16 results on '"E. Aston"'
Search Results
2. Circulating adipokines are associated with pre-eclampsia in women with type 1 diabetes
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James A. Scardo, Timothy J. Lyons, Clare B. Kelly, Tore Henriksen, Satish K. Garg, Michelle B. Hookham, Alison Nankervis, Samar M. Hammad, Alicia J. Jenkins, Jeremy Y. Yu, Christopher Patterson, Samuel M. Lockhart, Kristian F. Hanssen, Christopher E. Aston, and Mei Du
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Adult ,Leptin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Adipokine ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Insulin resistance ,Adipokines ,Pre-Eclampsia ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Fatty acid binding protein ,Resistin ,Prospective Studies ,Retinol binding protein 4 ,Type 1 diabetes ,biology ,Adiponectin ,business.industry ,Diabetes ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Endocrinology ,biology.protein ,Female ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,Retinol-Binding Proteins, Plasma ,Pre-eclampsia - Abstract
Aims/hypothesis: The incidence of pre-eclampsia, a multisystem disorder of pregnancy, is fourfold higher in type 1 diabetic than non-diabetic women; it is also increased in women with features of the metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance. In a prospective study of pregnant women with type 1 diabetes, we measured plasma levels of adipokines known to be associated with insulin resistance: leptin, fatty acid binding protein 4 (FABP4), adiponectin (total and high molecular weight [HMW]; also known as high molecular mass), retinol binding protein 4 (RBP4) and resistin and evaluated associations with the subsequent development of pre-eclampsia. Methods: From an established prospective cohort of pregnant type 1 diabetic women, we studied 23 who developed pre-eclampsia and 24 who remained normotensive; for reference values we included 19 healthy non-diabetic normotensive pregnant women. Plasma adipokines were measured (by ELISA) in stored samples from three study visits (Visit 1– Visit 3) at different gestational ages (mean ± SD): Visit 1, 12.4 ± 1.8 weeks; Visit 2, 21.7 ± 1.4 weeks; and Visit 3, 31.4 ± 1.5 weeks. All the women were free of microalbuminuria and hypertension at enrolment. All study visits preceded the clinical onset of pre-eclampsia. Results: In all groups, leptin, the ratio of leptin to total or HMW adiponectin, FABP4 concentration, ratio of FABP4 to total or HMW adiponectin and resistin level increased, while total and HMW adiponectin decreased, with gestational age. At Visit 1: (1) in diabetic women with vs without subsequent pre-eclampsia, leptin, ratio of leptin to total or HMW adiponectin, and ratio of FABP4 to total or HMW adiponectin, were increased (p 1c, insulin kg−1 day−1 and gestational age), the best predictive models for pre-eclampsia were as follows: Visit 1, doubling of leptin, OR 9.0 (p
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- 2017
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3. Optimizing Biomass Feedstock Blends with Respect to Cost, Supply, and Quality for Catalyzed and Uncatalyzed Fast Pyrolysis Applications
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John E. Aston, Jeffrey A. Lacey, Vicki S. Thompson, and David N. Thompson
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Biomass to liquid ,Waste management ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,020209 energy ,Biomass ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Raw material ,Biorefinery ,01 natural sciences ,Biotechnology ,Renewable energy ,Demolition waste ,Biofuel ,Bioenergy ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Environmental science ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Energy (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Biomass cost, supply, and quality are critical parameters to consider when choosing feedstocks and locations for biorefineries. Biomass cost is dependent upon feedstock type, location, quantities available, logistics costs, and the quality specifications required by the biorefinery. Biomass quality depends upon feedstock type, growth conditions, weather, harvesting methods, storage conditions, and any preprocessing methods used to improve quality. Biomass quantity depends on location as well as growth conditions, weather, harvesting methods, and storage conditions. This study examines the interdependencies of these parameters and how they affect the biomass blends required by biomass depots and/or biorefineries to achieve the lowest cost feedstock with sufficient quality at the quantities needed for biorefinery operation. Four biomass depots were proposed in South Carolina to each produce 200,000 t of feedstock per year. These depots supply a centrally located 800,000 t biorefinery that converts the feedstocks to bio-oil using either catalyzed or uncatalyzed fast pyrolysis. The four depots utilize biomass based upon availability, but the feedstock or feedstock blend still met the minimum quality requirements for the biorefinery. Costs were minimized by using waste biomass resources such as construction and demolition waste, logging residues, and forest residuals. As necessary, preprocessing methods such as air classification and acid leaching were used to upgrade biomass quality. For both uncatalyzed and catalyzed fast pyrolysis, all four depots could produce biomass blends that met quality and quantity specifications at a cost lower than using a single feedstock.
