247 results on '"J. Bertran"'
Search Results
2. Production of Toxoplasma gondii Recombinant Antigens in Genome-Edited Escherichia coli
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S. Amaral, J. Bertran, D. Goti, A. Redondo, D. Wood, and J. Ferré
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Clone (cell biology) ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Biochemistry ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antigen ,law ,010608 biotechnology ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Toxoplasma gondii ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Fusion protein ,Virology ,Toxoplasmosis ,030104 developmental biology ,Recombinant DNA ,biology.protein ,Antibody - Abstract
Toxoplasmosis is a widespread zoonosis with an impact on immunocompromised people and critical in pregnant women because of its transmission to the fetus. Recombinant Toxoplasma gondii antigens produced in Escherichia coli are useful for antibody detection in patient’s blood. The aim of the study was to evaluate the feasibility of deriving chromosome-edited E. coli clones producing T. gondii antigens. Here, we present the CRISPR-Cas9 facilitated editing of the E. coli genome to produce SAG2 and GRA2 T. gondii antigens. Moreover, we have derived a clone that produces both proteins and an additional clone producing a novel fusion protein, SAG2-GRA2. These proteins, bearing His-tag, can be easily purified and are useful to detect anti-Toxoplasma antibodies in human blood. We conclude that it is feasible to edit the E. coli chromosome to produce T. gondii antigens that are bound by antibodies present in people affected by toxoplasmosis.
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- 2021
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3. Lipocalin, Resistin and Gut Microbiota-Derived Propionate Could Be Used to Predict Metabolic Bariatric Surgery Selected Outcomes
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Auguet, T; Lopez-Dupla, M; Ramos, J; Bertran, L; Riesco, D; Aguilar, C; Ardévol, A; Pinent, M; Sabench, F; Del Castillo, D; Richart, C, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Auguet, T; Lopez-Dupla, M; Ramos, J; Bertran, L; Riesco, D; Aguilar, C; Ardévol, A; Pinent, M; Sabench, F; Del Castillo, D; Richart, C
- Abstract
Many patients with clinically severe obesity (CSO) need to undergo bariatric surgery, with possible side effects, so individualized predictive methods are required. Adipocytokines and gut/intestinal microbiota-derived metabolites could be predictive biomarkers of metabolic success post- surgery, but the knowledge in this field is undefined. The objective of this work was to determine whether adipocytokines and microbiota-derived metabolites can be used to predict the metabolic improvement post- surgery in women with CSO. We analyzed circulating levels of some cytokines and some microbiota-derived metabolites at baseline and 12 months post-surgery from 44 women with CSO and 21 women with normal weight. Results showed that glucose, insulin, glycosylated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), low-density lipoprotein (LDL-C), and triglycerides levels were decreased post-surgery, while high density lipoprotein increased. Twelve months later, leptin, resistin, lipocalin, PAI-1, TNF-alpha, and IL-1 beta levels were lower than baseline, meanwhile adiponectin, IL-8, and IL-10 levels were increased. Moreover, baseline lipocalin levels were associated with HbA1c reduction post-surgery; meanwhile baseline resistin was related to postoperative HOMA2 (insulin resistance) and baseline propionate was associated with LDL-C decrease. To conclude, the detection of lipocalin, resistin, and propionate levels may be used to predict the metabolic success following bariatric surgery, although new knowledge is needed.
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- 2022
4. EP08.02-135 Anti-EGF Antibodies Significantly Improve the Activity of MET and KRAS Inhibitors in Preclinical Models of Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)
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S. Garcia-Roman, M.A. Molina-Vila, A. Giménez-Capitán, N. Jordana-Ariza, J. Bertran-Alamillo, E. d'Hondt, and R. Rosell
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology - Published
- 2022
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5. A systematic scoping review to approach the construct of gender discrimination
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X Torres, L de la Torre, M J Bertran, and A Oliver
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Gender discrimination ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Psychology ,Construct (philosophy) ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Gender discrimination (GD) has been frequently linked to mental health. The heterogeneity of GD definition has led to different assessment methodologies and variation around the analysis of GD. This can affect the study of the association between GD and health outcomes. The main goal of this systematic scoping review is the review of previous studies to operationalize the definition of the GD construct. Three search strategies were set in Pubmed, CINAHL and PsycINFO. 1st and 2nd search strategies included studies if their main focus was either, the analysis of discrimination perception, triggers of discrimination or the analysis of GD effects and associated factors to its perception. 3rd strategy was focused on the identification of GD questionnaires. The prevalence of GD, factors and consequences associated with GD perception and forms of discrimination were the principal variables collected. Risk of bias was assessed (PROSPERO: CRD42019120719). A total of 925 studies were obtained and 84 papers included. GD analysis environments were described. 60 questionnaires of discrimination were identified. Prevalence of GD varied between 3.4-67%. Female gender and a younger age were the factors most frequently related to GD. Poorer mental health was the most frequent consequence. Two components of the GD construct were identified: undervaluation (different recognition, opportunities in access, evaluation standards and expectations) and different treatment (verbal abuse and behavior). GD is measured in several environments and with different methodologies. The two component definition of GD can add order and precision to the measurement, increase response rates and reported GD. Key messages The heterogeneity in the conception of gender discrimination has led to different ways of assessment and to a great heterogeneity around the analysis of GD perception. This operative gender discrimination construct could add order and precision to its measurement, increase response rates and reported GD.
