796 results on '"Rakesh K. Singh"'
Search Results
102. Antifungal Activity of Siderophore Isolated From Escherichia coli Against Aspergillus nidulans via Iron-Mediated Oxidative Stress
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Ganesh Kumar Agrawal, Usha Mina, Amrita Srivastava, Pratika Singh, Abhijit Sarkar, Sujit Das, Rakesh K. Singh, Azmi Khan, Ravinsh Kumar, and Randeep Rakwal
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Microbiology (medical) ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Siderophore ,Reactive oxygen species ,siderophore ,biology ,Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,antimicrobials ,QR1-502 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,Catalase ,Aspergillus nidulans ,biology.protein ,medicine ,oxidative stress ,fungi ,Propidium iodide ,Growth inhibition ,Escherichia coli ,Intracellular ,protein modeling - Abstract
Microorganisms produce various secondary metabolites for growth and survival. During iron stress, they produce secondary metabolites termed siderophores. In the current investigation, antifungal activity of catecholate siderophore produced by Escherichia coli has been assessed against Aspergillus nidulans. Exogenous application of the bacterial siderophore to fungal cultures resulted in decreased colony size, increased filament length, and changes in hyphal branching pattern. Growth inhibition was accompanied with increased intracellular iron content. Scanning electron microscopy revealed dose-dependent alteration in fungal morphology. Fluorescent staining by propidium iodide revealed cell death in concert with growth inhibition with increasing siderophore concentration. Antioxidative enzyme activity was also compromised with significant increase in catalase activity and decrease in ascorbate peroxidase activity. Siderophore-treated cultures showed increased accumulation of reactive oxygen species as observed by fluorescence microscopy and enhanced membrane damage in terms of malondialdehyde content. Antifungal property might thus be attributed to xenosiderophore-mediated iron uptake leading to cell death. STRING analysis showed interaction of MirB (involved in transport of hydroxamate siderophore) and MirA (involved in transport of catecholate siderophore), confirming the possibility of uptake of iron–xenosiderophore complex through fungal transporters. MirA structure was modeled and validated with 95% residues occurring in the allowed region. In silico analysis revealed MirA–Enterobactin–Fe3+ complex formation. Thus, the present study reveals a promising antifungal agent in the form of catecholate siderophore and supports involvement of MirA fungal receptors in xenosiderophore uptake.
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- 2021
103. Detoxifying aflatoxin contaminated peanuts by high concentration of H2O2 at moderate temperature and catalase inactivation
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Ming-Hsun Shen and Rakesh K. Singh
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Food Science ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2022
104. Micronization enhanced extractability of polyphenols and anthocyanins in tart cherry puree
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Nishtha Lukhmana, Fanbin Kong, and Rakesh K. Singh
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Biochemistry ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
105. Differential expression profile of CXC-receptor-2 ligands as potential biomarkers in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
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Sugandha, Saxena, Caitlin, Molczyk, Abhilasha, Purohit, Evie, Ehrhorn, Paran, Goel, Dipakkumar R, Prajapati, Pranita, Atri, Sukhwinder, Kaur, Paul M, Grandgenett, Michael A, Hollingsworth, Surinder K, Batra, and Rakesh K, Singh
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Original Article - Abstract
The discovery of early detection markers of pancreatic cancer (PC) disease is highly warranted. We analyzed the expression profile of different CXC-receptor-2 (CXCR2) ligands in PC cases for the potential of biomarker candidates. Analysis of different PDAC microarray datasets with matched normal and pancreatic tumor samples and next-generation sequenced transcriptomics data using an online portal showed significantly high expression of CXCL-1, 3, 5, 6, 8 in the tumors of PC patients. High CXCL5 expression was correlated to poor PC patient survival. Interestingly, mRNA and protein expression analysis of human PC cell lines showed higher CXCL2, 3, and 5 expressions in cell lines derived from metastatic sites than primary tumors. Furthermore, we utilized immunohistochemistry (IHC) to evaluate the expression of CXCR2 ligands in the human PC tumors and observed positive staining for CXCL1, 3, and 8 with a higher average IHC composite score of CXCL3 in the PC tissue specimens than the normal pancreas. We also observed an increase in the expression of mouse CXCL1, 3, and 5 in the pre-cancerous lesions of tumors and metastasis tissues derived from the PDX-cre-LSL-Kras(G12D) mouse model. Together, our data suggest that different CXCR2 ligands show the potential of being utilized as a diagnostic biomarker in PC patients.
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- 2021
106. CD300a Receptor Blocking Enhances Early Clearance of
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Rajan, Singh, Anshul, Anand, Arun K, Rawat, Shashi, Saini, Baishakhi, Mahapatra, Naveen K, Singh, Alok K, Mishra, Samer, Singh, Nisha, Singh, Dhiraj, Kishore, Vinod, Kumar, Pradeep, Das, and Rakesh K, Singh
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Leishmania ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Phagocytes ,T-Lymphocytes ,Immunology ,T cells ,Lymphocyte Activation ,macrophages ,Mice ,RAW 264.7 Cells ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Animals ,Leishmaniasis, Visceral ,Female ,CD300a ,dendritic cells ,Receptors, Immunologic ,Leishmania donovani ,Original Research - Abstract
The parasites of the genus Leishmania survive and proliferate in the host phagocytic cells by taking control over their microbicidal functions. The parasite also promotes differentiation of antigen-specific anti-inflammatory cytokines producing effector T cells, which eventually results in disease pathogenesis. The mechanisms that parasites employ to dominate host adaptive immunity are largely unknown. For the first time, we report that L. donovani, which causes visceral leishmaniasis in the Indian subcontinent, upregulates the expression of an immune inhibitory receptor i.e., CD300a on antigen presenting and phagocytic cells to dampen their effector functions. The blocking of CD300a signals in leishmania antigens activated macrophages and dendritic cells enhanced the production of nitric oxide, pro-inflammatory cytokines along with MHCI/II genes expression, and reduced parasitic uptake. Further, the abrogation of CD300a signals in Leishmania infected mice benefited antigen-experienced, i.e., CD4+CD44+ and CD8+CD44+ T cells to acquire more pro-inflammatory cytokines producing phenotypes and helped in the early clearance of parasites from their visceral organs. The CD300a receptor blocking also enhanced the conversion of CD4+ T effectors cells to their memory phenotypes i.e., CCR7high CD62Lhigh up to 1.6 and 1.9 fold after 14 and 21 days post-infection, respectively. These findings implicate that CD300a is an important determinant of host phagocytic cells functions and T cells differentiation against Leishmania antigens.
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- 2021
107. Effective UV wavelength range for increasing aflatoxins reduction and decreasing oil deterioration in contaminated peanuts
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Ming-Hsun Shen and Rakesh K. Singh
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Aflatoxins ,Arachis ,Ultraviolet Rays ,Food Science - Abstract
Many studies have demonstrated that UV radiation can degrade aflatoxins (AF) in contaminated foods. However, the effective wavelength ranges for AF decomposition and their impacts on the quality of foods have not been elucidated. This study investigated the AF reduction and oil quality change in peanuts subjected to three types of 17 W low-pressure (LP) UV lamps covering UV-A (Max. emission: 365 nm), UV-B (Max. emission: 310 nm), and UV-C (Max. emission: 254 nm) ranges and a 2000 W medium-pressure UV lamp covering from UV-A to UV-C. We used peeled-kernels for this study since the peanut skin represented an ability to protect AF from being degraded by UV. LP UV-A lamp treatment has shown the highest AF reduction in artificially spiked peeled-kernels and no detectable oil deterioration. With the same delivered UV dosage as LP lamp, MP lamp has shown the same level of AF reduction as LP UV-A lamp did, indicating such treatment was energy inefficient. Treating Aspergillus nomius inobulated peeled-kernels by two LP UV-A lamps (2.76 mW/cm
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- 2021
108. Abstract P421: Analysis Of The Functional Relevance Of Human Beta-myosin Heavy Chain Post-translational Modifications
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Michelle S. Parvatiyar, P.B. Chase, Maicon Landim-Vieira, J. Renato Pinto, Matthew C. Childers, Bryan A. Whitson, Brandon J. Biesiadecki, Rakesh K. Singh, Elizabeth A. Brundage, Amanda L. Wacker, Paul M.L. Janssen, Michelle C. Rodriguez Garcia, and Michael Regnier
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Beta-Myosin ,Heavy chain ,Physiology ,Chemistry ,Biophysics ,Posttranslational modification ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Sarcomeric proteins have been shown to be a target of post-translational modifications (PTMs). Phosphorylation and acetylation of several sarcomeric proteins have been reported to be important for fine-tuning of myocardial contractility. Given the emerging importance of understanding the potential role of PTMs on cardiac muscle performance in healthy and diseased states, we sought to identify novel PTMs on human cardiac beta-myosin heavy chain (beta-MHC). We found several high confidence beta-MHC peptides modified by K-acetylation and S- and T-phosphorylation found in non-diseased, ischemic, and non-ischemic human heart samples. Using bottom-up proteomics and label-free quantification, we identified seven high-confidence peptides (K34, K58, S210, T215, K429, K951, K1195) with K951 displaying significant reduction in acetylation levels in both ischemic and non-ischemic failing hearts compared to donor hearts. Molecular dynamics simulations were performed to better understand the functional significance of the beta-MHC PTMs. Focus was placed on modifications in the regions with greatest potential functional significance as well as modified residues with significantly altered abundance in diseased states (K951-Ac at the myosin tail nearby a binding site for myosin heads in the super-relaxed state). K951 is located in the myosin tail (S2) at the C-terminal end of simulated structure. In both unmodified and modified simulations, the tail fragment showed significant flexibility and partial unfolding at the C-terminus. In the unmodified simulations, the inter- and intra-helical contacts were maintained. However, when beta-MHC is acetylated at residue 951, these helical contacts were altered as the uncharged acetylated residue no longer formed strong hydrogen bonds with a residue of the opposite chain. This facilitated changes increase in inter-helical contacts, an increase in inter-helical distance, and disruption of the coiled-coil tail domain structure. Our study suggests that there are distinct differences in beta-MHC acetylation levels that appear to be influenced more by location of the modified residues than the type of heart disease (ischemic- and non-ischemic heart failure). Additionally, we speculate that these PTMs have the potential to modulate the interactions between beta-MHC and other regulatory sarcomeric proteins, as well as ADP-release rate of myosin, flexibility of S2 fragment, and cardiac myofilament contractility under normal and heart failure condition.