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- 2017
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4. A peptidomimetic inhibitor suppresses the inducibility of β1-adrenergic autoantibody-mediated cardiac arrhythmias in the rabbit
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David C. Kem, Vineet Veitla, Ling Zhang, Xichun Yu, Bing Huang, Madeleine W. Cunningham, Christopher E. Aston, Benjamin J. Scherlag, and Hongliang Li
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sinus tachycardia ,Peptidomimetic ,Adrenergic ,Peptide ,Article ,Biomimetic Materials ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptor ,Autoantibodies ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,business.industry ,Autoantibody ,Arrhythmias, Cardiac ,Adrenergic beta-1 Receptor Antagonists ,Treatment Outcome ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Rabbits ,Receptors, Adrenergic, beta-1 ,medicine.symptom ,Antibody ,Peptides ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Acetylcholine ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Previous studies demonstrated that burst pacing and subthreshold infusion of acetylcholine in β1-adrenergic receptor (β1AR)-immunized rabbits induced sustained sinus tachycardia. The aim of this study was to examine the anti-arrhythmogenic effect of a newly designed retro-inverso (RI) peptidomimetic inhibitor that specifically targets the β1AR antibodies in the rabbit. Six New Zealand white rabbits were immunized with a β1AR second extracellular loop peptide to produce sympathomimetic β1AR antibodies. A catheter-based electrophysiological study was performed on anesthetized rabbits before and after immunization and subsequent treatment with the RI peptide inhibitor. Each rabbit served as its own control. No sustained arrhythmias were induced at preimmune baseline. At 6 weeks after immunization, there was a marked increase in induced sustained tachyarrhythmias, predominantly sinus tachycardia, which was largely suppressed by the RI peptide. The atrial effective refractory period was shortened significantly in immunized rabbits compared to their preimmune state. The RI peptide reversed and prolonged this shortening. β1AR antibody levels were negatively correlated with the atrial effective refractory period. Postimmune sera-induced β1AR activation in transfected cells in vitro was also blocked by the RI peptide. β1AR-activating autoantibodies are associated with reduction of the atrial effective refractory period and facilitate arrhythmia induction in this model. The RI peptide reversal may have important therapeutic implications in subjects who harbor these autoantibodies.
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- 2015
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5. The Informal Trade of Medicinal Plants by Rastafari Bush Doctors in the Western Cape of South Africa
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Lisa E. Aston Philander, Karen J. Esler, and Nokwanda P. Makunga
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Plant ecology ,Geography ,Range (biology) ,Agroforestry ,Ecology ,Ethnobotany ,Sustainability ,Biodiversity ,IUCN Red List ,Community-based conservation ,Plant Science ,Species richness ,Horticulture - Abstract
This research investigates the trade of medicinal plants by Rastafari bush doctors in the biologically diverse Western Cape region. Inventories of the plant collections of 52 bush doctors reveal 38.6 tons of 135 ethnospecies were traded with a market value of $733,000 (ZAR 5 million) in 2010. Although a small part of the total trade of medicinal plants in South Africa, the characteristics of the Rastafari trade are unique in many respects. Men dominate this trade, there is homogeneity of plant species among vendors, and low species richness in comparison to the area’s high floral diversity indicates a cultural sharing of plants and medical knowledge. Diversity indices and species accumulation curves verified adequate sampling efforts and reveal that the range of medicinal species from the Western Cape may not have not been fully exploited, with up to 35 species involved in the trade yet to be “discovered.” The 27 ethnospecies in high demand that are targeted as conservation priorities include six plants new to the trade, ten unsustainably harvested species, six endemic fynbos plants, two plants with rare phylogenies, and three identified in the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s (IUCN) Red List Status. Bush doctors play a crucial role in transmitting herbal healing traditions and influence the future of this traditional plant knowledge and the sustainability of their diverse ecosystem. Western Cape medicinal plant trafficking by Rastafari should be monitored based upon the developing nature of this trade, the growing popularity of the group, and their willingness to engage in gardening, where community–based conservation strategies may be successful.
