated extensively in Pakistan. Past studies, however, have raised concerns about the prevalence of Bt cotton varieties possessing weak or nonperforming insect-resistance traits conferred by the cry gene. We examine this issue using data drawn from a representative sample of cotton-growing households that were surveyed in six agroclimatic zones spanning 28 districts in Pakistan in 2013, as well as measurements of Cry protein levels in cotton tissue samples collected from the sampled households' main fields. The resultant dataset combines information from 593 sampled households with corresponding plant tissue diagnostics from 70 days after sowing, as well as information from 589 sampled households with corresponding diagnostics from 120 days after sowing. Our analysis indicates that 11 percent of farmers believed they were cultivating Bt cotton when, in fact, the Cry toxin was not present in the tested tissue at 70 days after sowing (i.e., a Type I error). The analysis further indicates that 5 percent of farmers believed they were cultivating non-Bt cotton when, in fact, the Cry toxin was present in the tested tissue (i.e., a Type II error). In addition, 17 percent of all sampled farmers were uncertain whether or not they were cultivating Bt cotton. Overall, 33 percent of farmers either did not know or were mistaken in their beliefs about the presence of the cry gene in the cotton they cultivated. Results also indicate that toxic protein levels in the plant tissue samples occurred below threshold levels for lethality in a significant percentage of cases, although these measurements may also be affected by factors related to tissue sample collection, handling, storage, and testing procedures. Nonetheless, results strongly suggest wide variability both in farmers' beliefs and in gene expression. Such variability has implications for policy and regulation in Pakistan's transgenic cotton seed market.
- Published
- 2017
21. Computational prediction of the tolerance to amino-acid deletion in green-fluorescent protein
- Author
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Eleisha L. Jackson, Claus O. Wilke, and Stephanie J. Spielman
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,0301 basic medicine ,0106 biological sciences ,Support Vector Machine ,Mutagenesis and Gene Deletion Techniques ,lcsh:Medicine ,Protein Structure Prediction ,Biochemistry ,Physical Chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Green fluorescent protein ,Machine Learning ,Protein structure ,INDEL Mutation ,Macromolecular Structure Analysis ,Macromolecular Engineering ,lcsh:Science ,Peptide sequence ,Sequence Deletion ,Genetics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Protein structure prediction ,Chromophores ,Amino acid ,Chemistry ,Deletion Mutation ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering and Technology ,Synthetic Biology ,Functional status ,Research Article ,Biotechnology ,Protein Structure ,Computer and Information Sciences ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Protein design ,Bioengineering ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,010603 evolutionary biology ,Fluorescence ,Molecular Evolution ,03 medical and health sciences ,Residue (chemistry) ,Artificial Intelligence ,Support Vector Machines ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Indel ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,Sequence (medicine) ,Evolutionary Biology ,Deletion Mutagenesis ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,Macromolecular Design ,Logistic Models ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Synthetic Bioengineering ,Mutation ,lcsh:Q ,Directed Molecular Evolution - Abstract
Proteins evolve through two primary mechanisms: substitution, where mutations alter a protein’s amino-acid sequence, and insertions and deletions (indels), where amino acids are either added to or removed from the sequence. Protein structure has been shown to influence the rate at which substitutions accumulate across sites in proteins, but whether structure similarly constrains the occurrence of indels has not been rigorously studied. Here, we investigate the extent to which structural properties known to covary with protein evolutionary rates might also predict protein tolerance to indels. Specifically, we analyze a publicly available dataset of single–amino-acid deletion mutations in enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) to assess how well the functional effect of deletions can be predicted from protein structure. We find that weighted contact number (WCN), which measures how densely packed a residue is within the protein’s three-dimensional structure, provides the best single predictor for whether eGFP will tolerate a given deletion. We additionally find that using protein design to explicitly model deletions results in improved predictions of functional status when combined with other structural predictors. Our work suggests that structure plays fundamental role in constraining deletions at sites in proteins, and further that similar biophysical constraints influence both substitutions and deletions. This study therefore provides a solid foundation for future work to examine how protein structure influences tolerance of more complex indel events, such as insertions or large deletions.