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- 2021
109. Primary-level worker interventions for the care of people living with mental disorders and distress in low- and middle-income countries
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Antonio Rojas-García, Anna Borghesani, Sarah McMullen, Ambika Thapa Pachya, Eleonora Uphoff, Amin Ussif, Ujala Shahmalak, Marianna Purgato, Hakan Safaralilo Foss, Nadja van Ginneken, Lee Yee Chong, Laleh Rashidian, Yen Chian Lim, Rakesh K. Singh, Weng Yee Chin, Nicholas Henschke, and Simon Lewin
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders [*therapy] ,Psychological intervention ,Postpartum [therapy] ,Developing Countries ,Post-Traumatic [therapy] ,Mental distress ,Allied Health Personnel ,Anxiety [therapy] ,Dementia [therapy] ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Adverse effect ,Child ,Disorders ,Substance dependence ,business.industry ,Depression ,Mental Disorders ,Alcohol-Related Disorders [therapy] ,Mental Disorders [*therapy] ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Stress ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Depression [therapy] ,Distress ,Mental Health ,Caregivers ,Relative risk ,Physical therapy ,Quality of Life ,Female ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Community-based primary-level workers (PWs) are an important strategy for addressing gaps in mental health service delivery in low- and middle-income countries. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effectiveness of PW-led treatments for persons with mental health symptoms in LMICs, compared to usual care. SEARCH METHODS: MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, ClinicalTrials.gov, ICTRP, reference lists (to 20 June 2019). SELECTION CRITERIA: Randomised trials of PW-led or collaborative-care interventions treating people with mental health symptoms or their carers in LMICs. PWs included: primary health professionals (PHPs), lay health workers (LHWs), community non-health professionals (CPs). DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Seven conditions were identified apriori and analysed by disorder and PW examining recovery, prevalence, symptom change, quality-of-life (QOL), functioning, service use (SU), and adverse events (AEs). Risk ratios (RRs) were used for dichotomous outcomes; mean difference (MDs), standardised mean differences (SMDs), or mean change differences (MCDs) for continuous outcomes. For SMDs, 0.20 to 0.49 represented small, 0.50 to 0.79 moderate, and ≥0.80 large clinical effects. Analysis timepoints: T1 (6 months) post-intervention. MAIN RESULTS: Description of studies 95 trials (72 new since 2013) from 30 LMICs (25 trials from 13 LICs). Risk of bias Most common: detection bias, attrition bias (efficacy), insufficient protection against contamination. Intervention effects *Unless indicated, comparisons were usual care at T2. "Probably", "may", or "uncertain" indicates "moderate", "low," or "very low" certainty evidence. Adults with common mental disorders (CMDs) LHW-led interventions a. may increase recovery (2 trials, 308 participants; RR 1.29, 95%CI 1.06 to 1.56); b. may reduce prevalence (2 trials, 479 participants; RR 0.42, 95%CI 0.18 to 0.96); c. may reduce symptoms (4 trials, 798 participants; SMD -0.59, 95%CI -1.01 to -0.16); d. may improve QOL (1 trial, 521 participants; SMD 0.51, 95%CI 0.34 to 0.69); e. may slightly reduce functional impairment (3 trials, 1399 participants; SMD -0.47, 95%CI -0.8 to -0.15); f. may reduce AEs (risk of suicide ideation/attempts); g. may have uncertain effects on SU. Collaborative-care a. may increase recovery (5 trials, 804 participants; RR 2.26, 95%CI 1.50 to 3.43); b. may reduce prevalence although the actual effect range indicates it may have little-or-no effect (2 trials, 2820 participants; RR 0.57, 95%CI 0.32 to 1.01); c. may slightly reduce symptoms (6 trials, 4419 participants; SMD -0.35, 95%CI -0.63 to -0.08); d. may slightly improve QOL (6 trials, 2199 participants; SMD 0.34, 95%CI 0.16 to 0.53); e. probably has little-to-no effect on functional impairment (5 trials, 4216 participants; SMD -0.13, 95%CI -0.28 to 0.03); f. may reduce SU (referral to MH specialists); g. may have uncertain effects on AEs (death). Women with perinatal depression (PND) LHW-led interventions a. may increase recovery (4 trials, 1243 participants; RR 1.29, 95%CI 1.08 to 1.54); b. probably slightly reduce symptoms (5 trials, 1989 participants; SMD -0.26, 95%CI -0.37 to -0.14); c. may slightly reduce functional impairment (4 trials, 1856 participants; SMD -0.23, 95%CI -0.41 to -0.04); d. may have little-to-no effect on AEs (death); e. may have uncertain effects on SU. Collaborative-care a. has uncertain effects on symptoms/QOL/SU/AEs. Adults with post-traumatic stress (PTS) or CMDs in humanitarian settings LHW-led interventions a. may slightly reduce depression symptoms (5 trials, 1986 participants; SMD -0.36, 95%CI -0.56 to -0.15); b. probably slightly improve QOL (4 trials, 1918 participants; SMD -0.27, 95%CI -0.39 to -0.15); c. may have uncertain effects on symptoms (PTS)/functioning/SU/AEs. PHP-led interventions a. may reduce PTS symptom prevalence (1 trial, 313 participants; RR 5.50, 95%CI 2.50 to 12.10) and depression prevalence (1 trial, 313 participants; RR 4.60, 95%CI 2.10 to 10.08); b. may have uncertain effects on symptoms/functioning/SU/AEs. Adults with harmful/hazardous alcohol or substance use LHW-led interventions a. may increase recovery from harmful/hazardous alcohol use although the actual effect range indicates it may have little-or-no effect (4 trials, 872 participants; RR 1.28, 95%CI 0.94 to 1.74); b. may have little-to-no effect on the prevalence of methamphetamine use (1 trial, 882 participants; RR 1.01, 95%CI 0.91 to 1.13) and functional impairment (2 trials, 498 participants; SMD -0.14, 95%CI -0.32 to 0.03); c. probably slightly reduce risk of harmful/hazardous alcohol use (3 trials, 667 participants; SMD -0.22, 95%CI -0.32 to -0.11); d. may have uncertain effects on SU/AEs. PHP/CP-led interventions a. probably have little-to-no effect on recovery from harmful/hazardous alcohol use (3 trials, 1075 participants; RR 0.93, 95%CI 0.77 to 1.12) or QOL (1 trial, 560 participants; MD 0.00, 95%CI -0.10 to 0.10); b. probably slightly reduce risk of harmful/hazardous alcohol and substance use (2 trials, 705 participants; SMD -0.20, 95%CI -0.35 to -0.05; moderate-certainty evidence); c. may have uncertain effects on prevalence (cannabis use)/SU/AEs. PW-led interventions for alcohol/substance dependence a. may have uncertain effects. Adults with severe mental disorders *Comparisons were specialist-led care at T1. LHW-led interventions a. may have little-to-no effect on caregiver burden (1 trial, 253 participants; MD -0.04, 95%CI -0.18 to 0.11); b. may have uncertain effects on symptoms/functioning/SU/AEs. PHP-led or collaborative-care a. may reduce functional impairment (7 trials, 874 participants; SMD -1.13, 95%CI -1.78 to -0.47); b. may have uncertain effects on recovery/relapse/symptoms/QOL/SU. Adults with dementia and carers PHP/LHW-led carer interventions a. may have little-to-no effect on the severity of behavioural symptoms in dementia patients (2 trials, 134 participants; SMD -0.26, 95%CI -0.60 to 0.08); b. may reduce carers' mental distress (2 trials, 134 participants; SMD -0.47, 95%CI -0.82 to -0.13); c. may have uncertain effects on QOL/functioning/SU/AEs. Children with PTS or CMDs LHW-led interventions a. may have little-to-no effect on PTS symptoms (3 trials, 1090 participants; MCD -1.34, 95%CI -2.83 to 0.14); b. probably have little-to-no effect on depression symptoms (3 trials, 1092 participants; MCD -0.61, 95%CI -1.23 to 0.02) or on functional impairment (3 trials, 1092 participants; MCD -0.81, 95%CI -1.48 to -0.13); c. may have little-or-no effect on AEs. CP-led interventions a. may have little-to-no effect on depression symptoms (2 trials, 602 participants; SMD -0.19, 95%CI -0.57 to 0.19) or on AEs; b. may have uncertain effects on recovery/symptoms(PTS)/functioning.AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: PW-led interventions show promising benefits in improving outcomes for CMDs, PND, PTS, harmful alcohol/substance use, and dementia carers in LMICs.
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- 2021
110. Determining aflatoxins in raw peanuts using immunoaffinity column as sample clean-up method followed by normal-phase HPLC-FLD analysis
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Ming-Hsun Shen and Rakesh K. Singh
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Food Science ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2022
111. Mechanical counterbalance of kinesin and dynein motors in microtubular network regulates cell mechanics, 3D architecture, and mechanosensing
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Alexander Zhovmer, Dylan T. Burnette, Alexis Manning, James. B. Hayes, Rakesh K. Singh, Chynna Smith, Erdem Tabdanov, and Alexander X. Cartagena-Rivera
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Motor protein ,Chemistry ,Microtubule ,Cell cortex ,Dynein ,Biophysics ,Kinesin ,macromolecular substances ,Cell adhesion ,Cell mechanics ,Contact guidance - Abstract
Microtubules (MTs) and MT motor proteins form active 3D networks made of unstretchable cables with rod-like bending mechanics that provide cells with a dynamically changing structural scaffold. In this study, we report an antagonistic mechanical balance within the dynein-kinesin microtubular motor system. Dynein activity drives microtubular network inward compaction, while isolated activity of kinesins bundles and expands MTs into giant circular bands that deform the cell cortex into discoids. Furthermore, we show that dyneins recruit MTs to sites of cell adhesion increasing topographic contact guidance of cells, while kinesins antagonize it via retraction of MTs from sites of cell adhesion. Actin-to-microtubules translocation of septin-9 enhances kinesins-MTs interactions, outbalances activity of kinesins over dyneins and induces discoid architecture of cells. These orthogonal mechanisms of MT network reorganization highlight the existence of an intricate mechanical balance between motor activities of kinesins and dyneins that controls cell 3D architecture, mechanics, and cell-microenvironment interactions.