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- 2014
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6. Local Medicinal Plant Knowledge in South Africa Preserved by Apartheid
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Lisa E. Aston Philander, Nokwanda P. Makunga, and Simon Platten
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Sociology and Political Science ,Ecology ,Cultural identity ,business.industry ,Urban sociology ,Biocultural diversity ,Ethnic group ,Distribution (economics) ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Political ecology ,Geography ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Development economics ,Health care ,business ,Socioeconomic status - Abstract
Apartheid isolated South Africa economically and politically from the global arena and its citizens culturally from one another. Post-apartheid policymakers have sought to address prior inequalities in education, health care and employment, concerns central to biodiversity conservation initiatives. This article examines the role of school gardening programs on the distribution and transmission of local phytomedicinal knowledge. Urban Cape Town, an area of high biocultural diversity, presents a unique environment in which to observe cultural distinctions in medicinal plant utilization, the impact of school gardening, and the recent cultural amalgamation in local knowledge transmission. Local healers chose 16 common medicinal plants, which were used to examine fifth and seventh graders’ knowledge of local remedies. Results indicate that knowledge of different plants was concentrated in specific ethnic groups and amongst recent migrants. It is proposed that ethnic separation during the apartheid era insulated cultures on socioeconomic and geo-environmental strata, thereby preserving local knowledge.
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- 2011
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7. Growth effects and assimilation of organic acids in chemostat and batch cultures of Acidithiobacillus caldus
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John E. Aston, Brent M. Peyton, William A. Apel, and Brady D. Lee
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Tetrathionate ,biology ,Physiology ,Potassium ,Inorganic chemistry ,Heterotroph ,chemistry.chemical_element ,General Medicine ,Acidithiobacillus ,Chemostat ,biology.organism_classification ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Dissolved organic carbon ,Carbon dioxide ,Food science ,Mixotroph ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The ability of Acidithiobacillus caldus to grow aerobically using pyruvate, acetate, citrate, 2-ketoglutarate, succinate, and malate as either an electron donor and carbon source (heterotrophic growth), or as a carbon source when potassium tetrathionate was added as an electron donor (mixotrophic growth), was tested in chemostat cultures. Under both heterotrophic and mixotrophic conditions, organic acids were added to a sub-lethal concentration (50 μM). Under mixotrophic conditions, potassium tetrathionate was added to an excess concentration (10 mM). No cell growth was observed under heterotrophic conditions; however, effluent cell concentrations increased over threefold when pyruvate was coupled with potassium tetrathionate. Under these conditions, the effluent pyruvate concentration was reduced to below the detection limit (2 μM), and oxygen consumption increased by approximately 100%. Although pyruvate provided a carbon source in these experiments, ambient carbon dioxide was also available to the cells. To test whether At. caldus could grow mixotrophically using pyruvate as a sole carbon source and potassium tetrathionate as an electron donor, cells were batch cultured in a medium free of dissolved inorganic carbon, and with no carbon dioxide in the headspace. These experiments showed that At. caldus was able to convert between 65 ± 8 and 82 ± 15% of the pyruvate carbon to cellular biomass, depending on the initial pyruvate concentrations. This work is the first to identify a defined organic-carbon source, other than glucose, that At. caldus can assimilate. This has important implications, as mixotrophic and heterotrophic activity has been shown to increase mineral leaching in acidic systems.