- Published
- 2017
22. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (CHRN) expression and function in cultured human adult fungiform (HBO) taste cells
- Author
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Qian, Jie, primary, Mummalaneni, Shobha, additional, Larsen, James, additional, Grider, John R., additional, Spielman, Andrew I., additional, Özdener, Mehmet Hakan, additional, and Lyall, Vijay, additional
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
23. Validation of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) as a screening tool for depression in pregnant women: Afaan Oromo version
- Author
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Woldetensay, Yitbarek Kidane, primary, Belachew, Tefera, additional, Tesfaye, Markos, additional, Spielman, Kathryn, additional, Biesalski, Hans Konrad, additional, Kantelhardt, Eva Johanna, additional, and Scherbaum, Veronika, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Cyclic-AMP regulates postnatal development of neural and behavioral responses to NaCl in rats
- Author
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Mehmet Hakan Ozdener, Vijay Lyall, Deanna Hojati, Karnam S. Murthy, Gerard L. Heck, David West, Jie Qian, Sunila Mahavadi, Andrew I. Spielman, Shobha Mummalaneni, Mee Ra Rhyu, Tam Hao T. Phan, and John A. DeSimone
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Epithelial sodium channel ,Vasopressin ,Receptors, Vasopressin ,Sensory Receptors ,Arginine ,Physiology ,Voltage clamp ,Cell Membranes ,lcsh:Medicine ,Gene Expression ,Social Sciences ,Sodium Chloride ,Biochemistry ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Taste receptor ,Immune Physiology ,Cyclic AMP ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Insulin ,Deamino Arginine Vasopressin ,lcsh:Science ,Receptor ,Cells, Cultured ,Mammals ,Multidisciplinary ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Immune System Proteins ,Chemistry ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Age Factors ,Animal Models ,Taste Buds ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Taste ,Vertebrates ,Sensory Perception ,Chorda Tympani Nerve ,Anatomy ,Cellular Structures and Organelles ,Intracellular ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction ,Agonist ,Adult ,Cell Binding ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Rodents ,Antibodies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Food Preferences ,Model Organisms ,stomatognathic system ,Tongue ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Epithelial Sodium Channels ,Diabetic Endocrinology ,Mouth ,lcsh:R ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Intracellular Membranes ,Thionucleotides ,Hormones ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Amniotes ,lcsh:Q ,Digestive System ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
During postnatal development rats demonstrate an age-dependent increase in NaCl chorda tympani (CT) responses and the number of functional apical amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na+ channels (ENaCs) in salt sensing fungiform (FF) taste receptor cells (TRCs). Currently, the intracellular signals that regulate the postnatal development of salt taste have not been identified. We investigated the effect of cAMP, a downstream signal for arginine vasopressin (AVP) action, on the postnatal development of NaCl responses in 19-23 day old rats. ENaC-dependent NaCl CT responses were monitored after lingual application of 8-chlorophenylthio-cAMP (8-CPT-cAMP) under open-circuit conditions and under ±60 mV lingual voltage clamp. Behavioral responses were tested using 2 bottle/24h NaCl preference tests. The effect of [deamino-Cys1, D-Arg8]-vasopressin (dDAVP, a specific V2R agonist) was investigated on ENaC subunit trafficking in rat FF TRCs and on cAMP generation in cultured adult human FF taste cells (HBO cells). Our results show that in 19-23 day old rats, the ENaC-dependent maximum NaCl CT response was a saturating sigmoidal function of 8-CPT-cAMP concentration. 8-CPT-cAMP increased the voltage-sensitivity of the NaCl CT response and the apical Na+ response conductance. Intravenous injections of dDAVP increased ENaC expression and γ-ENaC trafficking from cytosolic compartment to the apical compartment in rat FF TRCs. In HBO cells dDAVP increased intracellular cAMP and cAMP increased trafficking of γ- and δ-ENaC from cytosolic compartment to the apical compartment 10 min post-cAMP treatment. Control 19-23 day old rats were indifferent to NaCl, but showed clear preference for appetitive NaCl concentrations after 8-CPT-cAMP treatment. Relative to adult rats, 14 day old rats demonstrated significantly less V2R antibody binding in circumvallate TRCs. We conclude that an age-dependent increase in V2R expression produces an AVP-induced incremental increase in cAMP that modulates the postnatal increase in TRC ENaC and the neural and behavioral responses to NaCl.
- Published
- 2016
25. What are farmers really planting? Measuring the presence and effectiveness of Bt cotton in Pakistan
- Author
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Spielman, David J., primary, Zaidi, Fatima, additional, Zambrano, Patricia, additional, Khan, Asif Ali, additional, Ali, Shaukat, additional, Cheema, H. Masooma Naseer, additional, Nazli, Hina, additional, Khan, Rao Sohail Ahmad, additional, Iqbal, Arshad, additional, Zia, Muhammad Amir, additional, and Ali, Ghulam Muhammad, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Computational prediction of the tolerance to amino-acid deletion in green-fluorescent protein
- Author
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Jackson, Eleisha L., primary, Spielman, Stephanie J., additional, and Wilke, Claus O., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cyclic-AMP regulates postnatal development of neural and behavioral responses to NaCl in rats
- Author
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Qian, Jie, primary, Mummalaneni, Shobha, additional, Phan, Tam-Hao T., additional, Heck, Gerard L., additional, DeSimone, John A., additional, West, David, additional, Mahavadi, Sunila, additional, Hojati, Deanna, additional, Murthy, Karnam S., additional, Rhyu, Mee-Ra, additional, Spielman, Andrew I., additional, Özdener, Mehmet Hakan, additional, and Lyall, Vijay, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Reducing uncertainty in the american community survey through data-driven regionalization
- Author
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David C. Folch and Seth E. Spielman
- Subjects
Computer science ,Population ,lcsh:Medicine ,American Community Survey ,Data-driven ,Residence Characteristics ,Econometrics ,Humans ,Cities ,education ,lcsh:Science ,education.field_of_study ,Family Characteristics ,Spatial Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,Data collection ,Poverty ,Geography ,Data Collection ,lcsh:R ,1. No poverty ,Uncertainty ,Censuses ,United States ,Survey data collection ,lcsh:Q ,Algorithms ,Research Article - Abstract
The American Community Survey (ACS) is the largest survey of US households and is the principal source for neighborhood scale information about the US population and economy. The ACS is used to allocate billions in federal spending and is a critical input to social scientific research in the US. However, estimates from the ACS can be highly unreliable. For example, in over 72% of census tracts, the estimated number of children under 5 in poverty has a margin of error greater than the estimate. Uncertainty of this magnitude complicates the use of social data in policy making, research, and governance. This article presents a heuristic spatial optimization algorithm that is capable of reducing the margins of error in survey data via the creation of new composite geographies, a process called regionalization. Regionalization is a complex combinatorial problem. Here rather than focusing on the technical aspects of regionalization we demonstrate how to use a purpose built open source regionalization algorithm to process survey data in order to reduce the margins of error to a user-specified threshold.