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- 2019
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6. Methodological guidelines for preparing a structured therapeutic education program: From design to evaluation
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M J, Bertran, M, Jansà, M, Vidal, M, Núñez, P, Isla, and J, Escarrabill
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Therapeutic patient education (TPE) is effective and essential in the context of the growing prevalence of chronic diseases, in which tools are needed for planning structured programs. The objective of this project was to develop guidelines for designing and assessing a TPE program.1) We assembled a multidisciplinary group of 8 leaders in TPE, chronicity, quality and safety from the hospital and the university. 2) We conducted an exhaustive review of the scientific literature on the planning of TPE programs directed at chronically ill patients, their relatives and caregivers. 3) The final text underwent comments and suggestions by participants from the hospital and primary care centre during a course on information and TPE methodology. The recommendations were unanimously agreed upon by the writing group.We obtained a standardised work procedure targeted at professionals involved in planning TPE programs, based on international recommendations. The document is structured into sections: a) Definition of the health problem and analysis of the situation; b) Program structure (human resources and materials); objectives (health-related, behaviour-related and educational) and methodology; c) Path the patient and family/caregiver follows in the program; and d) Assessment and indicators. The assessment of the procedure, in the framework of the methodology courses, was favourable.The methodology provided by this document serves as an instrument for the standardised and systematic planning of educational programs and unifies the criteria in their drafting. However, the document needs to be adapted to the condition and population to which each program is directed.
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- 2019
7. Deregulated serotonin pathway in women with morbid obesity and nafld
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Binetti J; Bertran L; Riesco D; Aguilar C; Martínez S; Sabench F; Porras JA; Camaron J; Del Castillo D; Richart C; Auguet T, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Binetti J; Bertran L; Riesco D; Aguilar C; Martínez S; Sabench F; Porras JA; Camaron J; Del Castillo D; Richart C; Auguet T
- Abstract
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) extends from simple steatosis (SS) to non‐alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Peripheral serotonin (5‐HT) has become as an important regulator of different metabolic pathways. 5‐HT has been related to obesity and lipid accumulation in the liver. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between the 5‐HT signaling pathway and the degree of NAFLD, as well as to investigate whether peripheral 5‐HT levels are related to the hepatic and jejunal mRNA abundance of serotonin receptors (HTR) in a cohort of women with morbid obesity (MO) and NAFLD. ELISA was used to quantify the serum 5‐HT from normal‐weight subjects (n = 26) and patients with MO (n = 58). We used RTq‐PCR analysis to evaluate the relative expression of HTR in women with MO with normal liver (n = 22), SS (n = 21), and NASH (n = 15). The 5‐HT was diminished in women with MO under a hypocaloric diet, regardless of the presence of NAFLD. Additionally, we report a negative correlation of 5‐HT levels with metabolic syndrome criteria, suggesting that serotonin may have a protective role in obesity. Additionally, the hepatic expression of HTR2A and HTR2B were decreased in women with MO and NAFLD, but no significant differences in the HTR jejunal expression according to the presence of NAFLD were found.
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- 2020
8. Palbociclib-induced senescence upregulates the expression of IL-8 and may enhance the response to inmunotherapy
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C. Mayo de las Casas, A. Aguilar, J. Bertran Aramillo, J J García Mosquera, Santiago Viteri, Jordi Codony-Servat, Magaly Molina, S. Garcia Román, A. Martinez Bueno, and A. Gimenez Capitan
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Senescence ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,Hematology ,Interleukin 8 ,Palbociclib ,business - Published
- 2019
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9. Optimal timing for initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy in treatment-naïve human immunodeficiency virus-1-infected individuals presenting with AIDS-defining diseases: the experience of the PISCIS Cohort
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C, Manzardo, A, Esteve, N, Ortega, D, Podzamczer, J, Murillas, F, Segura, L, Force, C, Tural, J, Vilaró, A, Masabeu, I, Garcia, M, Guadarrama, E, Ferrer, M, Riera, G, Navarro, B, Clotet, J M, Gatell, J, Casabona, J M, Miró, and J, Bertran
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Adult ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,AIDS-defining events ,Disease ,survival ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Advanced patients ,Prospective Studies ,Young adult ,Prospective cohort study ,Survival analysis ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,business.industry ,timing of HAART ,Hazard ratio ,prognostic factors ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,tuberculosis ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Cohort ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
In this prospective, multicentre cohort study, we analysed specific prognostic factors and the impact of timing of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) on disease progression and death among 625 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1-infected, treatment-naïve patients diagnosed with an AIDS-defining disease. HAART was classified as early (35 years, and low CD4+ count (
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- 2013
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10. Successful wound healing over exposed metal implants using vacuum-assisted wound closure in a dog
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J. Bertran, Noel Fitzpatrick, and Michael Farrell
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Vacuum ,Vacuum assisted ,Arthrodesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tarsus, Animal ,Dogs ,Surgical Wound Dehiscence ,medicine ,Animals ,Surgical Wound Infection ,Small Animals ,Wound Healing ,Wound Closure Techniques ,Wound dehiscence ,business.industry ,Granulation tissue ,Soft tissue ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Labrador Retriever ,Wound closure ,business ,Wound healing - Abstract
An eight-month-old Labrador retriever was presented with a grade IIIb open shearing injury of the left tarsus. Acute severe surgical site infection developed 2 days after pan-tarsal arthrodesis, resulting in wound dehiscence. Vacuum-assisted wound therapy was carried out for 12 days to treat an extensive full-thickness soft tissue defect with exposure of metal implants. New granulation tissue formation covering most of the defect was achieved by day 10 of this therapy. Epithelialization was achieved by second intention healing with open wound management. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first veterinary clinical case report documenting complete healing over exposed metal implants without any requirement for surgical revision.
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- 2013
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11. Chapter 12. Ribozymes
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A. Oliva and J. Bertran
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RNA world hypothesis ,biology ,Mechanism (biology) ,Chemistry ,Negative charge ,Ribozyme ,biology.protein ,Rational design ,RNA ,Nanotechnology ,Biochemical engineering ,Ribosome - Abstract
It has been found that RNA can act not only as a genetic carrier, but also as a biological catalyst. The concept of a ribozyme, created in 1982, and the hypothesis of a RNA world, reflect this dual behaviour. This chapter is devoted to studying the mechanisms of several reactions catalysed by natural ribozymes with the aim of detecting the main catalytic factors that intervene in this kind of enzyme. It has been shown that the dications Mg2+, which help to neutralise the large negative charge of the main chain, not only play the structural role that they have in the ribosome, but can also play a direct role in the catalytic process in some cases. The molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are very important in order to clarify the catalytic mechanism of natural ribozymes and are becoming basic for achieving the rational design of low-cost artificial ribozymes in the near future.