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- 2021
112. Potential Health Benefits of Citrus
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Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Jennifer S. Brodbelt, Edward G. Miller, Nancy D. Turner, Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Jennifer S. Brodbelt, Edward G. Miller, Nancy D. Turner, Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Jun Yu, Deepak V. Dandekar, Romeo T. Toledo, Rakesh K. Singh, Leonard M. Pike, Guddadarangavvanahally K. Jayaprakasha and Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Jennifer S. Brodbelt, Edward G. Miller, Nancy D. Turner, Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Jennifer S. Brodbelt, Edward G. Miller, Nancy D. Turner, Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Jun Yu, Deepak V. Dandekar, Romeo T. Toledo, Rakesh K. Singh, Leonard M. Pike, Guddadarangavvanahally K. Jayaprakasha
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- 2006
113. Psychometric properties of Adolescent Resilience Questionnaire among Nepalese adolescents in Lalitpur
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Suraj Bhushal, Sharika Mahato, Rakesh K. Singh, Fatemeh Khoshnavay Fomani, and Babita Singh
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Male ,Nepali ,Adolescent ,Psychometrics ,Intraclass correlation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology, Adolescent ,Factor structure ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nepal ,Cronbach's alpha ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Resilience, Psychological ,language.human_language ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,language ,Female ,Psychological resilience ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background : Although the need of measuring resilience among adolescents has gained attention in recent decades, there is no availability of an appropriate tool designed yet to assess resilience among Nepalese adolescents. This paper describes the psychometric properties of Adolescent Resilience Questionnaire (ARQ) among Nepalese adolescent students in Lalitpur which could be a possible tool for measuring resilience. Method : The ARQ was translated into Nepali and back translated in English. The Nepali ARQ was self-administered in 512 adolescent students with 46.7% boys between the age of 13 and 19 years (M = 16.07 years, SD = 1.49) enrolled in six secondary schools in Lalitpur, Nepal. Test-retest reliability was assessed among 52 adolescent students within an interval of two weeks. Results : Findings confirmed 12 scales and 5 domain factor structure of adolescents’ resilience. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient (α) for the scales and domains ranged between 0.64-0.86 and 0.71-0.86. The values of Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) showed that test-retest reliability of the scales and domains ranged between good and excellent with an overall ICC 0.95 (95% CI 0.92–0.97). Conclusion : The Nepali version of the ARQ can be used to measure resilience among adolescents in Lalitpur, Nepal. Further studies are recommended to assess adolescents’ resilience using the ARQ in diverse settings including communities of various provinces and regions of Nepal.
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- 2019
114. Inactivation of Salmonella Enteritidis and Enterococcus faecium NRRL B-2354 in corn flour by radio frequency heating with subsequent freezing
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Juming Tang, Samet Ozturk, Jie Xu, Fanbin Kong, Rakesh K. Singh, Jinru Chen, and Shuxiang Liu
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0106 biological sciences ,Salmonella ,biology ,Water activity ,Chemistry ,Salmonella enteritidis ,Microorganism ,Pasteurization ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,040401 food science ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,law ,Salmonella enterica ,010608 biotechnology ,Dielectric heating ,medicine ,Food science ,Food Science ,Enterococcus faecium - Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of using Enterococcus faecium NRRL B-2354 (E. faecium) as a surrogate of Salmonella enterica Enteritidis PT30 (S. Enteritidis PT30), validate radio frequency (RF) heating in pasteurizing corn flour, and study the effect of subsequent freezing treatment after RF heating in enhancing the microbial inactivation effect. Corn flour with water activity of 0.45 ± 0.05 at 25 °C was homogeneously inoculated with S. Enteritidis PT30 and E. faecium separately at 8.50 ± 0.23 log CFU/g. Thermal resistance parameters in corn flour were determined in a water bath at 75, 80, and 85 °C and RF heating was used to pasteurize 3.18 kg corn flour with subsequent freezing storage at −20 °C. Results showed that the thermal resistance of E. faecium was higher than S. Enteritidis PT30. Samples heated to 85 °C, held for 10 min after heating in a RF system, and then stored at −20 °C for 48 h, resulted in the reduction of S. Enteritidis PT30 by 6.59 ± 0.21 log and E. faecium by 4.79 ± 0.17 log. E. faecium could be used as its surrogate for validation studies in the packaged corn flour. Results also confirmed that RF heating combined with freezing storage treatment could significantly reduce the survival of both microorganisms in corn flour.
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- 2019
115. Economic Burden of Switching to Different Biologic Therapies Among Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitor-Experienced Patients with Psoriatic Arthritis
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Rakesh K. Singh, Keith A. Betts, Jenny Griffith, Jerry Clewell, Yichen Lu, and Yan Song
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medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Treatment discontinuation ,Etanercept ,Claims database analysis ,Psoriatic arthritis ,Rheumatology ,Tumor necrosis factor inhibitor ,Internal medicine ,Healthcare resource utilization ,Ustekinumab ,Adalimumab ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Certolizumab pegol ,Original Research ,business.industry ,Healthcare costs ,medicine.disease ,Golimumab ,Infliximab ,Discontinuation ,lcsh:RC925-935 ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction Patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) who receive an initial tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi) may switch to another TNFi or a non-TNFi biologic therapy. This study compared the healthcare resource use (HRU), expenditures, and time to discontinuation among TNFi-experienced patients with PsA who switched to different biologic therapies in the United States (US). Methods Adults with PsA who discontinued an initial TNFi (adalimumab, etanercept, infliximab, golimumab, or certolizumab pegol) and switched to another TNFi or a non-TNFi (ustekinumab or secukinumab) were identified in the Symphony Health Solutions database [Quarter (Q)1 2010–Q2 2017]. Eligible patients had claims data activity for ≥ 12 months before (baseline) and after (study period) the switching date. All-cause HRU, costs (2017 US dollars), and time to discontinuation during the study period were compared between patients switching to another TNFi vs. a non-TNFi (index drug). Multivariable regression models adjusted for baseline covariates (index year, age, sex, initial TNFi, comorbidities, baseline HRU, and PsA-related treatment history). Results Of 2107 patients switching to another TNFi and 253 switching to a non-TNFi, adalimumab and etanercept were the most common initial TNFi in both cohorts. During the study period, patients switching to another TNFi had significantly fewer dermatologists visits (0.43; p
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- 2019
116. Anti-inflammatory Activity of Ursolic Acid in MPTP-Induced Parkinsonian Mouse Model
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Walia Zahra, Sachchida Nand Rai, Rakesh K. Singh, Saumitra Sen Singh, Hagera Dilnashin, Rajan Singh, Chetan Keswani, Aaina Singh Rathore, Hareram Birla, and Surya Pratap Singh
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Substantia nigra ,Pharmacology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiparkinson Agents ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Parkinsonian Disorders ,Malondialdehyde ,medicine ,Animals ,Nitrites ,Neuroinflammation ,Inflammation ,Tyrosine hydroxylase ,Pars compacta ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,MPTP ,Neurodegeneration ,Brain ,Catalase ,medicine.disease ,Glutathione ,Symptomatic relief ,Triterpenes ,nervous system diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,nervous system ,chemistry ,1-Methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine ,Rotarod Performance Test ,Lipid Peroxidation ,business ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
Neuroinflammation plays an important role in the progression of Parkinson's disease (PD) and hence may represent a target for treatment. The drugs used currently for PD only provide symptomatic relief and have adverse effects in addition to their inability in preventing degeneration of neurons. Flavonoids show potent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities which is very valuable for the health of human beings. Thus, in the present study, we have tried to explore the anti-inflammatory activity of orally given ursolic acid (UA) (25 mg/kg bwt), a pentacyclic triterpenoid in 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP)-intoxicated mouse model. Significant severe oxidative stress and biochemical alterations have been seen in Parkinsonian mice after MPTP intoxication. Whereas, UA administration has significantly rescued the harmful consequence of MPTP intoxication. Ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule 1 (Iba1), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and nuclear transcription factor-κB (NF-κB) were seen to be altered in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) of MPTP-intoxicated mice through immunohistochemical studies. The changes in the expression level of these parameters primarily suggest increased inflammatory responses in MPTP-intoxicated mice as compared with the control. However, UA have significantly reduced these inflammatory parameters (Iba1 and TNF-α) along with transcription factor NF-κB, which regulates these inflammatory parameters and thus have inhibited MPTP-induced neuroinflammation. The immunoreactivity of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) was considerably increased by UA treatment in the SNpc of Parkinsonian mice. The neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration along with impairments in biochemical and behavioral parameters were found to be reversed on treatment with UA. Thus, UA has shown potent anti-inflammatory activity by preventing the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons from MPTP-induced Parkinsonian mice.