- Published
- 2015
29. IL-17A induces Pendrin expression and chloride-bicarbonate exchange in human bronchial epithelial cells
- Author
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Jay K. Kolls, Gregory E. Conner, Ronald C. Rubenstein, James L. Kreindler, Valsamma Abraham, Noam A. Cohen, Kelly M. Adams, and Daniel B. Spielman
- Subjects
Small interfering RNA ,Chemokine ,Physiology ,Gene Expression ,lcsh:Medicine ,Epithelium ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune Physiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Chloride-Bicarbonate Antiporters ,lcsh:Science ,Immune Response ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Interleukin-17 ,3. Good health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sulfate Transporters ,Cytokines ,Anatomy ,Research Article ,Intracellular pH ,Immunology ,Biophysics ,Bronchi ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Inflammation ,Antimicrobial peptide secretion ,Ion Transport ,Interleukins ,Mucin ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Epithelial Cells ,Pendrin ,Molecular Development ,Molecular biology ,Biological Tissue ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,Developmental Biology ,030215 immunology - Abstract
The epithelium plays an active role in the response to inhaled pathogens in part by responding to signals from the immune system. Epithelial responses may include changes in chemokine expression, increased mucin production and antimicrobial peptide secretion, and changes in ion transport. We previously demonstrated that interleukin-17A (IL-17A), which is critical for lung host defense against extracellular bacteria, significantly raised airway surface pH in vitro, a finding that is common to a number of inflammatory diseases. Using microarray analysis of normal human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells treated with IL-17A, we identified the electroneutral chloride-bicarbonate exchanger Pendrin (SLC26A4) as a potential mediator of this effect. These data were verified by real-time, quantitative PCR that demonstrated a time-dependent increase in Pendrin mRNA expression in HBE cells treated with IL-17A up to 48 h. Using immunoblotting and immunofluorescence, we confirmed that Pendrin protein expression is increased in IL-17 treated HBE cells and that it is primarily localized to the mucosal surface of the cells. Functional studies using live-cell fluorescence to measure intracellular pH demonstrated that IL-17A induced chloride-bicarbonate exchange in HBE cells that was not present in the absence of IL-17A. Furthermore, HBE cells treated with short interfering RNA against Pendrin showed substantially reduced chloride-bicarbonate exchange. These data suggest that Pendrin is part of IL-17A-dependent epithelial changes and that Pendrin may therefore be a therapeutic target in IL-17A-dependent lung disease.
- Published
- 2014
30. Targeted inactivation of dipeptidyl peptidase 9 enzymatic activity causes mouse neonate lethality
- Author
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Charles G. Bailey, Mark D. Gorrell, Ana Julia Vieira de Ribeiro, Yiqian Chen, Hui Zhang, Margaret G. Gall, Derek Spielman, and Denise M. T. Yu
- Subjects
Male ,Proteases ,Heterozygote ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Science ,Gene Expression ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,Dipeptidyl peptidase ,Andrology ,Mice ,Dipeptidyl Peptidase 9 ,Epidermal growth factor ,medicine ,Animals ,Point Mutation ,Gene Knock-In Techniques ,Dipeptidyl-Peptidases and Tripeptidyl-Peptidases ,Crosses, Genetic ,Enzyme Assays ,Multidisciplinary ,Protease ,Homozygote ,Heterozygote advantage ,Embryo ,Fibroblasts ,Embryo, Mammalian ,Molecular biology ,Founder Effect ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Animals, Newborn ,Liver ,Medicine ,Female ,Immunostaining ,Research Article - Abstract
Dipeptidyl Peptidase (DPP) 4 and related dipeptidyl peptidases are emerging as current and potential therapeutic targets. DPP9 is an intracellular protease that is regulated by redox status and by SUMO1. DPP9 can influence antigen processing, epidermal growth factor (EGF)-mediated signaling and tumor biology. We made the first gene knock-in (gki) mouse with a serine to alanine point mutation at the DPP9 active site (S729A). Weaned heterozygote DPP9 (wt/S729A) pups from 110 intercrosses were indistinguishable from wild-type littermates. No homozygote DPP9 (S729A/S729A) weaned mice were detected. DPP9 (S729A/S729A) homozygote embryos, which were morphologically indistinguishable from their wild-type littermate embryos at embryonic day (ED) 12.5 to ED 17.5, were born live but these neonates died within 8 to 24 hours of birth. All neonates suckled and contained milk spots and were of similar body weight. No gender differences were seen. No histological or DPP9 immunostaining pattern differences were seen between genotypes in embryos and neonates. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from DPP9 (S729A/S729A) ED13.5 embryos and neonate DPP9 (S729A/S729A) mouse livers collected within 6 hours after birth had levels of DPP9 protein and DPP9-related proteases that were similar to wild-type but had less DPP9/DPP8-derived activity. These data confirmed the absence of DPP9 enzymatic activity due to the presence of the serine to alanine mutation and no compensation from related proteases. These novel findings suggest that DPP9 enzymatic activity is essential for early neonatal survival in mice.