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- 2010
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8. Testing the association of novel meta-analysis-derived diabetes risk genes with type II diabetes and related metabolic traits in Asian Indian Sikhs
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Latonya F. Been, Sarju Ralhan, Dharambir K. Sanghera, Christopher E. Aston, John J. Mulvihill, Narinder K. Mehra, Lyda Ortega, and Gurpreet Singh Wander
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Male ,Oncology ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diabetes risk ,Population ,India ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Locus (genetics) ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Insulin resistance ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Ethnicity ,Genetics ,medicine ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Allele ,education ,Genetics (clinical) ,education.field_of_study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,Lipid Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Glucose ,Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Cohort ,Female - Abstract
A recent meta-analysis on three genome-wide association (GWA) scans identified six loci (NOTCH2, THADA, ADAMTS9, JAZF1, CDC123/CAMKID and TSPAN8/LGRS) highly associated with type II diabetes (T2D) in Caucasians. This investigation seeks to confirm this association with diabetes and related metabolic traits in Khatri Sikh diabetics of North India. We genotyped highly significant variants from each locus in a case-control cohort consisting of 680 T2D cases and 637 normoglycemic (NG) controls. Only CDC123/CAMKID (rs12779790) replicated earlier evidence of association with T2D under a dominant model (odds ratio (OR): 1.27; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.02-1.57; P=0.031) during initial testing. However, we could not confirm this association using multiple testing corrections. In a multiple linear-regression analysis, the same variant in the CDC123/CAMKID revealed a marked decrease in fasting insulin levels among 'G' (risk) allele carriers independently in NG controls (P=0.030) and in T2D cases (P=0.009), as well as in the combined sample (P=0.003) after adjusting for covariates. Evidence of impaired beta-cell function was also observed among 'G' (risk) allele carriers in T2D cases (P=0.008) and in a combined cohort (P=0.026). Our data could not confirm the role of the remaining variants with risk either for T2D or quantitative phenotypes measuring insulin secretion or insulin resistance. These findings suggest that CDC123/CAMKID could be a major risk factor for the development of T2D in Sikhs by affecting beta-cell function. To our knowledge, this is the first study reporting the role of recently emerging loci in this high-risk population from the South Asian subcontinent.
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- 2009
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9. Anti-angiogenic factors and pre-eclampsia in type 1 diabetic women
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Yongxin Yu, Kristian F. Hanssen, Hanne Scholz, Timothy J. Lyons, Joshua J. Wang, Tore Henriksen, M. K. Menard, K. May, Azar Dashti, K. Lu, Christopher E. Aston, John R. Stanley, Alicia J. Jenkins, Alison Nankervis, Samar M. Hammad, Torun Clausen, Bjorg Lorentzen, Jian Xing Ma, J. C. Scardo, Sarah X. Zhang, and Satish K. Garg
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Adult ,Placental growth factor ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Biology ,Preeclampsia ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Antigens, CD ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Nerve Growth Factors ,Eye Proteins ,Prospective cohort study ,Serpins ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Type 1 diabetes ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 ,Eclampsia ,Endoglin ,Membrane Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Pregnancy Complications ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Endocrinology ,Growth Hormone ,Female ,Tyrosine kinase - Abstract