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- 2019
117. Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts Enhance Survival and Progression of the Aggressive Pancreatic Tumor Via FGF-2 and CXCL8
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Mohammad Awaji, Rakesh K. Singh, Tayla Heavican, Javeed Iqbal, and Mitsuru Futakuchi
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Stromal cell ,Biology ,Fibroblast growth factor ,medicine.disease ,Desmoplasia ,03 medical and health sciences ,Paracrine signalling ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Pancreatic tumor ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts ,Original Article ,Interleukin 8 ,medicine.symptom ,Fibroblast - Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma remains one of the most challenging human cancers. Desmoplasia is predominant in this disease exhibiting a strong stromal reaction with an abundance of the cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). We aimed in this study to investigate the reciprocal interaction between the tumor cells and the CAFs and its effect on tumor cells survival. We hypothesized that the survival of pancreatic cancer cell with aggressive phenotype is modulated by the Interactions between malignant pancreatic tumor cells and surrounding CAFs. To examine this, we utilized co-culture methods where tumor cells with different malignant potentials, HPAF (low) HPAF-CD11 (moderate/high) co-cultured with CAFs. CAFs-conditioned media increased the growth of HPAF-CD11 but not HPAF cells and increased CXCL8 levels highly in HPAF-CD11 and slightly in HPAF. The growth stimulatory effect and elevated CXCL8 level caused by CAFs-conditioned media were diminished by neutralizing the fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2). In addition, conditioned media of HPAF-CD11 increased CAFs cell number whereas that of HPAF did not, and these effects were suppressed by neutralizing CXCL8. Furthermore, data from gene expression microarray study exhibited different expression profiles between HPAF and HPAF-CD11 when co-culture with CAFs. A significant increase in CXCL8 and FGF-2 expression was observed with HPAF-CD11/CAFs co-culture and to a lower extent with HPAF/CAFs co-culture. Together, these data demonstrate a paracrine bi-directional interaction between pancreatic tumor cells and the CAFs through CXCL8 and FGF-2 that helps the tumor growth. Future in-depth study of these pathways will assist in obtaining diagnostic and therapeutic tools for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
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- 2019
118. Design, Synthesis and Pharmacological Evaluation of Noscapine Glycoconjugates
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Kunj B. Mishra, Sumit K. Singh, Rajan Singh, Priyanka Bose, Rakesh K. Singh, Vinod K. Tiwari, Arun Kumar Rawat, Ram Chandra Mishra, and Neeraj Tiwari
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,chemistry ,Design synthesis ,Glycoconjugate ,Click chemistry ,medicine ,General Chemistry ,Pharmacology ,Anti leishmanial ,Noscapine ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2019
119. Impact of substituents on the crystal structures and anti-leishmanial activity of new homoleptic Bi(<scp>iii</scp>) dithiocarbamates
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Akhilesh Kumar, Michael G. B. Drew, Krishna K. Manar, Chote Lal Yadav, Rakesh K. Singh, Anamika, Rajan Singh, and Nanhai Singh
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Supramolecular chemistry ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Crystal structure ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Metal ,Crystallography ,Piperazine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,visual_art ,Materials Chemistry ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Chelation ,Homoleptic ,0210 nano-technology ,Dithiocarbamate ,Lone pair - Abstract
Six new functionalised homoleptic Bi(III) dithiocarbamate complexes, [Bi(L1–L6)3] (L1 = (N-4-nitrobenzyl-N-furfuryl)dithiocarbamate 1, L2 = (N-4-chlorobenzyl-N-3-methylpyridyl)dithiocarbamate 2, L3 = (N-4-bromobenzyl-N-3-methylpyridyl)dithiocarbamate 3, L4 = (N-4-dimethylaminobenzyl-N-3-methylpyridyl)dithiocarbamate 4, L5 = (1-(2-pyridyl)piperazine)dithiocarbamate 5 and L6 = (N-4-methoxybenzyl-N-benzyl)dithiocarbamate 6), have been prepared and characterised by elemental analyses, powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) and (IR, UV-Vis, 1H and 13C{1H} NMR) spectroscopy. The structures of the six complexes have been revealed in the solid state by X-ray crystallography and assessed by DFT calculations. Complexes 1 and (2, 5 and 6) are similarly dimeric in which the three dithiocarbamate ligands are bound to the seven and eight-coordinate Bi(III) centre, respectively, in asymmetric S,S-bidentate and μ2,κ2 S,S-chelating/chelating-bridging modes. By contrast, complex 4 is monomeric with a six-co-ordinate metal atom while complex 3 forms a polymeric structure with the metal in a seven-coordinate environment. The specific geometries of all compounds are distorted by the stereochemical lone pair. In these complexes, supramolecular structures have been sustained by non-covalent C–H⋯N, C–H⋯O, C–H⋯Cl, C–H⋯Br, C–H⋯π, C–H⋯π (BiCS2, chelate) and H⋯H interactions. The anti-leishmanial activities of the complexes have been tested; 5 and 6 showed potential anti-promastigote activity with IC50 values of 7.16 and 7.44 μM, and anti-amastigote activity with IC50 values of 8.40 and 9.70 μM, respectively. Cytotoxicity assays for complexes 1–6 showed toxicity on promastigotes but lower toxicity against the RAW 264.7 cell line at different concentrations.
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- 2019
120. Exosome proteomic analyses identify inflammatory phenotype and novel biomarkers in African American prostate cancer patients
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Rajesh Agarwal, Asit R. Mridha, Santosh K. Mishra, Gati K. Panigrahi, Roger S. Mercer, Prakash Priyadarshi Praharaj, Olen M. Black, Hiroki Kittaka, Zakaria Y. Abd Elmageed, Hariom Yadav, Chapla Agarwal, Rakesh K. Singh, Gagan Deep, Kathleen C. Torkko, and Adrie van Bokhoven
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Male ,Proteomics ,Cancer Research ,Proteome ,Biopsy ,Filamin ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Original Research ,Cancer Biology ,Neurons ,prostate cancer ,Phenotype ,Immunohistochemistry ,3. Good health ,Molecular Imaging ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Biomarker (medicine) ,biomarker ,Inflammation Mediators ,health disparity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Filamins ,exosomes ,Exosome ,White People ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Healthcare Disparities ,business.industry ,Macrophages ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Microvesicles ,Black or African American ,030104 developmental biology ,inflammation ,Calcium ,business ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
African American men face a stark prostate cancer (PCa)‐related health disparity, with the highest incidence and mortality rates compared to other races. Additional and innovative measures are warranted to reduce this health disparity. Here, we focused on the identification of a novel serum exosome‐based “protein signature” for potential use in the early detection and better prognosis of PCa in African American men. Nanoparticle tracking analyses showed that compared to healthy individuals, exosome concentration (number/ml) was increased by ~3.2‐fold (P ˂ 0.05) in the sera of African American men with PCa. Mass spectrometry‐based proteomic analysis of serum exosomes identified seven unique and fifty‐five overlapping proteins (up‐ or downregulated) in African Americans with PCa compared to healthy African Americans. Furthermore, ingenuity pathway analyses identified the inflammatory acute‐phase response signaling as the top pathway associated with proteins loaded in exosomes from African American PCa patients. Interestingly, African American PCa E006AA‐hT cells secreted exosomes strongly induced a proinflammatory M2‐phenotype in macrophages and showed calcium response on sensory neurons, suggesting a neuroinflammatory response. Additionally, proteomic analyses showed that the protein Isoform 2 of Filamin A has higher loading (2.6‐fold) in exosomes from African Americans with PCa, but a lesser loading (0.6‐fold) was observed in exosomes from Caucasian men with PCa compared to race‐matched healthy individuals. Interestingly, TCGA and Taylor's dataset as well as IHC analyses of PCa tissue showed a lower Filamin A expression in tissues of PCa patients compared with normal subjects. Overall, these results support the usefulness of serum exosomes to noninvasively detect inflammatory phenotype and to discover novel biomarkers associated with PCa in African American men.
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- 2019
121. Functional properties of marinated chicken breast meat during heating in a pilot-scale radio-frequency oven
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Deepti Deshpande and Rakesh K. Singh
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musculoskeletal diseases ,Materials science ,pse muscle ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,01 natural sciences ,Chicken breast ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,water holding ,medicine ,Food science ,Texture (crystalline) ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,cooking ,lcsh:TP368-456 ,010401 analytical chemistry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Pilot scale ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040401 food science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Tenderness ,lcsh:Food processing and manufacture ,myofibrillar protein ,Water holding ,medicine.symptom ,texture ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Food Science - Abstract
Chicken breast meat is traditionally marinated to improve tenderness and juiciness. However, a significant amount of marinade is purged during cooking. It was envisioned that preheating of marinated chicken breast meat would minimize the purge due to presetting the myofibrillar proteins and will give higher cook yield. The preheating was done in a radiofrequency (RF) oven to provide uniform heating within the volume of the product, and to allow extra marinade retention. Two preheating regimens, 20–30°C and 55–60°C were selected. A 3–4% marinade gain was obtained while the meat was preheated in RF with 10% extra marinade but this gain was not significantly different in the four treatments and the control (p > .05). The cooked meat yields were determined as a function of programmed preheating of marinated meat in the RF oven, followed by final cooking of the product in the air impingement oven. The programmed preheated samples at 20–30°C showed higher cook yield (96.11–100.51%) as compared to the control (95.6%). However, all the samples heated at 55–60°C showed higher cook yield (100.57–109.39%). Warner-Bratzler shear tests were performed on cooked samples to determine the quality of RF preheated product, and the quality of the RF-treated product was not much different from that of the product cooked directly in a conventional air oven.
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- 2019
122. Application of logistic regression, CART and random forest techniques in prediction of blast-induced slope failure during reconstruction of railway rock-cut slopes
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Narayan Kumar Bhagat, Arvind K. Mishra, Rakesh K. Singh, C. Sawmliana, and P.K. Singh
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General Engineering ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
123. Gigantic fibroepithelial polyp of the tonsil: a unique case
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Diksha Kumari and Rakesh K. Singh
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Being a benign lesion of mesodermal origin, the fibroepithelial polyps (FEPs) are a rare clinical entity arising from tonsil. It is also known as acrochordons with an exceptionally low incidence of malignant change. We present a rare case of huge FEPs of the right tonsil in a 15 years old female of the low socioeconomic group which was a subject of magic for society unless it created a significant problem in alimentation. It is one of the largest FEPs of the oropharynx reported till now to the best of our knowledge. The tumour attained such a gigantic size within the period of 8 years of negligence. The lesion was surgically removed by right side tonsillectomy as the lesion was attached to its lower pole. The strengthening of the health care system in rural areas is required for prompt management of such lesions and to prevent any form of catastrophe.