- Published
- 2013
31. FTO and MC4R Gene Variants Are Associated with Obesity in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
- Author
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Ricardo Azziz, Wendy Ankener, Margrit Urbanek, Kathryn G. Ewens, Mark O. Goodarzi, Matthew Jones, Richard S. Legro, Andrea Dunaif, Jerome F. Strauss, Douglas R. Stewart, Angela Chua, and Richard S. Spielman
- Subjects
Male ,Anatomy and Physiology ,endocrine system diseases ,Genome-wide association study ,Type 2 diabetes ,Biochemistry ,Body Mass Index ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Polycystic ovary ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Ovarian Cysts ,Oncology ,Medicine ,Receptor, Melanocortin, Type 4 ,Female ,Research Article ,Polycystic Ovary Syndrome ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Urology ,Alpha-Ketoglutarate-Dependent Dioxygenase FTO ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Endocrine System ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Anovulation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Genetic predisposition ,Genetics ,Reproductive Endocrinology ,Humans ,Family ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Obesity ,Genetic Association Studies ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic association ,Nutrition ,Endocrine Physiology ,Population Biology ,Case-control study ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Proteins ,Human Genetics ,Neuroendocrinology ,medicine.disease ,Lipid Metabolism ,Female Subfertility ,Metabolism ,Infertility ,Case-Control Studies ,Genetic Polymorphism ,Women's Health ,Physiological Processes ,Energy Metabolism ,Gynecological Tumors ,Population Genetics - Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the leading cause of anovulatory infertility in women. It is also associated with metabolic disturbances that place women at increased risk for obesity and type 2 diabetes. There is strong evidence for familial clustering of PCOS and a genetic predisposition. However, the gene(s) responsible for the PCOS phenotypes have not been elucidated. This two-phase family-based and case-control genetic study was designed to address the question of whether SNPs identified as susceptibility loci for obesity in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are also associated with PCOS and elevated BMI. Members of 439 families having at least one offspring with PCOS were genotyped for 15 SNPs previously shown to be associated with obesity. Linkage and association with PCOS was assessed using the transmission/disequilibrium test (TDT). These SNPs were also analyzed in an independent case-control study involving 395 women with PCOS and 176 healthy women with regular menstrual cycles. Only one of these 15 SNPs (rs2815752 in NEGR1) was found to have a nominally significant association with PCOS (χ(2) = 6.11, P = 0.013), but this association failed to replicate in the case-control study. While not associated with PCOS itself, five SNPs in FTO and two in MC4R were associated with BMI as assessed with a quantitative-TDT analysis, several of which replicated association with BMI in the case-control cohort. These findings demonstrate that certain SNPs associated with obesity contribute to elevated BMI in PCOS, but do not appear to play a major role in PCOS per se. These findings support the notion that PCOS phenotypes are a consequence of an oligogenic/polygenic mechanism.
- Published
- 2011
32. Pyvolve: A Flexible Python Module for Simulating Sequences along Phylogenies
- Author
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Spielman, Stephanie J., primary and Wilke, Claus O., additional
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
33. Reducing Uncertainty in the American Community Survey through Data-Driven Regionalization
- Author
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Spielman, Seth E., primary and Folch, David C., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Quantification of cell edge velocities and traction forces reveals distinct motility modules during cell spreading
- Author
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Jake M. Hofman, Ingrid Spielman, Yunfei Cai, Michael P. Sheetz, Harry S. Xenias, Anna V. Shneidman, Benjamin J. Dubin-Thaler, Hans-Günther Döbereiner, Lawrence A. David, and Chris H. Wiggins
- Subjects
Cytochalasin D ,Biophysics ,lcsh:Medicine ,Motility ,Apoptosis ,Computer Science/Applications ,Cell membrane ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cell Movement ,Cell Biology/Cytoskeleton ,Myosin ,medicine ,Animals ,Biophysics/Cell Signaling and Trafficking Structures ,Pseudopodia ,lcsh:Science ,Cytoskeleton ,Actin ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,lcsh:R ,Cell Membrane ,Microfilament Proteins ,Microfilament Protein ,Fibroblasts ,Actin cytoskeleton ,Phosphoproteins ,Cell biology ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Protein Transport ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,lcsh:Q ,Biophysics/Experimental Biophysical Methods ,Cytology ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article - Abstract
Actin-based cell motility and force generation are central to immune response, tissue development, and cancer metastasis, and understanding actin cytoskeleton regulation is a major goal of cell biologists. Cell spreading is a commonly used model system for motility experiments -- spreading fibroblasts exhibit stereotypic, spatially-isotropic edge dynamics during a reproducible sequence of functional phases: 1) During early spreading, cells form initial contacts with the surface. 2) The middle spreading phase exhibits rapidly increasing attachment area. 3) Late spreading is characterized by periodic contractions and stable adhesions formation. While differences in cytoskeletal regulation between phases are known, a global analysis of the spatial and temporal coordination of motility and force generation is missing. Implementing improved algorithms for analyzing edge dynamics over the entire cell periphery, we observed that a single domain of homogeneous cytoskeletal dynamics dominated each of the three phases of spreading. These domains exhibited a unique combination of biophysical and biochemical parameters -- a motility module. Biophysical characterization of the motility modules revealed that the early phase was dominated by periodic, rapid membrane blebbing; the middle phase exhibited continuous protrusion with very low traction force generation; and the late phase was characterized by global periodic contractions and high force generation. Biochemically, each motility module exhibited a different distribution of the actin-related protein VASP, while inhibition of actin polymerization revealed different dependencies on barbed-end polymerization. In addition, our whole-cell analysis revealed that many cells exhibited heterogeneous combinations of motility modules in neighboring regions of the cell edge. Together, these observations support a model of motility in which regions of the cell edge exhibit one of a limited number of motility modules that, together, determine the overall motility function. Our data and algorithms are publicly available to encourage further exploration.