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- 2016
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12. y+ LAT-1 mediates transport of the potent and selective iNOS inhibitor, GW274150, in control J774 macrophages
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Manuel Palacín, Anwar R. Baydoun, Shori Thakur, J. Bertran, J. Dawson, and R. G. Knowles
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Clinical Biochemistry ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Sulfides ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,Inos inhibitor ,Mice ,Animals ,Macrophage ,Northern blot ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Chemistry ,Macrophages ,Sodium ,Organic Chemistry ,Amino Acid Transport System y+L ,Biological Transport ,Transporter ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Blotting, Northern ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Blot ,Ethylmaleimide ,Cell culture ,biology.protein - Abstract
This study has characterised the transport mechanism(s) for the novel and selective inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), GW274150, in murine macrophage J774 cells. Transport of GW274150 was saturable (K(m) = 0.24 +/- 0.01 mM and V(max) of 8.5 +/- 0.12 pmol.microg protein(-1) min(-1)), pH-insensitive and largely Na(+)-independent. Transport was also susceptible to trans-stimulation and was significantly inhibited by a 10-fold excess of L-arginine, L-lysine, L-leucine, L-methionine, L-glutamine and 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine but not by other amino acids or by N-ethylmaleimide. More importantly, the inhibitions caused by the neutral amino acids were critically dependent on Na(+). These results strongly implicate system y(+)L in the transport of GW274150. Northern blot analysis confirmed this by revealing the presence of transcripts for y(+)LAT-1 but not y(+)LAT-2. Thus, taken together, our data show for the first time that J774 macrophages express y(+)LAT-1 transporters and that these carriers mediate transport of GW2741500 at least in these cells.
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- 2006
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13. Unusual hydrogen bonds in [AH3–H3O]+ radical cations (A=C, Si, Ge, Sn and Pb)Single-electron hydrogen bond, proton-hydride hydrogen bond and formation of [H2AOH2]+–H2 complexes
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A GIL, M SODUPE, and J BERTRAN
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General Physics and Astronomy ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Published
- 2004
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14. P2.02-014 Simultaneous Gene Profiling of Advanced NSCLC: Single-Molecule Quantification of DNA and RNA by nCounter3D™ Technology
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Gavin Meredith, A. Arcocha, S. Lopez-Padres, C. Hernan, M.A. Molina-Vila, Aleix Prat, P.M. Ross, Noemí Reguart, Sonia Rodríguez, Cristina Teixidó, Ana Giménez-Capitán, N. Vilariño, J. Bertran-Alamillo, D. Martinez, P. Galván, and Afshin Mashadi-Hossein
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,business.industry ,RNA ,Computational biology ,Molecular biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Molecule ,Medicine ,Profiling (information science) ,business ,Gene ,DNA - Published
- 2017
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15. Milk fat depression and plasma lipids in dairy cows and goats
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C. Delavaud, H. Fougère, J. Bertrand-Michel, and L. Bernard
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Ceramide ,Lipid supplement ,Lipidomic ,Plasma triacylglycerol ,Ruminant ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
This study examines the effects of diets supplemented with various lipids selected to induce divergent milk fat content responses (including a milk fat depression) between dairy cows and goats on plasma lipid composition. The objective was to better understand the mechanisms behind the regulation of milk fat secretion in these two ruminant species. Twelve Holstein cows and 12 Alpine goats were fed a basal diet not supplemented (CTL) or supplemented with corn oil plus wheat starch (COS, 5% DM intake (DMI)), marine algae powder of Schizochytrium sp. (MAP, 1.5% DMI), or hydrogenated palm oil (HPO, 3% DMI), in a replicated 4 × 4 Latin square design, during 28 days. On day 27, blood samples were collected for lipid analysis. Plasma lipid classes were quantified by high-performance thin-layer chromatography, with triacylglycerol (TAG) and free fatty acid (FFA) fractions analysed for FA composition by GLC. Plasma molecular species of TAG and ceramides were determined by HPLC–high-resolution MS and by liquid chromatography–triple quadrupole, respectively. Irrespective of diet, plasma total lipid content was higher in cows than goats (+61%), and TAG concentration was higher in goats than cows (+157%). In cows, conversely to goats, COS increased the trans-10 C18:1 proportion in the free FA (+248%) and the TAG (+195%) fractions. In cows and goats, MAP induced increases in cholesterol esters, cholesterol and phospholipids compared to CTL and changes in the plasma free FA and FA of TAG profiles. In both ruminant species, the concentrations of the lipid fractions were unchanged by HPO compared to CTL. Our results point to species specificities and different diet effects in plasma concentrations and compositions of lipid fractions in cows and goats. These new data highlight how diets, that induce large variations in milk fat secretions, affect the plasma lipid classes available for milk fat synthesis.
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- 2022
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16. Synthesis of organic heterocycles via multicomponent reactions with cyano transition metal complexes
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Dirk Rieger, J. Bertran-Nadal, Wolf Peter Fehlhammer, Ulrich Kernbach, C. André, and S.D. Lotz
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Hydrochloride ,Stereochemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Medicinal chemistry ,Cycloaddition ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Transition metal ,Molar ratio ,Reagent ,Materials Chemistry ,Amine gas treating ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Carbenoid - Abstract
Twenty three complexes of the type (1–23) have been synthesized by the three-component cycloaddition (3CC) of [M(CN)(CO)5]− (M Cr, Mo, W) with various isocyanides CNR1 (R1 Me, Cy, tBu, p-Tol, CH2CO2Et and CH2SO2Tol-p) and carbonyl compounds R2R3CO (R2, R3 =for example, Me, Me; Et, Et; tBu, Me; H, iPr; CF3, CF3; [CH2]4; [CH2]5). Several other mono- and di-cyano complexes ([Mn2(CN)(CO)9]−, [Fe(CN)2Cp(CO)]−, [Fe(CN)Cp(dppe)], [Ru(CN)Cp(dppe)] and [Co(CN)2(dmgH)2]−) also undergo this obviously general reaction resulting in the 4-amino-oxazolin-2-ylidene complexes [M Fe (34), Ru (35)] and (36). With amine hydrochloride as the fourth component, however, the 4CC products (29), [R1 Cy, R2 = Ph (37); p-Tol (38); R1 tBu, R2 = p-Tol (39)] have been obtained on using a molar ratio of cyano complex/organic reagents of 1: 2, afforded the bis(heterocyclic) complexes (40). To confirm the claimed nature of the products, X-ray structure analyses have been carried out on (27). Detachment of the carbenoid 4-amino-imidazoles from the complexes [M W, R Cy (46); M Cr, R = tBu (47)] by oxidation with KmNO4/Fe(NO3)3 surprisingly gave the 4-amino-5-hydroxyimidazol-2-ones 48 and 49 which were characterized by X-ray analyses.