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- 2022
124. Abstract 894: CXCR1: A novel therapeutic avenue for CSC-like phenotypes in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
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Caitlin Molczyk, Elizabeth Thomas, Lubaba Zaman, Paran Goel, and Rakesh K. Singh
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. Often diagnosed late in disease progression, PDAC is notorious for chemotherapy resistance as well as having metastases. A cell population of interest aiding in this progression is the cancer stem cell (CSC). These cells are known for having high resistance to chemotherapy, along with propagating and re-building the tumor after most non-CSCs have been therapeutically targeted. Previous studies have determined CXCR4, ALDH1, CD24, CD44, and CD133 are markers of PDAC CSCs. In the present study, we investigated CXCR1 as a marker and therapeutic target for PDAC CSCs. CXCR1 is a G-coupled transmembrane protein receptor with downstream effects known to aid in anti-apoptosis, proliferation, and angiogenesis via binding CXCL8 and CXCL6. Already known to be a CSC marker and target in triple-negative breast cancer, initial studies by Chen et al. of CXCR1 in PDAC demonstrate CXCL8 induces increased tumorsphere formation in vitro, leading us to investigate CXCR1 in PDAC CSCs. Considering these findings, we hypothesized that PDAC cells with high CXCR1 activity exhibit increased CSC-like characteristics, and targeting CXCR1 will reduce those characteristics. To investigate the role of CXCR1 in PDAC CSC-like phenotype, we used two PDAC cell lines, CD18/HPAF and T3M4, and developed gemcitabine resistant (GemR) counterparts. These GemR cell lines were shown to have over 10-fold higher resistance than their respective parent cell lines. We treated with the CXCR1/2 antagonist navarixin at concentrations known to inhibit CXCR1. Using the parent cell lines’ relative IC50 concentrations for each drug, we treated cells for 72 hours. We used qRT-PCR and ELISAs for analysis of several known CSC markers and CXCR1 axis expression. From our results, we see the beginning trends of GemR cells having increased expression of CSC markers as well as gemcitabine-treated parent and resistant cells having increased expression. Using flow cytometry, we evaluated the CXCR1+ cell populations post-control and gemcitabine treatment. The population of CXCR1+ cells was higher in the gemcitabine-treated groups. Together, our observations suggest an association between CXCR1 and the CSC-like phenotype in PDAC. Citation Format: Caitlin Molczyk, Elizabeth Thomas, Lubaba Zaman, Paran Goel, Rakesh K. Singh. CXCR1: A novel therapeutic avenue for CSC-like phenotypes in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 894.
- Published
- 2022
125. Radio frequency assisted thermal processing for pasteurization of packaged whole milk powder surrounded by oil
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Damla Dag, Rakesh K. Singh, Jinru Chen, Abhinav Mishra, and Fanbin Kong
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Food Science ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2022
126. Process severity affects texture and color of potato strips baked in pilot-scale infrared Radiant Wall Oven
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Rakesh K. Singh and Bilal Kirmaci
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Lightness ,Materials science ,Moisture ,Pilot scale ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,STRIPS ,040401 food science ,law.invention ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,law ,Brown color ,Food science ,Texture (crystalline) ,Water content ,Food Science ,Hue - Abstract
Frozen par-fried potato strips were baked in an infrared radiant wall oven (RWO) at temperatures of 290–365 °C with different processing times to reduce fat content of the final product in contrast to deep fat fried strips. Product characteristics in terms of cutting force, puncture force, lightness, chroma, hue, moisture and fat content of the RWO-baked potato strips were measured and compared to that of deep-fat fried samples (177 °C for 3 min). Instrumental and sensory assessment of the texture of the potato strips indicated that RWO-baked potato strips at 365 °C for 6.5 min had similar texture as deep-fat fried potato strips, yet contained 72% less fat. However, those potato strips were lighter and less brown in color, and had 18% more moisture than the fried counterparts. RWO processing, as a surface treatment, achieved dramatic fat reduction because the potato strips were not submerged into oil. Increase in the severity of the RWO processing resulted in potato strips with higher cutting force, puncture force, darker and more brown color and lower moisture content.
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- 2018
127. Polycation Fluorination Improves Intraperitoneal siRNA Delivery in Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer
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David Oupický, Ying Xie, Fei Yu, Weimin Tang, Siyuan Tang, Diptesh Sil, Jing Li, Rakesh K. Singh, David Větvička, Ao Yu, Chuhan Zhang, and Yu Hang
- Subjects
Biodistribution ,Halogenation ,Cell ,Serum albumin ,Pharmaceutical Science ,02 engineering and technology ,Article ,Metastasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Peritoneal cavity ,Cell Line, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,RNA, Small Interfering ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,CXCR4 antagonist ,biology ,Chemistry ,Transfection ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,medicine.disease ,Polyelectrolytes ,In vitro ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a growing medical problem associated with extensive metastasis and high mortality. Intraperitoneal (IP) administration of therapeutics promises to help the treatment of cancers originated from organs in the peritoneal cavity. In this study, we evaluated how physicochemical properties of self-assembled polycation/siRNA nanoparticles affect their IP delivery efficacy in an orthotopic PDAC model. We have examined the effect of covalent polycation modification with lipophobic and hydrophobic tetrafluoro-p-toluic acid (TFTA), hydrophobic cholesterol, and hydrophilic poly(ethylene glycol) respectively. The surface charge of the three different nanoparticles was also modulated by coating the surface with serum albumin. We found that positively charged fluorine-containing particles with lipophobic properties based on a mixture of positively charged polymeric AMD3100 CXCR4 antagonist (PAMD) and PAMD modified with TFTA (mPAMD-TFTA)/siRNA displayed the best cell uptake and transfection efficacy in vitro. Biodistribution evaluation of the nanoparticles in a syngeneic orthotopic PDAC model revealed that the fluorine-containing formulation also achieved the highest PDAC tumor accumulation after IP administration. Moreover, elevated accumulation of the mPAMD-TFTA/siRNA nanoparticles was observed in the peritoneal metastatic sites compared to the surrounding healthy tissues. With a combination of CXCR4 inhibition by PAMD and PLK1 downregulation by siRNA, the treatment with mPAMD-TFTA/siPLK1 showed significant inhibition of both primary and metastatic PDAC tumors. Overall, our study provides insights into and guides the design of the nanoparticles for improved IP delivery of siRNA in PDAC.
- Published
- 2021
128. 'Trained immunity' from Mycobacterium spp. (environmental or BCG) exposure predicts protection from Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
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Samer Singh, Rakesh K Singh, and Dhiraj Kishore
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,biology ,Latent tuberculosis ,business.industry ,Confounding ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Vaccination ,Randomized controlled trial ,Immunity ,law ,Case fatality rate ,Medicine ,business ,Demography ,Mycobacterium - Abstract
Endeavors to identify protective variables that could be potentially responsible for reduced COVID-19 impact on certain populations have remained a priority. Multiple attempts have been made to attribute the reduced COVID-19 impact on populations to their bacillus Calmette–Guerin (BCG) vaccination coverage ignoring the fact that the effect of childhood BCG vaccination wanes within the first 5 years of life while most of the COVID-19 cases as well as deaths have been observed in adults especially the aged with comorbidities. Since the supposed desired protection being investigated could come from heterologous ‘trained immunity’ conferred by exposure to Mycobacterium spp. (i.e., environmental and BCG), it is argued that the estimates of the prevalence of ‘trained immunity’ of populations currently available as latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) of populations would be a better variable to evaluate such assertions. Indeed, when we analyze the European populations (twenty-four) as well as erstwhile East and West Germany populations completely disregarding their BCG vaccination coverage, the populations with higher trained immunity prevalence consistently display reduced COVID-19 impact as compared to their lower trained immunity prevalence neighbors. The incidences, mortality, and interim case fatality rates (i-CFR) of COVID-19 are found negatively correlated with the trained immunity of populations that have comparable underlying confounders not the BCG coverage per se. It is submitted that to decisively arrive at dependable conclusions about the potential protective benefit that can be gained from BCG vaccination in COVID-19, the ongoing/planned randomized controlled trials should consciously consider including measures of trained immunity as - a) all individuals immunized do not respond equally, b) small study groups of higher background trained immunity could fail to indicate any protective effect.
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- 2021
129. Plexin-B3 Regulates Cellular Motility, Invasiveness, and Metastasis in Pancreatic Cancer
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Michael A. Hollingsworth, Paran Goel, Babita Tomar, Pranita Atri, Yuri Hayashi, Rakesh K. Singh, Surinder K. Batra, Dipakkumar R. Prajapati, Paul M. Grandgenett, Sugandha Saxena, and Satyanarayana Rachagani
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,cancer stem cells ,Cancer Research ,animal structures ,Cell ,pancreatic cancer ,cellular motility ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Article ,Metastasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Semaphorin ,Cancer stem cell ,Pancreatic cancer ,medicine ,metastasis ,Gene knockdown ,biology ,Plexin ,Cell migration ,Plexin-B3 ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,embryonic structures ,Cancer research ,biology.protein - Abstract
The Plexins family of proteins are well-characterized transmembrane receptors of semaphorins, axon guidance cue molecules, that mediate the cell attraction or repelling effects for such cues. Plexins and their ligands are involved in numerous cellular activities, such as motility, invasion, and adhesion to the basement membrane. The detachment of cells and the gain in motility and invasion are hallmarks of the cancer metastasis cascade, thus generating interest in exploring the role of plexins in cancer metastasis. Semaphorin–plexin complexes can act as tumor promoters or suppressors, depending upon the cancer type, and are under investigation for therapeutic purposes. Our group has identified Semaphorin-5A (SEMA5A)/Plexin-B3 as an attractive targetable complex for pancreatic cancer (PC) metastasis. However, our understanding of the Plexin-B3 function and pathological expression in PC is limited, and our present study delineates the role of Plexin-B3 in PC malignancy. We examined the pathological expression of Plexin-B3 in PC tumors and metastasis using a human tissue microarray, disease progression model of PDX-Cre-Kras(G12D) (KC) mice, and different metastatic sites obtained from the KrasG12D, Trp53R172H, Pdx1-Cre (KPC) mice model. We observed a higher Plexin-B3 expression in PC tumor cores than the normal pancreas, and different metastatic sites were positive for Plexin-B3 expression. However, in the KC mice model, the Plexin-B3 expression increased initially and then decreased with the disease progression. Next, to evaluate the functional role of Plexin-B3, we utilized T3M-4- and CD18/HPAF-Control and -Plexin B3 knockdown cells for different in vivo and in vitro studies. The knockdown of Plexin-B3 enhanced the in vitro cellular migration, invasiveness, and impaired colony formation in three-dimensional culture, along with an increase in cellular spread and remodeling of the actin filaments. We also observed a higher metastasis in nude mice injected with T3M-4- and CD18/HPAF-shPlexin-B3 cells compared to their respective control cells. Furthermore, we observed a lower number of proliferating Ki-67-positive cells and higher ALDH1-A1-positive cells in the tumors formed by Plexin-B3 knockdown cells compared to tumors formed by the control cells. Together, our data suggest that the loss of Plexin-B3 is associated with the interference of cell division machinery and the induction of stem cell-like characteristics in PC cells.