- Published
- 2008
35. Pyvolve: A Flexible Python Module for Simulating Sequences along Phylogenies
- Author
-
Stephanie J. Spielman and Claus O. Wilke
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Computer science ,Nucleotide sequencing ,lcsh:Medicine ,Model parameters ,Genomics ,Sequence alignment ,Biology ,Markov model ,Bioinformatics ,computer.software_genre ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Nucleotide ,Amino Acid Sequence ,lcsh:Science ,Peptide sequence ,Phylogeny ,030304 developmental biology ,computer.programming_language ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Iterative proportional fitting ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,Models, Genetic ,Programming language ,Human evolutionary genetics ,lcsh:R ,Genetic data ,Python (programming language) ,Markov Chains ,chemistry ,Scripting language ,lcsh:Q ,computer ,Research Article - Abstract
We introduce Pyvolve, a flexible Python module for simulating genetic data along a phylogeny according to continuous-time Markov models of sequence evolution. Pyvolve is easily incorporated into Python bioinformatics pipelines, and it can simulate sequences according most standard models of nucleotide, amino-acid, and codon sequence evolution. All model parameters are fully customizable. Users can additionally specify custom evolutionary models, with custom rate matrices and/or states to evolve. This flexibility makes Pyvolve a convenient framework not only for simulating sequences under a wide variety of conditions, but also for developing and testing new evolutionary models. Moreover, Pyvolve includes several novel sequence simulation features, including a new rate matrix scaling algorithm and branch-length perturbations. Pyvolve is an open-source project freely available, along with a detailed user-manual and example scripts, under a FreeBSD license from http://github.com/sjspielman/pyvolve.
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
36. IL-17A Induces Pendrin Expression and Chloride-Bicarbonate Exchange in Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells
- Author
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Adams, Kelly M., primary, Abraham, Valsamma, additional, Spielman, Daniel, additional, Kolls, Jay K., additional, Rubenstein, Ronald C., additional, Conner, Gregory E., additional, Cohen, Noam A., additional, and Kreindler, James L., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Maximum Allowed Solvent Accessibilites of Residues in Proteins
- Author
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Tien, Matthew Z., primary, Meyer, Austin G., additional, Sydykova, Dariya K., additional, Spielman, Stephanie J., additional, and Wilke, Claus O., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Targeted Inactivation of Dipeptidyl Peptidase 9 Enzymatic Activity Causes Mouse Neonate Lethality
- Author
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Gall, Margaret G., primary, Chen, Yiqian, additional, Vieira de Ribeiro, Ana Julia, additional, Zhang, Hui, additional, Bailey, Charles G., additional, Spielman, Derek S., additional, Yu, Denise M. T., additional, and Gorrell, Mark D., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Maximum Allowed Solvent Accessibilites of Residues in Proteins
- Author
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Stephanie J. Spielman, Dariya K. Sydykova, Matthew Z. Tien, A. Meyer, and Claus O. Wilke
- Subjects
Normalization (statistics) ,Protein Conformation ,FOS: Physical sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,Dihedral angle ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Bioinformatics ,Upper and lower bounds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Protein structure ,Physics - Biological Physics ,lcsh:Science ,Hydrophobicity scales ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Residue (complex analysis) ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,lcsh:R ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Proteins ,Biomolecules (q-bio.BM) ,Solvent accessibility ,Solvent ,Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules ,Biological Physics (physics.bio-ph) ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Solvents ,lcsh:Q ,Biological system ,Research Article - Abstract
The relative solvent accessibility (RSA) of a residue in a protein measures the extent of burial or exposure of that residue in the 3D structure. RSA is frequently used to describe a protein's biophysical or evolutionary properties. To calculate RSA, a residue's solvent accessibility (ASA) needs to be normalized by a suitable reference value for the given amino acid; several normalization scales have previously been proposed. However, these scales do not provide tight upper bounds on ASA values frequently observed in empirical crystal structures. Instead, they underestimate the largest allowed ASA values, by up to 20%. As a result, many empirical crystal structures contain residues that seem to have RSA values in excess of one. Here, we derive a new normalization scale that does provide a tight upper bound on observed ASA values. We pursue two complementary strategies, one based on extensive analysis of empirical structures and one based on systematic enumeration of biophysically allowed tripeptides. Both approaches yield congruent results that consistently exceed published values. We conclude that previously published ASA normalization values were too small, primarily because the conformations that maximize ASA had not been correctly identified. As an application of our results, we show that empirically derived hydrophobicity scales are sensitive to accurate RSA calculation, and we derive new hydrophobicity scales that show increased correlation with experimentally measured scales., 16 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
40. FTO and MC4R Gene Variants Are Associated with Obesity in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
- Author
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Ewens, Kathryn G., primary, Jones, Michelle R., additional, Ankener, Wendy, additional, Stewart, Douglas R., additional, Urbanek, Margrit, additional, Dunaif, Andrea, additional, Legro, Richard S., additional, Chua, Angela, additional, Azziz, Ricardo, additional, Spielman, Richard S., additional, Goodarzi, Mark O., additional, and Strauss, Jerome F., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Sour Ageusia in Two Individuals Implicates Ion Channels of the ASIC and PKD Families in Human Sour Taste Perception at the Anterior Tongue