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- 1995
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17. Management of degenerative lumbosacral disease in cats by dorsal laminectomy and lumbosacral stabilization
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A. Danielski, J. Bertran, and Noel Fitzpatrick
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Decompression ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiography ,Cauda equina syndrome ,Lumbar vertebrae ,Intervertebral Disc Degeneration ,Cat Diseases ,0403 veterinary science ,medicine ,Animals ,Polyradiculopathy ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Laminectomy ,Lumbosacral Region ,Cauda equina ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,medicine.disease ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cats ,Animal Science and Zoology ,business ,Lumbosacral joint - Abstract
SummaryIn this case series we describe the diagnosis and surgical treatment of five cats affected by clinical cauda equina syndrome as a result of degenerative lumbosacral stenosis. Radiographic and magnetic resonance imaging findings confirmed the suspected diagnosis of disc-associated lumbosacral disease. Cauda equina decompression was achieved by dorsal laminectomy followed by dorsal annulectomy and nuclear extirpation. Dorsal stabilization was achieved using miniature positive-profile pins inserted into the vertebral body of L7 and the wings of S1 with the free ends of the pins being embedded in a bolus of gentamicin-impregnated polymethylmethacrylate. Reassessment two years postoperatively using a previously validated feline specific owner questionnaire indicated satisfactory outcome with complete return to normal activity and resolution of signs of pain in all cases.
- Published
- 2012
18. ChemInform Abstract: One Century of Physical Organic Chemistry: The Menshutkin Reaction
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J.-L. M. ABBOUD, R. NOTARIO, J. BERTRAN, and M. SOLA
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General Medicine - Published
- 2010
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19. [Quality standards of educational activities for patients and families in a university hospital]
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M J, Bertran, M, Jansà, M, Santiñá, A, Prat, and A, Trilla
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Family Health ,Hospitals, University ,Self Care ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Patient Education as Topic ,Spain ,Teaching Materials ,Mental Disorders ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
To identify groups of patients receiving hospital-based educational programs, to determine whether the education was structured or ad hoc, and to analyse information on the structure, process and results of the programs.We performed a cross-sectional study using a translated and adapted version of the National Standards for Diabetes Self-Management Education. Information was collected on structure (resources, availability of a written program and professional training), the process followed by the patient (baseline assessment, methodology, training courses, support materials and record of activities), patient outcomes (post-intervention assessment, tools, record of evaluation and results) and program results (number of patients/relatives included, regular assessment).Patient groups receiving education were: patients with chronic diseases, patients with treatable psychiatric disorders and patients with oncological and haematological processes. Most educational activities involved informative activities and technical skills training, both on-demand and integrated in care activity. Structured therapeutic education programs were aimed at patients/relatives with: diabetes, obesity, musculoskeletal diseases, AIDS, splenectomy, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hypertension and urinary incontinence. Not all programs had written guidelines or defined parameters with respect to structure, process and results.The application of quality standards to hospital educational programs is useful in detecting: patients receiving education and the quality, type and weaknesses of the programs studied. Software based on these standards may provide information on trends in patient education, identify opportunities for improvement and aid the evaluation of the impact of each educational activity on the quality indicators associated with each program.
- Published
- 2009
20. Simultaneous bilateral contracture of the infraspinatus muscle
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J, Franch, J, Bertran, G, Remolins, P, Fontecha, M C, Díaz-Bertrana, and I, Durall
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Male ,Contracture ,Dogs ,Treatment Outcome ,Shoulder Joint ,Forelimb ,Muscle Fibers, Skeletal ,Animals ,Dog Diseases ,Walking ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Muscle Contraction - Abstract
A case of bilateral fibrotic contracture of the infraspinatus muscles in a five-year-old Belgian Shepherd dog is described. The dog was presented with progressive forelimb lameness with postural and gait abnormalities three months after an episode of overexertion. When walking, the lower part of both forelimbs swung in a lateral arc causing a circumduction movement and in the standing position, the dog showed elbow adduction with external rotation of the distal part of both front limbs. Orthopaedic examination revealed bilateral atrophy of both infraspinatus and supraspinatus muscles and restriction in the range of motion of both shoulders, especially when attempting abduction and flexion. No specific findings were observed in the shoulder or elbow radiographs but hyperechogenic areas were evident in the ultrasonographic examination of both infraspinatus muscles. A diagnosis of fibrotic contracture of both infraspinatus muscles was established and bilateral tenectomy of the insertion tendons of the infraspinatus muscles was performed. Complete recovery of the animal was achieved after the surgery, which was confirmed in a long-term follow-up (10 months). In conclusion, physical examination and ultrasonography allowed a proper diagnosis of the condition, and tenectomy of the infraspinatus muscles resulted in a complete recovery of the patient even with bilateral involvement.