- Published
- 2021
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130. Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Breast Cancer and Role of Plant Products in Targeted Therapy
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Mala Singh, Rakesh K. Singh, Surabhi Bajpai, Sonu Singhal, and Vinod K. Tiwari
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Phosphoinositide 3-kinase ,biology ,Cancer research ,Notch signaling pathway ,biology.protein ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Signal transduction ,Protein kinase B ,PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway ,Hedgehog signaling pathway ,Receptor tyrosine kinase - Abstract
Breast cancer (BC), the leading cause of female mortality worldwide, is caused by multiple signaling pathways. This chapter discusses major pathways underlying the cancer pathogenesis, namely, Notch pathway, Wnt/β-catenin pathway, Hedgehog pathway, NF-κB pathway, receptor tyrosine kinase pathway, Ras/MEK/Raf/ERK signaling pathway, AKT/phosphoinositide 3 kinase (PI3K) pathway, PI3Ks Class I, PI3Ks Class II and III, c-JUN NH2-terminal kinase pathway, heat shock protein 90 signaling pathway, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 signaling pathway, angiogenesis pathway, estrogen receptor signaling pathway, mammalian target of rapamycin pathway, and protein kinase C pathway. All these pathways are misregulated in BC conditions and their misregulation can be controlled by pharmacological inhibitors. Since chemical drugs or inhibitors may have some side effects and cancer cells may develop drug resistivity, a need for the study of medicinal plants, their extracts, and polyherbal formulae is warranted. Thus, this chapter is planned to focus on the various plants and their extracts that show remarkable anticancer activity. Further, it discusses about the role of pure phytochemicals like flavonoids, semisynthetic flavonoids and phenols, and polyphenols in controlling BC. This chapter will help to establish medicinal plant therapy as an effective alternative to improve the existing chemotherapy and to reduce drug-induced toxicity.
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- 2021
131. Contributors
- Author
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Didem Şöhretoğlu, Rosaria Acquaviva, Javed Ali, Randolph Arroo, Sanjula Baboota, Surabhi Bajpai, María Soledad Belingeri, Marco Bonesi, Goutam Brahmachari, Laura Romina Caltana, Sayanta Dutta, M. Pilar Gómez-Serranillos, Elena González-Burgos, Shile Huang, Babar Iqbal, Narendra Kale, Monica R. Loizzo, Sushweta Mahalanobish, Giuseppe A. Malfa, Sanku Mallik, Babak Mamnoon, Arvind Singh Negi, Jessica E. Pullan, Suat Sari, Nupur Shrivastava, Parames C. Sil, Mala Singh, Rakesh K. Singh, Sonu Singhal, Vinod K. Tiwari, and Rosa Tundis
- Published
- 2021
132. Intracerebral Schwannoma with Perivascular Meningioangiomatosis-like Extension in Surrounding Glia
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Kiran P, Malhotra, Hardeep S, Malhotra, Rakesh K, Singh, Shivi, Mohini, and Nuzhat, Husain
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Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Humans ,Meningioma ,Neuroglia ,Neurilemmoma - Published
- 2020
133. An urgent call for measures to fight against increasing suicides during COVID-19 pandemic in Nepal
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Kedar Baral, Sharika Mahato, and Rakesh K. Singh
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Suicide Prevention ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,MEDLINE ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Mental health ,Article ,Suicide ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Health ,Nepal ,Environmental health ,Pandemic ,Humans ,Psychology ,Pandemics ,General Psychology - Published
- 2020
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134. Preliminary preclinical study of Chol-DsiRNA polyplexes formed with PLL[30]-PEG[5K] for the RNAi-based therapy of breast cancer
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Samuel M. Cohen, Vishakha V. Ambardekar, Zhen Ye, Yazen Alnouti, Joseph A. Vetro, Lora L. Arnold, Devendra Kumar, Rakesh K. Singh, Don W. Coulter, Stephen M. Curran, Mai Mohamed Abdelmoaty, and Shetty Ravi Dyavar
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Ribonuclease III ,STAT3 Transcription Factor ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Bioengineering ,Breast Neoplasms ,02 engineering and technology ,Article ,Polyethylene Glycols ,DEAD-box RNA Helicases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,RNA interference ,Cell Line, Tumor ,PEG ratio ,medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,Potency ,Distribution (pharmacology) ,Animals ,Humans ,General Materials Science ,Polylysine ,Tissue Distribution ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,RNA, Small Interfering ,STAT3 ,Micelles ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Chemistry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Gene Transfer Techniques ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,medicine.disease ,Cholesterol ,RNAi Therapeutics ,Drug delivery ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Female ,RNA Interference ,Target protein ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
RNA interference molecules have tremendous potential for cancer therapy but are limited by insufficient potency after i.v. administration. We previously found that Chol-DsiRNA polyplexes formed between cholesterol-modified dicer-substrate siRNA (Chol-DsiRNA) and the cationic diblock copolymer PLL[30]-PEG[5K] greatly increase the activity of Chol-DsiRNA against a stably expressed reporter mRNA in primary murine syngeneic breast tumors after daily i.v. dosing. Here, we provide a more thorough preliminary preclinical study of Chol-DsiRNA polyplexes against the therapeutically relevant target protein, STAT3. We found that Chol-DsiSTAT3 polyplexes greatly increase plasma exposure, distribution, potency, and therapeutic activity of Chol-DsiSTAT3 in primary murine syngeneic 4T1 breast tumors after i.v. administration. Furthermore, inactive Chol-DsiCTRL polyplexes are well tolerated by healthy female BALB/c mice after chronic i.v. administration at 50 mg Chol-DsiCTRL/kg over 28 days. Thus, Chol-DsiRNA polyplexes may be a good candidate for Phase I clinical trials to improve the treatment of breast cancer and other solid tumors.
- Published
- 2020
135. NUTRITIONAL IMMUNITY, ZINC SUFFICIENCY AND COVID-19 MORTALITY IN SOCIALLY SIMILAR EUROPEAN POPULATIONS
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Brijesh P. Singh, Samer Singh, Rakesh K. Singh, and Amita Diwaker
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medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Immunology ,Population ,Comorbidity ,nutritional immunity ,Biology ,Immunity ,Pandemic ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Retrospective analysis ,Humans ,oxidative stress ,Immunology and Allergy ,Adverse effect ,education ,education.field_of_study ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Mortality rate ,Confounding ,zinc supplementation ,COVID-19 ,Brief Research Report ,RC581-607 ,medicine.disease ,mortality ,infection ,Europe ,Zinc ,redox ,Dietary Supplements ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,business ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Demography - Abstract
The impact of Zinc (Zn) sufficiency/supplementation on COVID-19 associated mortality and incidence (SARS-CoV-2 infections) remains unknown. During an infection, the levels of free Zn are reduced as part of ‘nutritional immunity’ to limit the growth and replication of pathogen and the ensuing inflammatory damage. Considering its key role in immune competency and frequently recorded deficiency in large sections of different populations, Zn has been prescribed for both prophylactic and therapeutic purposes in COVID-19 without any corroborating evidence for its protective role. Multiple trials are underway evaluating the effect of Zn supplementation on COVID-19 outcome in patients getting standard of care treatment. However, the trial designs presumably lack the power to identify negative effects of Zn supplementation, especially in the vulnerable groups of elderly and patients with comorbidities (contributing 9 out of 10 deaths; up to >8000-fold higher mortality). In this study, we have analyzed COVID-19 mortality and incidence (case) data from 23 socially similar European populations with comparable confounders (population: 522.47 million; experiencing up to >150 fold difference in death rates) and at the matching stage of the pandemic (12 March - 26 June 2020; 1st wave of COVID-19 incidence and mortality). Our results suggest a positive correlation between populations’ Zn-sufficiency status and COVID-19 mortality (r(23): 0.7893–0.6849, p-valuer(23):0.8084 to 0.5658; p-value
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- 2020
136. Physical and biochemical changes in ultra-rapid air chilled broiler muscle and quality of marinated chicken breast filets
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Rakesh K. Singh and Neeraj Sharma
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Biochemistry ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
137. Corrigendum to 'Assessing the impact of 4-oxo-2-nonenal on lactate dehydrogenase activity and myoglobin redox stability' [Food Bioscience 43 (2021) 101306]
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Samuel A. Gonzalez, Ronald B. Pegg, Rakesh K. Singh, and Anand Mohan
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Biochemistry ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
138. Giant pilomatrixoma on the back of neck: a unique case
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Shruti Jha, Jyoti Singh, Alekh Kumar, and Rakesh K. Singh
- Abstract
Pilomatrixomas are benign adnexal tumours, commonly occurring in the head and neck region. We present a unique case of giant pilomatrixoma on the posterior triangle of the neck, its diagnosis and subsequent treatment and its potential to become a primary differential diagnosis of slow-growing, benign masses. We report a case of 10×10 cm slow-growing painless mass in the nape of the neck with overlying ulcerations and conflicting radio-pathological pre-operative reports and its subsequent diagnosis as pilomatrixoma. Histopathological examination revealed the presence of ghost cells and basaloid cells, confirming the diagnosis. We stress the importance of recognizing this pilomatrixoma variant, whose clinical picture is confusing and obscure. We also reiterate the need for close follow up of small lesions due to the small but grave risk of malignant transformation and recurrence. Pilomatrixoma has variable presenting features and poses a diagnostic dilemma. Surgical planning can be done with the help of proper radiological features, and complete excision of the mass is required to achieve a cure.