- Author
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Huque, Taufiqul, primary, Cowart, Beverly J., additional, Dankulich-Nagrudny, Luba, additional, Pribitkin, Edmund A., additional, Bayley, Douglas L., additional, Spielman, Andrew I., additional, Feldman, Roy S., additional, Mackler, Scott A., additional, and Brand, Joseph G., additional
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
42. Quantification of Cell Edge Velocities and Traction Forces Reveals Distinct Motility Modules during Cell Spreading
- Author
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Dubin-Thaler, Benjamin J., primary, Hofman, Jake M., additional, Cai, Yunfei, additional, Xenias, Harry, additional, Spielman, Ingrid, additional, Shneidman, Anna V., additional, David, Lawrence A., additional, Döbereiner, Hans-Günther, additional, Wiggins, Chris H., additional, and Sheetz, Michael P., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Sour Ageusia in Two Individuals Implicates Ion Channels of the ASIC and PKD Families in Human Sour Taste Perception at the Anterior Tongue
- Author
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Douglas L. Bayley, Edmund A. Pribitkin, Scott A. Mackler, Beverly J. Cowart, Luba Dankulich-Nagrudny, Andrew I. Spielman, Joseph G. Brand, Roy S. Feldman, and Taufiqul Huque
- Subjects
Male ,Epithelial sodium channel ,Taste ,Biopsy ,Phospholipase C beta ,lcsh:Medicine ,Sodium Channels ,Cell Biology/Cell Signaling ,Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled ,0302 clinical medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Lingual papilla ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,Neuroscience/Behavioral Neuroscience ,Multidisciplinary ,Fungal genetics ,Genetics and Genomics/Gene Expression ,Middle Aged ,Taste Buds ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,TAS2R38 ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell Biology/Neuronal Signaling Mechanisms ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tongue ,stomatognathic system ,Internal medicine ,Neuroscience/Neuronal Signaling Mechanisms ,medicine ,Humans ,Epithelial Sodium Channels ,Cell Biology/Gene Expression ,Acid-sensing ion channel ,030304 developmental biology ,Neuroscience/Sensory Systems ,lcsh:R ,Ageusia ,Acid Sensing Ion Channels ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,lcsh:Q ,Calcium Channels ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background The perception of sour taste in humans is incompletely understood at the receptor cell level. We report here on two patients with an acquired sour ageusia. Each patient was unresponsive to sour stimuli, but both showed normal responses to bitter, sweet, and salty stimuli. Methods and findings Lingual fungiform papillae, containing taste cells, were obtained by biopsy from the two patients, and from three sour-normal individuals, and analyzed by RT-PCR. The following transcripts were undetectable in the patients, even after 50 cycles of amplification, but readily detectable in the sour-normal subjects: acid sensing ion channels (ASICs) 1a, 1beta, 2a, 2b, and 3; and polycystic kidney disease (PKD) channels PKD1L3 and PKD2L1. Patients and sour-normals expressed the taste-related phospholipase C-beta2, the delta-subunit of epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) and the bitter receptor T2R14, as well as beta-actin. Genomic analysis of one patient, using buccal tissue, did not show absence of the genes for ASIC1a and PKD2L1. Immunohistochemistry of fungiform papillae from sour-normal subjects revealed labeling of taste bud cells by antibodies to ASICs 1a and 1beta, PKD2L1, phospholipase C-beta2, and delta-ENaC. An antibody to PKD1L3 labeled tissue outside taste bud cells. Conclusions These data suggest a role for ASICs and PKDs in human sour perception. This is the first report of sour ageusia in humans, and the very existence of such individuals ("natural knockouts") suggests a cell lineage for sour that is independent of the other taste modalities.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Reversed metabolic reprogramming as a measure of cancer treatment efficacy in rat C6 glioma model.
- Author
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Keshav Datta, Mette H Lauritzen, Milton Merchant, Taichang Jang, Shie-Chau Liu, Ralph Hurd, Lawrence Recht, and Daniel M Spielman
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundMetabolism in tumor shifts from oxidative phosphorylation to inefficient glycolysis resulting in overproduction of lactate (Warburg effect), and cancers may be effectively treated if this imbalance were corrected. The aim of this longitudinal study of glioblastoma in a rat model was to determine whether the ratio of lactate (surrogate marker for glycolysis) to bicarbonate (for oxidative phosphorylation), as measured via in vivo magnetic resonance imaging of hyperpolarized 13C-labeled pyruvate accurately predicts survival.MethodsC6 Glioma implanted male Wistar rats (N = 26) were treated with an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor antibody B20.4.1.1 in a preliminary study to assess the efficacy of the drug. In a subsequent longitudinal survival study, magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) was used to estimate [1-13C]Lactate and [1-13C]Bicarbonate in tumor and contralateral normal appearing brain of glioma implanted rats (N = 13) after injection of hyperpolarized [1-13C]Pyruvate at baseline and 48 hours post-treatment with B20.4.1.1.ResultsA survival of ~25% of B20.4.1.1 treated rats was noted in the preliminary study. In the longitudinal imaging experiment, changes in 13C Lactate, 13C Bicarbonate and tumor size measured at baseline and 48 hours post-treatment did not correlate with survival. 13C Lactate to 13C Bicarbonate ratio increased in all the 6 animals that succumbed to the tumor whereas the ratio decreased in 6 of the 7 animals that survived past the 70-day observation period.Conclusions13C Lactate to 13C Bicarbonate ratio (Lac/Bic) at 48 hours post-treatment is highly predictive of survival (p = 0.003). These results suggest a potential role for the 13C Lac/Bic ratio serving as a valuable measure of tumor metabolism and predicting therapeutic response.