Elevated anti-angiogenic factors such as soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFlt1), a soluble form of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor, and endoglin, a co-receptor for TGFbeta1, confer high risk of pre-eclampsia in healthy pregnant women. In this multicentre prospective study, we determined levels of these and related factors in pregnant women with type 1 diabetes, a condition associated with a fourfold increase in pre-eclampsia.Maternal serum sFlt1, endoglin, placental growth factor (PlGF) and pigment epithelial derived factor were measured in 151 type 1 diabetic and 24 healthy non-diabetic women at each trimester and at term.Approximately 22% of the diabetic women developed pre-eclampsia, primarily after their third trimester visit. In women with pre-eclampsia (diabetic pre-eclampsia, n = 26) vs those without hypertensive complications (diabetic normotensive, n = 95), significant changes in angiogenic factors were observed, predominantly in the early third trimester and prior to clinical manifestation of pre-eclampsia. Serum sFlt1 levels were increased approximately twofold in type 1 diabetic pre-eclampsia vs type 1 diabetic normotensive women at the third trimester visit (p0.05) and the normal rise of PlGF during pregnancy was blunted (p0.05). Among type 1 diabetic women, third trimester sFlt1 and PlGF were inversely related (r(2) = 42%, p0.0001). Endoglin levels were increased significantly in the diabetic group as a whole vs the non-diabetic group (p0.0001).Higher sFlt1 levels, a blunted PlGF rise and an elevated sFlt1/PlGF ratio are predictive of pre-eclampsia in pregnant women with type 1 diabetes. Elevated endoglin levels in women with type 1 diabetes may confer a predisposition to pre-eclampsia and may contribute to the high incidence of pre-eclampsia in this patient group.
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- 2008
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10. STOP-BANG questionnaire as a screening tool for diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea by unattended portable monitoring sleep study
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Christopher E. Aston, Kellie Jones, Ahmed Awab, Reuben Walia, and Viral Doshi
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Research ,Epworth Sleepiness Scale ,Apnea ,Home sleep study ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Blood pressure ,Apnea–hypopnea index ,STOP-BANG ,Emergency medicine ,Medicine ,Mass index ,Sleep study ,Sleep (system call) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,AHI ,Unattended portable monitoring - Abstract
The Snoring, Tiredness, Observed apnea, high blood Pressure (STOP)-Body mass index (BMI), Age, Neck circumference, and Gender (BANG) questionnaire is a well validated screening tool for diagnosis of Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) by an in- lab sleep study. However, performance of STOP-BANG as a screening tool for diagnosis of OSA in patients undergoing portable monitoring (PM) sleep study has not been well validated. We conducted a retrospective chart review of patients older than 18 years who had unattended portable monitoring sleep study done at a VA medical center between June 2012 and October 2014. STOP-BANG questionnaire and Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS) were routinely done prior to study. Sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value (PPV) various STOP-BANG score thresholds were calculated for diagnosis of OSA defined by Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) ≥5. Out of 502 unattended portable monitoring sleep studies, there were 465 males and 37 females. STOP-BANG thresholds of ≥2 and 3 have high sensitivity of 99.8 and 98.9 %, respectively, but very low specificity. Higher score thresholds of ≥7 and 8 have high specificity of 95 and 98.3 %, and PPV of 98.1 and 98.5 %, respectively, but very low sensitivity. A threshold of ≥7 in patients with BMI ≥30 was 100 % specific. The false negative rate for unattended portable monitoring sleep study compared to in-lab study was 80 %. STOP-BANG score thresholds of ≥7 and 8 are highly specific and have high PPV and therefore can potentially reduce need of diagnostic sleep studies in selected patients. Score thresholds of ≤2 or 3 are highly sensitive for AHI ≥5 by unattended portable monitoring sleep study but have high false negative rates. Therefore, in-lab sleep study should be performed to rule out OSA.