- Published
- 2009
21. 478 Pharmacological disruption of the Astrocytic Elevated Gene-1 (AEG1) in anticancer intervention: PB0412_3 (PB03) as a first-in-class AEG1 interacting agent
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J.C. Monasterio, Rosa Rosell, O. Villacañas, F. Albericio, C. Olbiol, Niki Karachaliou, J. Bertran, J. Jimeno, M. Taron, G. Acosta, Ana Giménez-Capitán, Cristina Teixidó, Miguel Angel Molina, and Maria Sanchez-Ronco
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Cancer Research ,Angiogenesis ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Cancer ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oncology ,chemistry ,In vivo ,Neuroblastoma ,medicine ,KRAS ,Growth inhibition ,Protein kinase B - Abstract
Background: AEG1 is highly expressed in most solid tumors conferring multidrug resistance, increased proliferation, angiogenesis, metastatic potential and poor outcome. AEG1 activates multiple signal transduction pathways such as PIK3/AKT, NFKB, MAPK, WNT and is a rational target for therapeutic intervention in cancer. Our previous data in advanced EGFR mutated and EGFR wild type lung cancer patients confirmed that AEG1 overexpression is indicative of poor outcome to targeted and pleiotropic therapy. In addition, AEG1 functionality is instrumental in the natural history of brain tumors. Material and Methods: We designed an in silico model based on inhibition of the NFkB (p65) binding domain of AEG1, identifying a possible interacting interface between the two proteins that could be modeled as a 3-dimensional structure. This interface was reduced and transformed into a 3-point pharmacophore for virtual screeningcomparing both molecular interaction fields and the pharmacophore. A total of 217,000 chemical entities (CEs) were tested in this model. Each CE was scored using the Hercules affinity ranking. The top sixty CEs amongst the high scores were selected, and thus 4 compounds were proposed for in vitro screening. Twenty analogs were then synthesized, and PB03, a small molecular weight polyheterocyclic compound, was selected as the CE lead. Results: PB03 displays antitumor activity at low mM and nM concentrations. PB03-induced growth inhibition appears to be independent of EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA and p53 mutational status, Her2 amplification, and BRCA1 and AEG1 mRNA expression. PB03 clusters in vitro molar potency (MP) of Glial (Gliobastoma, GBM) and Neural Crest (Neuroblastoma (NBM) and Melanoma) -derived tumors as compared with PB03 profile in other solid tumors and in non-tumoral cells (p < 0.0001). A lack of impact of MGMT methylation status on PB03 (MP) sensitivity has been observed. PB03 is between 500 and 1000 fold more potent than temozolomide and MTIC in GBM and NBM (p < 0.0001). The mean PB03 IC50s in human non-tumoral cell lines is 2.08mM versus 1.22mM in the solid tumor panel vs 0.40mM in the Glial and Neural Crest-derived panel vs 0.11mM in GBM+NBM. Preliminary data in PC9 shows downregulation of AEG1 mRNA expression upon exposure to PB03. Expansion of the Glial and Neural Crest-derived tumor panel, cell kinetics, drug-induced cell death and in vivo/PK-PD studies in in vivo models is ongoing. PB03 has a negative score when screened in the SCIfinder chemical data base confirming PB03 as a first-in-class CE. Conclusions: This is the first successful attempt at the pharmacological intervention against the AEG1 pathway. The observed clustering of Glial and Neural Crest-derived malignancies is unique and a tool for rational development.
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- 2014
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22. Can we Do Better with Our Current Therapies for Nsclc? the Spanish Lung Cancer Group Approach
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Alberto Villanueva, Daniela Morales-Espinosa, B. Massuti Sureda, Cristina Teixidó, R. Estrada, Teresa Moran, S. Garcia-Roman, Josep Ramírez, J. Codony, Miguel Angel Molina, Enric Carcereny, Ana Giménez-Capitán, Niki Karachaliou, A. Vergnenegre, Maria Gonzalez-Cao, Imane Chaib, Maria Sanchez-Ronco, Rosa Rosell, C. Codony, and J. Bertran
- Subjects
Predictive marker ,business.industry ,GAS6 ,Afatinib ,Notch signaling pathway ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,T790M ,Gefitinib ,Oncology ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,Erlotinib ,business ,Lung cancer ,neoplasms ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Aim: In the SLCG large-scale screening, 16.6% of EGFR mutations were found, median PFS and OS for pts receiving erlotinib was 14 mos and 27 mos, respectively. The HR for the duration of PFS was 1.68 for the presence of L858R mutation in paired serum DNA (P = 0.02) (NEJM 2009; 361:958-67). Mutant EGFR NSCLC selectively activates STAT3 signaling which promotes cell survival and single EGFR inhibition can even enhance STAT3 activation. Growing evidence shows that targeting STAT3 or upstream or downstream components could improve the outcome. Hence, the resistance mechanisms should be revised, T790M is detected in 60% before therapy (reported by SLCG) and MET signaling can cause inter-receptor crosstalk with AXL, EPHA2, JAK1 and CDCP1. BIM mRNA expression is an independent predictive marker of response to erlotinib (reported by SLCG). High BIM can predict response and early adaptive resistance via IL6-STAT3-Bcl2. In those patients with low BIM, STAT3 can be activated through over-expression of AXL and EPHA2. Crosstalk between TGFb and NOTCH signaling can also be involved. Methods: Transcripts involving STAT3 signaling were examined from 80 EGFR mutant NSCLC pts, including BIM, STAT3 and SHP2. Also MET, AXL, Mer, EphA2 and Gas6 were analyzed. Together with TGFb and NOTCH constituents: ADAM17, NUMB, HES1, DUSP1, RBJ, LncRNA-ATB, SLUG, GLI and PKCi. Repurposing drugs, in combination with gefitinib, erlotinib and afatinib, were examined in cell cultures and in subcutaneous and orthotopic xenograft mice models. Results: Data will be presented on the correlation of BIM and SHP2 with regard to the mechanism of activation of STAT3 and the influence in response, PFS and OS in the 80 erlotinib-treated EGFR mutant NSCLC pts, and the influence of the above mentioned signaling constituents. Early data shows synergism of gefitinib with AXL inhibitor in the PC9-R cells. Also, activity of niclosamide and paclitaxel. Conclusions: Based on the results, the SLCG-GFCP will carry out a trial with erlotinib in combination with the most active repurposing drugs found, customized by BIM expression. Disclosure: All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Gas phase intramolecular proton transfer in cationized glycine and chlorine substituted derivatives (M-Gly, M = Na+, Mg2+, Cu+, Ni+, and Cu2+): existence of Zwitterionic structures?