- Published
- 2019
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45. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (CHRN) expression and function in cultured human adult fungiform (HBO) taste cells.
- Author
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Jie Qian, Shobha Mummalaneni, James Larsen, John R Grider, Andrew I Spielman, Mehmet Hakan Özdener, and Vijay Lyall
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
In rodents, CHRNs are involved in bitter taste transduction of nicotine and ethanol. Currently, it is not clear if CHRNs are expressed in human taste cells and if they play a role in transducing the bitter taste of nicotine and ethanol or in the synthesis and release of neurohumoral peptides. Accordingly, we investigated the expression and functional role of CHRNs in HBO cells. Using molecular techniques, we demonstrate that a subset of HBO cells express CHRNs that also co-express TRPM5, T1R3 or T2R38. Exposing HBO cells to nicotine or ethanol acutely or to nicotine chronically induced a differential increase in the expression of CHRN mRNA and protein in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Acutely exposing HBO cells to a mixture containing nicotine plus ethanol induced a smaller increase in CHRN mRNAs relative to nicotine or ethanol treatment alone. A subset of HBO cells responded to nicotine, acetylcholine and ATP with a transient increase in [Ca2+]i. Nicotine effects on [Ca2+]i were mecamylamine sensitive. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) protein was detected in HBO cells using ELISA. Acute nicotine exposure decreased BDNF in HBO cells and increased BDNF release in the medium. CHRNs were also detected in HEK293 cells by RT-PCR. Unlike HBO cells, CHRNs were localized in most of HEK293 cells and majority of HEK293 cells responded to nicotine and ethanol stimulation with a transient increase in [Ca2+]i. BDNF levels in HEK293 cells were significantly higher than in HBO cells but the nicotine induced release of BDNF in the media was a fraction of the BDNF cellular content. We conclude that CHRNs are expressed in TRPM5 positive HBO cells. CHRN mRNA expression is modulated by exposure to nicotine and ethanol in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Nicotine induces the synthesis and release of BDNF in HBO cells.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Cyclic-AMP regulates postnatal development of neural and behavioral responses to NaCl in rats.
- Author
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Jie Qian, Shobha Mummalaneni, Tam-Hao T Phan, Gerard L Heck, John A DeSimone, David West, Sunila Mahavadi, Deanna Hojati, Karnam S Murthy, Mee-Ra Rhyu, Andrew I Spielman, Mehmet Hakan Özdener, and Vijay Lyall
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
During postnatal development rats demonstrate an age-dependent increase in NaCl chorda tympani (CT) responses and the number of functional apical amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na+ channels (ENaCs) in salt sensing fungiform (FF) taste receptor cells (TRCs). Currently, the intracellular signals that regulate the postnatal development of salt taste have not been identified. We investigated the effect of cAMP, a downstream signal for arginine vasopressin (AVP) action, on the postnatal development of NaCl responses in 19-23 day old rats. ENaC-dependent NaCl CT responses were monitored after lingual application of 8-chlorophenylthio-cAMP (8-CPT-cAMP) under open-circuit conditions and under ±60 mV lingual voltage clamp. Behavioral responses were tested using 2 bottle/24h NaCl preference tests. The effect of [deamino-Cys1, D-Arg8]-vasopressin (dDAVP, a specific V2R agonist) was investigated on ENaC subunit trafficking in rat FF TRCs and on cAMP generation in cultured adult human FF taste cells (HBO cells). Our results show that in 19-23 day old rats, the ENaC-dependent maximum NaCl CT response was a saturating sigmoidal function of 8-CPT-cAMP concentration. 8-CPT-cAMP increased the voltage-sensitivity of the NaCl CT response and the apical Na+ response conductance. Intravenous injections of dDAVP increased ENaC expression and γ-ENaC trafficking from cytosolic compartment to the apical compartment in rat FF TRCs. In HBO cells dDAVP increased intracellular cAMP and cAMP increased trafficking of γ- and δ-ENaC from cytosolic compartment to the apical compartment 10 min post-cAMP treatment. Control 19-23 day old rats were indifferent to NaCl, but showed clear preference for appetitive NaCl concentrations after 8-CPT-cAMP treatment. Relative to adult rats, 14 day old rats demonstrated significantly less V2R antibody binding in circumvallate TRCs. We conclude that an age-dependent increase in V2R expression produces an AVP-induced incremental increase in cAMP that modulates the postnatal increase in TRC ENaC and the neural and behavioral responses to NaCl.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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47. Reducing uncertainty in the american community survey through data-driven regionalization.