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- 2015
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11. Oligogenic combinations associated with breast cancer risk in women under 53�years of age
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Daniele C. DeFreese, Christopher E. Aston, David Ralph, Dannielle E. Branam, Dominique P. Lalo, Bobby A. Gramling, Eldon R. Jupe, Craig D. Shimasaki, Amy D. West, Melissa A Craft, Sharmila Manjeshwar, John J. Mulvihill, Debra S. Mitchell, and Linda F. Thompson
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Adult ,Risk ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Breast Neoplasms ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Breast cancer ,Gene Frequency ,Internal medicine ,Odds Ratio ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,education ,Allele frequency ,Genetics (clinical) ,education.field_of_study ,Case-control study ,Epistasis, Genetic ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Case-Control Studies ,Epistasis ,Female ,Steroid hormone metabolism - Abstract
Common, but weakly penetrant, functional polymorphisms probably account for most of the genetic risk for breast cancer in the general population. Current polygenic risk models assume that component genes act independently. To test for potential gene-gene interactions, single nucleotide polymorphisms in ten genes with known or predicted roles in breast carcinogenesis were examined in a case-control study of 631 Caucasian women diagnosed with breast cancer under the age of 53 years and 1,504 controls under the age of 53 years. Association of breast cancer risk with individual genes and with two- and three-gene combinations was analyzed. Sixty-nine oligogenotypes from 37 distinct two- and three-gene combinations met stringent criteria for significance. Significant odds ratios (ORs) covered a 12-fold range: 0.5-5.9. Of the observed ORs, 17% differed significantly from the ORs predicted by a model of independent gene action, suggesting epistasis, i.e., that these genes interact to affect breast cancer risk in a manner not predictable from single gene effects. Exploration of the biological basis for these oligogenic interactions might reveal etiologic or therapeutic insights into breast cancer and other cancers.
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- 2004
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12. Genetic screening of the lipoprotein lipase gene for mutations associated with high triglyceride/low HDL-cholesterol levels
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H. Razzaghi, Richard F. Hamman, Kamboh Mi, and Christopher E. Aston
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Adult ,Male ,Linkage disequilibrium ,Arteriosclerosis ,Population ,Nonsense mutation ,Deoxyribonuclease HindIII ,HindIII ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,White People ,Exon ,Risk Factors ,Genetics ,Humans ,Missense mutation ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Testing ,education ,Polymorphism, Single-Stranded Conformational ,Triglycerides ,Genetics (clinical) ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Lipoprotein lipase ,biology ,Cholesterol, HDL ,Single-strand conformation polymorphism ,Hispanic or Latino ,Middle Aged ,Molecular biology ,Lipoprotein Lipase ,Phenotype ,Haplotypes ,Multivariate Analysis ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Female ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length - Abstract
The lipoprotein lipase (LPL) enzyme plays a major role in lipid metabolism, primarily by regulating the catabolism of triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoprotein particles. The gene for LPL is an important candidate for affecting the risk of atherlosclerosis in the general population. Previously, we have shown that the HindIII polymorphism in intron 8 of the LPL gene is associated with plasma TG and HDL-cholesterol variation in Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites (NHWs). However, this polymorphism is located in an intron and hence may be in linkage disequilibrium with a functional mutation in the coding region or intron-exon junctions of the LPL gene. The aim of this study was to initially screen the LPL coding region and the intron-exon junctions by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis for mutation detection in a group of 86 individuals expressing the phenotype of high TG/low HDL, followed by association studies in a population-based sample of 1,014 Hispanics and NHWs. Four sequence variations were identified by SSCP and DNA sequencing in the coding region of the gene, including two missense mutations (D9N in exon 2 and N291S in exon 6), one samesense mutation (V108V in exon 3), and one nonsense mutation (S447X in exon 9). Multiple regression analyses, including these four mutations and the HindIII polymorphic site, indicate that the association of the HindIII site with plasma TG (P=0.001 in NHWs and P=0.002 in Hispanics) and HDL-cholesterol (P=0.007 in NHWs and P=0.127 in Hispanics) is independent of all other LPL variable sites examined. These observations reinforce the concept that the intronic 8 HindIII site is functional by itself and provide a strong rationale for future comprehensive functional studies to delineate its biological significance.