- Author
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S, Pulkkinen, M, Noguera, L, Rodríguez-Santiago, M, Sodupe, and J, Bertran
- Abstract
The intramolecular proton transfer in cationized glycine and chlorine substituted derivatives with M = Na+, Mg2+, Ni+, Cu+, and Cu2+ has been studied with the three parameter B3LYP density functional method. The coordination of metal cations to the oxygens of the carboxylic group of glycine stabilizes the zwitterionic structure. For all monocations the intramolecular proton transfer occurs readily with small energy barriers (1-2 kcalmol(-1)). For the dication Mg2+ and Cu2+ systems, the zwitterionic structure becomes very stable. However, whereas for Mg2+, the proton transfer process takes place spontaneously, for Cu2+ the reaction occurs with an important energy barrier. The substitution of the hydrogens of the amino group by chlorine atoms decreases the basicity of nitrogen, which destabilizes the zwitterionic structure. For monosubstituted glycine complexed with Na+, the zwitterionic structure still exists as a minimum, but for disubstituted glycine no minimum appears for this structure. In contrast, for Mg2+ complexed to mono- and disubstituted glycine, the zwitterionic structure remains the only minimum, since the enhanced electrostatic interaction with the dication overcomes the destabilizing effect of the chlorine atoms.
- Published
- 2001
24. The ICOH Working Group 'Unemployment and Health' Paris 25-26 September 1998: an introduction. International Commission of Occupational Health
- Author
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J, Bertran and B, Claussen
- Subjects
Unemployment ,Health Status ,Humans - Published
- 1999
25. A multifactorial health risk questionnaire
- Author
-
J, Valty, S, Frèal, C, Nguyen Khoa, D, Demoulin, and J, Bertran
- Subjects
Risk Factors ,Unemployment ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health Status Indicators ,Humans ,Middle Aged - Abstract
to assess the relations between cardiovascular risk factors and psychological or socio-economic status.We used a self-questionnaire including data upon usual risk factors, anxiety, depression, behavioural pattern, somatic manifestations, life style, incomes and work-related stress. We gathered 955 people, mainly attending an occupational health examination, filling anonymously the same restricted questionnaire (83 questions).Non-working people represented only 4.4 per cent of the study group and included mainly retired people. They differed significantly from wage earners by a higher level of cardiovascular risk and depression, respectively 15.8 (s.d. 11.3) versus 7.8 (6.7) and 5.6 (3.5) versus 3.9 (2.8). These differences can be related to older age of this group. Among working people, 30 per cent felt job-insecurity; they differed significantly from working people by a higher level of anxiety, 8.9 (3.7) versus 7.5 (3.3). There was no difference concerning the absolute cardiovascular risk or the behavioural pattern. A comprehensive self questionnaire is proposed.
- Published
- 1999
26. Genotypic analysis of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma: a comparative study of Southern blot analysis with polymerase chain reaction amplification of the T-cell receptor-gamma gene
- Author
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N, Curcó, O, Servitje, M, Llucià, J, Bertran, A, Limón, M, Carmona, V, Romagosa, and J, Peyrí
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Skin Neoplasms ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Gene Rearrangement, gamma-Chain T-Cell Antigen Receptor ,Middle Aged ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Lymphoma, T-Cell, Cutaneous ,Blotting, Southern ,Mycosis Fungoides ,Humans ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Aged ,DNA Primers - Abstract
The diagnosis of early cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) is a difficult point in dermatology. Recently, Southern blot analysis (SBA) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) have been used to detect clonality in initial lesions in which clinical and histological findings are unspecific. Forty-one samples from 25 patients with CTCL were investigated for the presence of T-cell receptor-gamma gene rearrangement using a nested PCR technique and analysed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Conventional SBA was also performed on 28 samples from 20 of these patients. In addition, 20 samples corresponding to patients with large plaque parapsoriasis (LPP), cutaneous B-cell lymphoma (CBCL) and eczema were analysed by PCR in the same way as were the CTCL specimens. Most of the CTCL specimens (81%) showed clonality on PCR analysis. Among patients with mycosis fungoides, 71% of initial patch lesions and 100% of plaques and tumours showed clonal disease. Clonality could be detected in three of four histologically negative post-treatment lesions. Clonal rearrangement was detected in one of three patients with LPP and in three of 10 patients with CBCL. None of the samples corresponding to patients with eczema showed positive results. SBA was significantly less sensitive than PCR in detecting clonality in CTCL patients (42% among early disease and 60% among advanced cases). The results indicate that this PCR/PAGE technique is a reliable and useful method for the detection of clonality in early skin lesions of CTCL patients and probably in the identification of silent extracutaneous involvement.
- Published
- 1998
27. Presentation of a PCR-nuclease protection strategy for minimal residual disease monitoring in B-ALL
- Author
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A, Limón, J, Bertran, M, Llucià, M, Carmona, C, Canals, J J, Ortega, J, García, and F, Rueda
- Subjects
Genetic Markers ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Base Sequence ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Single-Strand Specific DNA and RNA Endonucleases ,Gene Rearrangement, B-Lymphocyte, Heavy Chain ,Humans ,Child ,Oligonucleotide Probes ,Burkitt Lymphoma ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,DNA Primers - Abstract
Methods for detecting residual malignant cells in patients suffering from lymphoid malignancies have neither been sufficiently sensitive nor easy to routinize, hampering a potential prediction of disease outcome. Taking advantage of clone-specific DNA sequences, generated during lymphocyte differentiation and the polymerase chain reaction, some strategies have been developed for several groups. Up to now the most specific and sensitive methodology, which consists of designing leukemia-specific oligonucleotides, requires sequencing of the complementary determining region III-DNA for each particular patient and is too laborious to be applied to each case for routine monitoring in most hospital laboratories. In an attempt to achieve an easy way to detect residual malignant cells in B lymphoproliferative diseases, we have used a new PCR-based approach, named here as PCR-nuclease protection assay, consisting of: (i) amplification of DNA segments corresponding to the complementarity determining region III of the immunoglobulin heavy chain genes from samples at disease diagnosis; (ii) isolation of the disease-specific single-stranded DNA; (iii) labeling of the single-stranded DNA to generate specific probes; (iv) hybridization to amplified DNA from samples corresponding to different disease phases; and (v) digestion with S1-nuclease. Using this approach, we could detect one malignant cell in a background of 10(5) healthy cells. The sensitivity and specificity of this approach compares with those of the above mentioned specific oligonucleotide strategy in detecting residual malignant B cells. Moreover, this strategy is much less tedious and could be used by most hospital laboratories.