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- 2022
139. Myelin Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein (MOG) Antibody-Associated CNS Demyelination: Clinical Spectrum and Comparison with Aquaporin-4 Antibody Positive Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder
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Pawan T, Ojha, Vikram B, Aglave, Girish, Soni, Kamlesh A, Jagiasi, Rakesh K, Singh, Rakeshsingh Kamleshsingh, Singh, and Shashank, Nagendra
- Subjects
Adult ,Aquaporin 4 ,Motor Disorders ,Neuromyelitis Optica ,Humans ,India ,Disabled Persons ,Myelin-Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein ,Autoantibodies - Abstract
The clinical phenotypes of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody disease, its disease course, and treatment are poorly understood and much work needs to be done towards this.To characterize the clinico-radiologic spectrum and treatment outcomes of MOG antibody disease and differentiate it from aquaporin-4 (AQP-4) antibody positive neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMO-SD).A single-center, observational study from Western India during 2017-2019, of 48 patients with either MOG antibody positive (21 patients) or AQP-4 antibody positive (27 patients) central nervous system demyelination.MOG antibody group had median age 32.2 years, no gender bias, median disease duration 40 months, relapses in 9 patients (43%), and median 2.5 (1-16) episodes per patient. Onset phenotypes included isolated bilateral optic neuritis (ON) (43%), isolated unilateral ON (19%), acute brainstem syndrome (19%), simultaneous ON with myelitis (9%), isolated myelitis (5%), and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis optic neuritis (ADEM-ON) (5%). Characteristic neuroimaging abnormalities were anterior segment longitudinally extensive ON, upper brainstem, and thoracic cord involvement (both short and long segment lesions). Most patients (86%) responded well to steroids, only 3/21 required rescue immunotherapy. In total, 6 out of 46 eyes affected developed permanent visual disability, while one patient had motor disability. The features differentiating MOG from AQP-4 antibody group were: no female predilection, preferential optic nerve involvement, characteristic neuroimaging abnormalities, and favorable therapeutic response and outcome.MOG disease commonly presents as severe ON, myelitis, acute brainstem syndrome, ADEM or their combinations. Early identification, treatment, and maintenance immunosuppression are necessary. It can easily be differentiated from NMO-SD using clinico-radiological features and therapeutic response.
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- 2020
140. Breast Cancer Cell–Neutrophil Interactions Enhance Neutrophil Survival and Pro-Tumorigenic Activities
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Paran Goel, Cheng Wang, Sugandha Saxena, Lingyun Wu, Rakesh K. Singh, and Dipakkumar R. Prajapati
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,chemotherapy resistance ,neutrophil extracellular traps ,CCL3 ,MMP9 ,CCL2 ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Article ,Metastasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,breast cancer ,neutrophils ,medicine ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Tumor microenvironment ,biology ,business.industry ,Neutrophil extracellular traps ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Nitric oxide synthase ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,matrix metallopeptidase 9 ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,business - Abstract
Breast cancer remains the most prevalent cancer in women with limited treatment options for patients suffering from therapy-resistance and metastatic disease. Neutrophils play an important role in breast cancer progression and metastasis. We examined the pro-tumorigenic nature of the breast cancer cell&ndash, neutrophil interactions and delineated the differences in neutrophil properties between the chemotherapy-resistant and the parent tumor microenvironment. Our data demonstrated that high neutrophil infiltration is associated with disease aggressiveness and therapy resistance. In the human breast cancer dataset, expression of neutrophil-related signature gene expression was higher in tumors from therapy-resistant patients than therapy-sensitive patients. We observed that breast cancer-derived factors significantly enhanced neutrophil survival, polarization, and pro-inflammatory cytokine expression. Breast cancer cell-derived supernatant treated neutrophils significantly expressed high levels of interleukin-1&beta, (IL-1&beta, ), CC-chemokine ligand-2-4 (CCL2, CCL3, CCL4), inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), and matrix metallopeptidase-9 (MMP9), and formed extracellular traps (NETs). Moreover, neutrophils showed increased secretion of MMP9 when cultured with the supernatant of chemotherapy-resistant Cl66-Doxorubicin (Cl66-Dox) and Cl66-Paclitaxel (Cl66-Pac) cells in comparison with the supernatant of Cl66-parent cells. Together, these data suggest an important role of breast cancer cell&ndash, neutrophil interactions in regulating pro-tumor characteristics in neutrophils and its modulation by therapy resistance.
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- 2020
141. Perception towards Online Teaching-learning in Medical Education among Medical Students during COVID-19 Outbreak in Nepal: A Descriptive Cross-sectional Study
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Pragya Rai, Sanjeev Shah, Krishna Gupta, Smriti Pant, Madhusudan Subedi, Kishor Adhikari, Kaushal Kumar Singh, Ambika Thapa, Babita Singh, Rakesh K. Singh, Abdul Khan, and Shanta Sharma
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Students, Medical ,Cross-sectional study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Disease Outbreaks ,Nepal ,Informed consent ,Perception ,Computer literacy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Medicine ,Humans ,Social media ,Curriculum ,media_common ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Medical education ,Descriptive statistics ,Education, Medical ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,medical education ,medical students ,online teaching-learning ,perception ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Residence ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business - Abstract
The outbreak of coronavirus disease in Nepal led medical colleges to suspend in person teaching-learning activities and ultimately online platform was introduced to deliver the contents of medical education. The objective of this study was to describe the perception of medical students towards online teaching-learning introduced during the COVID-19 outbreak in Nepal.An online survey using a descriptive cross-sectional study design was carried out among 515 undergraduate medical students currently enrolled in medical colleges in Nepal. Ethical approval was sought from Nepal Health Research Council to conduct this study, and digital informed consent was taken from study respondents. A semi-structured questionnaire in Google form was utilized to collect data. The link of the Google form was sent to the potential respondents through email and social media. Descriptive statistics, including frequency, percentage, mean, and standard deviation were used to analyze data in Stastical Package for the Social Sciences version 20. Ethical approval was sought from Nepal Health Research Council to conduct this study, and digital informed consent was taken from study respondants.The overall score of perception of online teaching-learning was 17.61±7.19, which indicated many problems in this method of teaching-learning. The mean score of perception of online teaching-learning was found to be different across sex, location of enrolled medical colleges, having a personal electronic device, having an internet connection at residence, having separate room/space for attending online classes, and self-rated computer skills. Moreover, only 28 (5.4%) of respondents had perceived online teaching-learning as a better method of delivering content of medical curricula.Surveyed medical students in Nepal were found to perceive many problems in online teaching-learning. Moreover, management and faculty members need to take the necessary measures for enhancing the online teaching-learning quality.
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- 2020
142. Nursing Education during COVID-19 Pandemic: Way Forward for Teaching Hospitals in Nepal
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Rakesh K. Singh and Babita Singh
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Medical education ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Political science ,Pandemic ,Capacity building ,Nurse education ,Use of technology ,Limited resources ,Teaching hospital - Abstract
COVID-19 pandemic has affected nursing education globally, with more impact in nations like Nepal with limited resources. Although, the use of technology and virtual platforms has long history in nursing education, it is relatively very new for teaching hospitals in Nepal where the health system is fragile. The challenges seen in nursing education have depicted an urgent need to address nation’s gaps in educational infrastructure including capacity building of faculties and enabling nursing students to utilize technology effectively. In fact, the pandemic has unveiled underlying structural vulnerabilities and existing disparities in educational settings between nations, particularly in nursing education. Keywords: nursing education, COVID-19, pandemic, teaching hospitals, Nepal
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- 2020
143. Aortic Root Thrombosis on ECMO-A Novel Management Strategy
- Author
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David K. Werho, Kanishka Ratnayaka, John J. Nigro, Othman A. Aljohani, Stephen Nageotte, Rakesh K. Singh, and Thomas Do
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Aortic valve ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Viral Myocarditis ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Heart Ventricles ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Ascending aorta ,medicine ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Heart Atria ,Cardiac Surgical Procedures ,business.industry ,Cardiogenic shock ,Disease Management ,Thrombosis ,General Medicine ,Heparin ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030228 respiratory system ,Ventricle ,Echocardiography ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A 15-year-old presented in cardiogenic shock secondary to viral myocarditis requiring venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support. He developed large thrombi of the left ventricle and aortic root. Anticoagulation was increased, and medications were initiated to decrease the likelihood of aortic valve opening. He underwent balloon atrial septostomy followed by placement of a left atrial vent. A pigtail catheter was placed in the ascending aorta for direct heparin infusion. Serial echocardiograms showed progressive resolution of the thrombi. He was successfully weaned from ECMO and discharged home without neurological deficits.
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- 2020
144. Targeting Vitamin-D receptor (VDR) by a small molecule antagonist MeTC7 inhibits PD-L1 but controls THMYCN neuroblastoma growth PD-L1 independently
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Leggy A. Arnold, Negar Khazan, Scott A. Gerber, Thomas Conley, Richard G. Moore, Umayal Sivagnanalingam, Nina F. Schor, David C. Linehan, Hiroshi Miyamoto, Takuro Goto, Nicholas Battaglia, Rachael B. Rowswell-Turner, Rakesh K. Singh, John M. Ashton, Debasmita Ojha, Russel Hopson, Kyu Kwang Kim, Naohiro Yano, Jeanne N. Hansen, Yuki Teramoto, Ravina Pandita, Aaron Jones, Virginia Hovanesian, Michael T. Milano, Ye Jian, and Ashoke Sharon
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Calcitriol ,biology ,Chemistry ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Calcitriol receptor ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Pancreatic cancer ,Neuroblastoma ,PD-L1 ,Cancer cell ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,education ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Vitamin-D receptor (VDR) mRNA is enriched in malignant lung, ovarian and pancreatic tissues and showed poor prognoses. Calcitriol and stable or CRISPR-directed VDR upregulation increased PD-L1mRNA and protein expression in cancer cells in-vitro. A ChIP assay showed the binding of VDR with VDREPD-L1. Stattic, a STAT3 phosphorylation inhibitor blocked calcitriol or VDR overexpression induced PD-L1 upregulation. MeTC7, a VDR antagonist developed by us, reduced PD-L1 expression on macrophages, ovarian, lung, breast, and pancreatic cancer cells in-vitro. In radiotherapy inducible PD-L1 model of orthotopic MC38 murine colon cancer, MeTC7 decreased PD-L1 surface expression, suppressed inflammatory monocytes (IMs) population and increased intra-tumoral CD69+PD1+CD8+T-cells. Intriguingly, MeTC7 reduced TH-MYCN transgenic neuroblastoma tumor growth without affecting PD-L1 and tumor immune milieu. In summary, Vitamin-D/VDR drives PD-L1 expression on cancer cells via STAT-3. Inhibiting VDR exhibited anti-checkpoint effects in orthotopic colon tumors, whereas PDL1-independent and anti-VDR/MYCN effects controlled growth of transgenic neuroblastoma and xenografted tumors.SummaryVitamin-D/VDR induces PD-L1 expression on cancer cells via STAT-3; and targeting VDR by a novel small molecule antagonist MeTC7 exhibits both anti-PD-L1 and anti-VDR/MYCN effects in tumor models.