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- 2000
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13. Variants in KCNQ1 increase type II diabetes susceptibility in South Asians: A study of 3,310 subjects from India and the US
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John J. Mulvihill, Latonya F. Been, Sarju Ralhan, Jai Rup Singh, Narinder K. Mehra, Gurpreet Singh Wander, Christopher E. Aston, and Dharambir K. Sanghera
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Male ,lcsh:Internal medicine ,Genotype ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,endocrine system diseases ,India ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Locus (genetics) ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Genome-wide association study ,Gene mutation ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetics(clinical) ,Allele ,lcsh:RC31-1245 ,Allele frequency ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Haplotype ,Middle Aged ,United States ,lcsh:Genetics ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Haplotypes ,Case-Control Studies ,KCNQ1 Potassium Channel ,Cohort ,Female ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Polymorphisms in intron 15 of potassium voltage-gated channel, KQT-like subfamily member 1 (KCNQ1) gene have been associated with type II diabetes (T2D) in Japanese genome-wide association studies (GWAS). More recently a meta-analysis of European GWAS has detected a new independent signal associated with T2D in intron 11 of the KCNQ1 gene. The purpose of this investigation is to examine the role of these variants with T2D in populations of Asian Indian descent from India and the US. Methods We examined the association between four variants in the KCNQ1 gene with T2D and related quantitative traits in a total of 3,310 Asian Indian participants from two different cohorts comprising 2,431 individuals of the Punjabi case-control cohort from the Sikh Diabetes Study and 879 migrant Asian Indians living in the US. Results Our data confirmed the association of a new signal at the KCNQ1 locus (rs231362) with T2D showing an allelic odds ratio (OR) of 1.24 95%CI [1.08-1.43], p = 0.002 in the Punjabi cohort. A moderate association with T2D was also seen for rs2237895 in the Punjabi (OR 1.14; p = 0.036) and combined cohorts (meta-analysis OR 1.14; p = 0.018). Three-site haplotype analysis of rs231362, rs2237892, rs2237895 exhibited considerably stronger evidence of association of the GCC haplotype with T2D showing OR of 1.24 95%CI [1.00-1.53], p = 0.001, permutation p = 8 × 10-4 in combined cohorts. The 'C' risk allele carriers of rs2237895 had significantly reduced measures of HOMA-B in the US cohort (p = 0.008) as well as in combined cohort in meta-analysis (p = 0.009). Conclusions Our investigation has confirmed that the variation within the KCNQ1 locus confers a significant risk to T2D among Asian Indians. Haplotype analysis further suggested that the T2D risk associated with KCNQ1 SNPs may be derived from 'G' allele of rs231362 and 'C' allele of rs2237895 and this appears to be mediated through β cell function.
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- 2011
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14. Response to Fay’s Comments: Apartheid and the Erosion or Preservation of Medicinal Plant Knowledge
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Lisa E. Aston Philander
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History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Ecology ,Anthropology ,Erosion ,Environmental ethics ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Archaeology - Published
- 2012
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15. Bleomycin hydrolase is associated with risk of sporadic Alzheimer's disease
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Kamboh Mi, Susana E. Montoya, Christopher E. Aston, John S. Lazo, Robert E. Ferrell, and Steven T. DeKosky
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Heterozygote ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,business.industry ,Homozygote ,Bleomycin hydrolase ,Disease ,Biology ,Cysteine Endopeptidases ,Apolipoproteins E ,Text mining ,Gene Frequency ,Alzheimer Disease ,Case-Control Studies ,Genetics ,Cancer research ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,business - Published
- 1998
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16. Gene expression profiling in a model of human neuronal differentiation using oligonucleotide arrays
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Greg Tucker Kellogg, Anne Marie Velasco, Aiqing He, Peter W. Andrews, Stefan Pzyborski, Christopher E. Aston, Andrew Wood, and Stanley C. Smith
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Gene expression profiling ,nervous system ,Neuronal differentiation ,Genetics ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Oligonucleotide Arrays ,Molecular biology - Abstract
Gene expression profiling in a model of human neuronal differentiation using oligonucleotide arrays
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- 1999
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