- Published
- 1995
28. 9017 POSTER DISCUSSION Initial Detection of the Double Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Mutation (L858R or Deletion in Exon 19 [del 19] Plus T790M) in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Patients (p) With Brain Metastases (mets) and the Influence of First-Line Chemotherapy on Outcome to Erlotinib
- Author
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Susana Benlloch, J. Bertran-Alamilllo, Miquel Taron, José Jurado Sánchez, Carlos Camps, Rafael Rosell, Teresa Moran, Miguel Angel Molina-Vila, B. Massuti, and Christian D. Rolfo
- Subjects
Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) ,medicine.disease ,Exon ,T790M ,Egfr mutation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Erlotinib ,Epidermal growth factor receptor ,First line chemotherapy ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Organ transplantation in Catalonia
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R, Deulofeu and J, Bertran
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Europe ,Transplantation ,Tissue and Organ Procurement ,Spain ,Graft Survival ,Humans ,Child ,Kidney Transplantation ,Follow-Up Studies - Published
- 1992
30. Nonrenal organ sharing in Spain: the first 3-year (1987 to 1990) experience
- Author
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R, Deulofeu, J C, Miralles, J, Busquets, M, Gonzalez, E, Belmonte, and J, Bertran
- Subjects
Tissue and Organ Procurement ,Spain ,Humans ,Kidney Transplantation ,Liver Transplantation - Published
- 1991
31. y+ LAT-1 mediates transport of the potent and selective iNOS inhibitor, GW274150, in control J774 macrophages.
- Author
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A. R. Baydoun, J. Bertran, S. Thakur, J. Dawson, M. Palacín, and R. G. Knowles
- Abstract
Summary. This study has characterised the transport mechanism(s) for the novel and selective inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), GW274150, in murine macrophage J774 cells. Transport of GW274150 was saturable (K
m = 0.24 ± 0.01 mM and Vmax of 8.5 ± 0.12 pmol·µg protein−1 min−1 ), pH-insensitive and largely Na+ -independent. Transport was also susceptible to trans-stimulation and was significantly inhibited by a 10-fold excess of L-arginine, L-lysine, L-leucine, L-methionine, L-glutamine and 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine but not by other amino acids or by N-ethylmaleimide. More importantly, the inhibitions caused by the neutral amino acids were critically dependent on Na+ . These results strongly implicate system y+ L in the transport of GW274150. Northern blot analysis confirmed this by revealing the presence of transcripts for y+ LAT-1 but not y+ LAT-2. Thus, taken together, our data show for the first time that J774 macrophages express y+ LAT-1 transporters and that these carriers mediate transport of GW2741500 at least in these cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
32. Author Correction: Sex-biased patterns shaped the genetic history of Roma
- Author
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C. García-Fernández, N. Font-Porterias, V. Kučinskas, E. Sukarova-Stefanovska, H. Pamjav, H. Makukh, B. Dobon, J. Bertranpetit, M. G. Netea, F. Calafell, and D. Comas
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2020
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33. Experimental Evaluation of the Critical Flutter Speed on Wings of Different Aspect Ratio
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J. Bertrand, H. Fellouah, and K. Alsaif
- Subjects
Aeroelasticity ,Flutter ,Wings ,Aspect ratio ,Angle of attack ,Wind tunnel measurements. ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 - Abstract
In this work, wind tunnel experiments were conducted to evaluate the critical flutter speed of wings for three pertinent flight parameters (i) the aspect ratio (AR), (ii) the angle of attack (AoA), and (iii) the aircraft propeller excitation. Six symmetrical wings (NACA0012 design), of fixed chord length of 80 mm and varied AR from 8.75 to 15, were used for this purpose. These wings were mounted horizontally in the wind tunnel as fixed-free condition. The airflow speed is increased slowly until the wing flutters. The results show that the critical flutter speed decreases when the AR increases. For higher AR, the effect of the AoA on the flutter speed is minimal. However, for low AR, the AoA is vital in delaying the flutter instability of the wing. This critical speed spans low to moderate Reynolds numbers based on the wing chord length (Rec =7×104-2×105) which corresponds to the speed range of High Altitude and Long Endurance (HALE) aircraft. In contrast, for a propeller excitation outside the resonance region of the wing, its effect of the on flutter characteristics is not noticeable.