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- 2020
145. Nusinersen and Spinal Muscular Atrophies: Where are we in 2020?
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Satish V, Khadilkar and Rakesh K, Singh
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Editorial Commenatry - Published
- 2020
146. Promotion, prevention and treatment interventions for mental health in low- and middle-income countries through a task-shifting approach
- Author
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Ambika Thapa Pachya, Jibril Abdulmalik, Eleonora Uphoff, Nadja van Ginneken, Rakesh K. Singh, and Marianna Purgato
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Male ,Mental Health Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Population ,Psychological intervention ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Mental distress ,Global mental health ,prevention ,Preventive Health Services ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,education ,primary mental health care ,education.field_of_study ,Low- and middle-income countries ,public mental health ,treatment ,Mental Disorders ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Editorials ,promotion ,Mental health ,task-shifting ,Antidepressive Agents ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Editorial ,Income ,Psychotherapy, Brief ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
Recently, mental health and ill health have been reframed to be seen as a continuum from health to ill health, through the stages of being asymptomatic ‘at risk’, to experiencing ‘mental distress’, ‘sub-syndromal symptoms’ and finally ‘mental disorders’. This new conceptualisation emphasised the importance of mental health promotion and prevention interventions, aimed at reducing the likelihood of future disorders with the general population or with people who are identified as being at risk of a disorder. This concept generated discussion on the distinction between prevention and treatment interventions, especially for those mental health conditions which lie between psychological distress and a formal psychiatric diagnosis. The present editorial aims to clarify the definition of promotion, prevention and treatment interventions delivered through a task-shifting approach according to a global mental health perspective.
- Published
- 2020
147. Microencapsulation of
- Author
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George Cavender, Nan Jiang, Kevin Mis Solval, Rakesh K. Singh, and Jinru Chen
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,food.ingredient ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Capsules ,01 natural sciences ,Homogenization (chemistry) ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,lcsh:QD241-441 ,Freeze-drying ,Probiotic ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,food ,lcsh:Organic chemistry ,law ,010608 biotechnology ,Drug Discovery ,Skimmed milk ,Pressure ,Animals ,spray drying ,Ultra high pressure ,Food science ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,biology ,Chemistry ,skim milk ,Probiotics ,Organic Chemistry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,particle size ,biology.organism_classification ,040401 food science ,Milk ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Spray drying ,microencapsulation ,Molecular Medicine ,Particle size ,ultra-high-pressure homogenization ,Lactobacillus plantarum - Abstract
Several health benefits are associated with the consumption of probiotic foods. Lyophilized probiotic cultures are commonly used to manufacture probiotic-containing products. Spray drying (SDR) is a cost-effective process to microencapsulate probiotics. However, the high temperatures of the drying air in SDR can inactivate significant numbers of probiotic cells. Ultra-high-pressure homogenization (UHPH) processing can modify the configuration of proteins found in skim milk which may increase its protective properties as microencapsulating agent towards probiotic cells during SDR. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of microencapsulating probiotic Lactobacillus plantarum NRRL B-1927 (LP) with UHPH-treated skim milk after SDR or freeze drying (FD). Dispersions containing LP were made with either UHPH-treated (at 150 MPa or 300 MPa) or untreated skim milk and dried via concurrent SDR (CCSD), mixed-flow SDR (MXSD) or FD. Higher cell survival (%) of LP was found in powders microencapsulated with 150 MPa-treated skim milk than in those microencapsulated with non-UHPH-treated and 300 MPa-treated skim milk via FD followed by MXSD and CCSD, respectively. Increasing UHPH pressures increased the particle size of powders produced via CCSD, and reduced particle agglomeration of powders produced via MXSD and FD. This study demonstrated that UHPH processes improves the effectiveness of skim milk as a microencapsulating agent for LP, creating powders that could be used in probiotic foods.
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- 2020
148. Inequities towards leprosy-affected people: A challenge during COVID-19 pandemic
- Author
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Sharika Mahato, Rakesh K. Singh, and Srijana Bhattarai
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Bacterial Diseases ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Asia ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,RC955-962 ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Oceania ,India ,Global Health ,Health Services Accessibility ,Geographical Locations ,Pharmacotherapy ,Nepal ,Risk Factors ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Leprosy ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Humans ,Hypersensitivity, Delayed ,Public and Occupational Health ,Pandemics ,Viral Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,Tropical Diseases ,Virology ,Socioeconomic Aspects of Health ,Viewpoints ,Health Care ,Pneumonia ,Infectious Diseases ,Indonesia ,People and Places ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business ,Coronavirus Infections ,Behavioral and Social Aspects of Health ,Hand Disinfection ,Neglected Tropical Diseases - Published
- 2020
149. ‘Trained immunity’ from Mycobacterium spp. exposure or BCG vaccination and COVID-19 outcomes
- Author
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Rajendra P Maurya, Rakesh K. Singh, and Samer Singh
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Population ,Confounding ,Tuberculin ,Vaccination ,Vaccination policy ,Immunity ,Pandemic ,Immunology ,Medicine ,education ,business ,BCG vaccine - Abstract
Protective variables for COVID-19 are unknown. ‘Trained immunity’ of the populace as a result of BCG immunization policy implementation and coverage had been suggested to be one of the factors responsible for the differential impact of COVID-19 on different countries. Several trials are underway to evaluate the potential protective role of BCG vaccination in COVID-19. However, the lack of clarity on the use of appropriate controls concerning the measures of ‘trained immunity’ or the heterologous cell-mediated immunity conferred by BCG vaccination has been a cause of concern leading to more confusion as exemplified by a recently concluded trial in Israel that failed to find any protective correlation with regard to BCG vaccination. Whereas, when we analyze the COVID-19 data of European countries without any regard for BCG vaccination policy but with similar age distribution, comparable confounding variables, and the stage of the pandemic, the prevalence of tuberculin immunoreactivity - a measure of cell-mediated immunity persistence as a result of Mycobacterium spp. (including BCG vaccine) exposure of the populations, is found consistently negatively correlated with COVID-19 infections and mortality per million population, at all the time points evaluated. We propose that on-going and future studies evaluating the effect of BCG vaccination on COVID-19 outcomes may actively consider, if not already, the inclusion of controls for underlying ‘trained immunity’ and heterologous cell-mediated immunity prevalence that may be pre-existing or resulting from the intervention (e.g., BCG vaccine) in such trials to arrive at more dependable conclusions concerning their potential benefit.
- Published
- 2020
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150. E-cig vapor condensate alters proteome and lipid profiles of membrane rafts: impact on inflammatory responses in A549 cells
- Author
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Rakesh K. Singh, Rizwana Begum, Dhirendra Pratap Singh, Gagandeep Kaur, Devaiah Kambiranda, Prathyusha Bagam, and Sanjay Batra
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Proteomics ,Chemokine ,Proteome ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Inflammation ,Lung injury ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Toxicology ,Nicotine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Membrane Microdomains ,Caveolae ,medicine ,Humans ,Lipid raft ,A549 cell ,biology ,Chemistry ,Pattern recognition receptor ,Cell Biology ,Lipids ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,A549 Cells ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Electronic cigarettes (e-cigs) are battery-operated heating devices that aerosolize e-liquid, typically containing nicotine and several other chemicals, which is then inhaled by a user. Over the past decade, e-cigs have gained immense popularity among both smokers and non-smokers. One reason for this is that they are advertised as a safe alternative to conventional cigarettes. However, the recent reports of e-cig use associated lung injury have ignited a considerable debate about the relative harm and benefits of e-cigs. The number of reports about e-cig-induced inflammation and pulmonary health is increasing as researchers seek to better understand the effects of vaping on human health. In line with this, we investigated the molecular events responsible for the e-cig vapor condensate (ECVC)-mediated inflammation in human lung adenocarcinoma type II epithelial cells (A549). In an attempt to limit the variables caused by longer ingredient lists of flavored e-cigs, tobacco-flavored ECVC (TF-ECVC±nicotine) was employed for this study. Interestingly, we observed significant upregulation of cytokines and chemokines (IL-6, IL-8, and MCP-1) in A549 cells following a 48 h TF-ECVC challenge. Furthermore, there was a significant increase in the expression of pattern recognition receptors TLR-4 and NOD-1, lipid raft-associated protein caveolin-1, and transcription factor NF-кB in TF-ECVC with and/or without nicotine-challenged lung epithelial cells. Our results further demonstrate the harboring of TLR-4 and NOD-1 in the caveolae of TF-ECVC-challenged A549 cells. Proteomic and lipidomic analyses of lipid raft fractions from control and challenged cells revealed a distinct protein and lipid profile in TF-ECVC (w/wo nicotine)-exposed A549 cells. Interestingly, the inflammatory effects of TF-ECVC (w/wo nicotine) were inhibited following the caveolin-1 knockdown, thus demonstrating a critical role of caveolae raft-mediated signaling in eliciting inflammatory responses upon TF-ECVC challenge. Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract.
- Published
- 2020
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