- Author
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Seth E Spielman and David C Folch
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The American Community Survey (ACS) is the largest survey of US households and is the principal source for neighborhood scale information about the US population and economy. The ACS is used to allocate billions in federal spending and is a critical input to social scientific research in the US. However, estimates from the ACS can be highly unreliable. For example, in over 72% of census tracts, the estimated number of children under 5 in poverty has a margin of error greater than the estimate. Uncertainty of this magnitude complicates the use of social data in policy making, research, and governance. This article presents a heuristic spatial optimization algorithm that is capable of reducing the margins of error in survey data via the creation of new composite geographies, a process called regionalization. Regionalization is a complex combinatorial problem. Here rather than focusing on the technical aspects of regionalization we demonstrate how to use a purpose built open source regionalization algorithm to process survey data in order to reduce the margins of error to a user-specified threshold.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. IL-17A induces Pendrin expression and chloride-bicarbonate exchange in human bronchial epithelial cells.
- Author
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Kelly M Adams, Valsamma Abraham, Daniel Spielman, Jay K Kolls, Ronald C Rubenstein, Gregory E Conner, Noam A Cohen, and James L Kreindler
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The epithelium plays an active role in the response to inhaled pathogens in part by responding to signals from the immune system. Epithelial responses may include changes in chemokine expression, increased mucin production and antimicrobial peptide secretion, and changes in ion transport. We previously demonstrated that interleukin-17A (IL-17A), which is critical for lung host defense against extracellular bacteria, significantly raised airway surface pH in vitro, a finding that is common to a number of inflammatory diseases. Using microarray analysis of normal human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells treated with IL-17A, we identified the electroneutral chloride-bicarbonate exchanger Pendrin (SLC26A4) as a potential mediator of this effect. These data were verified by real-time, quantitative PCR that demonstrated a time-dependent increase in Pendrin mRNA expression in HBE cells treated with IL-17A up to 48 h. Using immunoblotting and immunofluorescence, we confirmed that Pendrin protein expression is increased in IL-17 treated HBE cells and that it is primarily localized to the mucosal surface of the cells. Functional studies using live-cell fluorescence to measure intracellular pH demonstrated that IL-17A induced chloride-bicarbonate exchange in HBE cells that was not present in the absence of IL-17A. Furthermore, HBE cells treated with short interfering RNA against Pendrin showed substantially reduced chloride-bicarbonate exchange. These data suggest that Pendrin is part of IL-17A-dependent epithelial changes and that Pendrin may therefore be a therapeutic target in IL-17A-dependent lung disease.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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49. Maximum allowed solvent accessibilites of residues in proteins.
- Author
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Matthew Z Tien, Austin G Meyer, Dariya K Sydykova, Stephanie J Spielman, and Claus O Wilke
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The relative solvent accessibility (RSA) of a residue in a protein measures the extent of burial or exposure of that residue in the 3D structure. RSA is frequently used to describe a protein's biophysical or evolutionary properties. To calculate RSA, a residue's solvent accessibility (ASA) needs to be normalized by a suitable reference value for the given amino acid; several normalization scales have previously been proposed. However, these scales do not provide tight upper bounds on ASA values frequently observed in empirical crystal structures. Instead, they underestimate the largest allowed ASA values, by up to 20%. As a result, many empirical crystal structures contain residues that seem to have RSA values in excess of one. Here, we derive a new normalization scale that does provide a tight upper bound on observed ASA values. We pursue two complementary strategies, one based on extensive analysis of empirical structures and one based on systematic enumeration of biophysically allowed tripeptides. Both approaches yield congruent results that consistently exceed published values. We conclude that previously published ASA normalization values were too small, primarily because the conformations that maximize ASA had not been correctly identified. As an application of our results, we show that empirically derived hydrophobicity scales are sensitive to accurate RSA calculation, and we derive new hydrophobicity scales that show increased correlation with experimentally measured scales.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Sour ageusia in two individuals implicates ion channels of the ASIC and PKD families in human sour taste perception at the anterior tongue.
- Author
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Taufiqul Huque, Beverly J Cowart, Luba Dankulich-Nagrudny, Edmund A Pribitkin, Douglas L Bayley, Andrew I Spielman, Roy S Feldman, Scott A Mackler, and Joseph G Brand
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:The perception of sour taste in humans is incompletely understood at the receptor cell level. We report here on two patients with an acquired sour ageusia. Each patient was unresponsive to sour stimuli, but both showed normal responses to bitter, sweet, and salty stimuli. METHODS AND FINDINGS:Lingual fungiform papillae, containing taste cells, were obtained by biopsy from the two patients, and from three sour-normal individuals, and analyzed by RT-PCR. The following transcripts were undetectable in the patients, even after 50 cycles of amplification, but readily detectable in the sour-normal subjects: acid sensing ion channels (ASICs) 1a, 1beta, 2a, 2b, and 3; and polycystic kidney disease (PKD) channels PKD1L3 and PKD2L1. Patients and sour-normals expressed the taste-related phospholipase C-beta2, the delta-subunit of epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) and the bitter receptor T2R14, as well as beta-actin. Genomic analysis of one patient, using buccal tissue, did not show absence of the genes for ASIC1a and PKD2L1. Immunohistochemistry of fungiform papillae from sour-normal subjects revealed labeling of taste bud cells by antibodies to ASICs 1a and 1beta, PKD2L1, phospholipase C-beta2, and delta-ENaC. An antibody to PKD1L3 labeled tissue outside taste bud cells. CONCLUSIONS:These data suggest a role for ASICs and PKDs in human sour perception. This is the first report of sour ageusia in humans, and the very existence of such individuals ("natural knockouts") suggests a cell lineage for sour that is independent of the other taste modalities.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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