- Published
- 2017
34. Staphylococcus aureus CC30 Lineage and Absence of sed,j,r-Harboring Plasmid Predict Embolism in Infective Endocarditis
- Author
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Jean-Philippe Rasigade, Amélie Leclère, François Alla, Adrien Tessier, Michèle Bes, Catherine Lechiche, Véronique Vernet-Garnier, Cédric Laouénan, François Vandenesch, Catherine Leport, The AEPEI Study Group, B. Hoen, X. Duval, F. Alla, A. Bouvet, S. Briancxon, E. Cambau, M. Celard, C. Chirouze, N. Danchin, T. Doco-Lecompte, F. Delahaye, J. Etienne, B. Iung, V. Le Moing, J. F. Obadia, C. Leport, C. Poyart, M. Revest, C. Selton-Suty, C. Strady, P. Tattevin, F. Vandenesch, Y. Bernard, S. Chocron, P. Plesiat, I. Abouliatim, C. De Place, P. Y. Donnio, J. P. Carteaux, C. Lion, N. Aissa, B. Baehrel, R. Jaussaud, P. Nazeyrollas, V. Vernet, P. Nataf, C. Chidiac, H. Aumaître, J. M. Frappier, E. Oziol, A. Sotto, C. Sportouch, M. Bes, P. Abassade, E. Abrial, C. Acar, J. F. Alexandra, N. Amireche, D. Amrein, P. Andre, M. Appriou, M. A. Arnould, P. Assayag, A. Atoui, F. Aziza, N. Baille, N. Bajolle, P. Battistella, S. Baumard, A. Ben Ali, J. Bertrand, S. Bialek, M. Bois Grosse, M. Boixados, F. Borlot, A. Bouchachi, O. Bouche, S. Bouchemal, J. L. Bourdon, L. Brasme, F. Bricaire, E. Brochet, F. J. Bruntz, A. Cady, J. Cailhol, M. P. Caplan, B. Carette, O. Cartry, C. Cazorla, H. Chamagne, H. Champagne, G. Chanques, J. Chastre, B. Chevalier, F. Chometon, C. Christophe, A. Cohen, N. Colin de Verdiere, V. Daneluzzi, L. David, P. De Lentdecker, V. Delcey, P. Deleuze, E. Donal, B. Deroure, V. Descotes-Genon, K. Didier Petit, A. Dinh, V. Doat, F. Duchene, F. Duhoux, M. Dupont, S. Ederhy, O. Epaulard, M. Evest, J. F. Faucher, B. Fantin, E. Fauveau, T. Ferry, M. Fillod, T. Floch, T. Fraisse, J. M. Frapier, L. Freysz, B. Fumery, B. Gachot, S. Gallien, I. Gandjbach, P. Garcon, A. Gaubert, J. L. Genoud, S. Ghiglione, C. Godreuil, A. Grentzinger, L. Groben, D. Gherissi, P. Gue'ret, A. Hagege, N. Hammoudi, F. Heliot, P. Henry, S. Herson, P. Houriez, L. Hustache-Mathieu, O. Huttin, S. Imbert, S. Jaureguiberry, M. Kaaki, A. Konate, J. M. Kuhn, S. Kural Menasche, A. Lafitte, B. Lafon, F. Lanternier, V. Le Chenault, C. Lechiche, S. Lefèvre-Thibaut, A. Lefort, A. Leguerrier, J. Lemoine, L. Lepage, C. Lepouse', J. Leroy, P. Lesprit, L. Letranchant, D. Loisance, G. Loncar, C. Lorentz, P. Mabo, I. Magnin-Poull, T. May, A. Makinson, H. Man, M. Mansouri, O. Marcxon, J. P. Maroni, V. Masse, F. Maurier, M. C. Meyohas, P. L. Michel, C. Michelet, F. Mechaï, O. Merceron, D. Messika-Zeitoun, Z. Metref, V. Meyssonnier, C. Mezher, S. Micheli, M. Monsigny, S. Mouly, B. Mourvillier, O. Nallet, V. Noel, T. Papo, B. Payet, A. Pelletier, P. Perez, J. S. Petit, F. Philippart, E. Piet, C. Plainvert, B. Popovic, J. M. Porte, P. Pradier, R. Ramadan, J. Richemond, M. Rodermann, M. Roncato, I. Roigt, O. Ruyer, M. Saada, J. Schwartz, M. Simon, B. Simorre, S. Skalli, F. Spatz, J. Sudrial, L. Tartiere, A. Terrier De La Chaise, M. C. Thiercelin, D. Thomas, M. Thomas, L. Toko, F. Tournoux, A. Tristan, J. L. Trouillet, L. Tual, A. Vahanian, F. Verdier, V. Vernet Garnier, V. Vidal, P. Weyne, M. Wolff, A. Wynckel, N. Zannad, and P. Y. Zinzius
- Subjects
S. aureus ,MRSA ,infective endocarditis ,stroke ,CC30 ,enterotoxin ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus induces severe infective endocarditis (IE) where embolic complications are a major cause of death. Risk factors for embolism have been reported such as a younger age or larger IE vegetations, while methicillin resistance conferred by the mecA gene appeared as a protective factor. It is unclear, however, whether embolism is influenced by other S. aureus characteristics such as clonal complex (CC) or virulence pattern. We examined clinical and microbiological predictors of embolism in a prospective multicentric cohort of 98 French patients with monomicrobial S. aureus IE. The genomic contents of causative isolates were characterized using DNA array. To preserve statistical power, genotypic predictors were restricted to CC, secreted virulence factors and virulence regulators. Multivariate regularized logistic regression identified three independent predictors of embolism. Patients at higher risk were younger than the cohort median age of 62.5 y (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.14; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.05–0.36). S. aureus characteristics predicting embolism were a CC30 genetic background (adjusted OR 9.734; 95% CI 1.53–192.8) and the absence of pIB485-like plasmid-borne enterotoxin-encoding genes sed, sej, and ser (sedjr; adjusted OR 0.07; 95% CI 0.004–0.457). CC30 S. aureus has been repeatedly reported to exhibit enhanced fitness in bloodstream infections, which might impact its ability to cause embolism. sedjr-encoded enterotoxins, whose superantigenic activity is unlikely to protect against embolism, possibly acted as a proxy to others genes of the pIB485-like plasmid found in genetically unrelated isolates from mostly embolism-free patients. mecA did not independently predict embolism but was strongly associated with sedjr. This mecA-sedjr association might have driven previous reports of a negative association of mecA and embolism. Collectively, our results suggest that the influence of S. aureus genotypic features on the risk of embolism may be stronger than previously suspected and independent of clinical risk factors.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The active role of the solvent in chemical reactivity
- Author
-
J. Bertran
- Subjects
Hydrogen ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Solvation ,Non-equilibrium thermodynamics ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Photochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Solvent ,Combination reaction ,Intramolecular force ,Relaxation (physics) ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Solvent effects ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
Nucleophile-electrophile combination reactions, hydrolytic reactions, intramolecular hydrogen shifts and some reactions in which the solvent relaxation plays an important role are studied in order to demonstrate the active role of the solvent. The equilibrium or nonequilibrium of transition state solvation are examined in light of the solvent's active role.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Theoretical study on the hydroxide ion addition to esters
- Author
-
Enrique Sánchez Marcos, J.J. Maraver, and J. Bertran
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chemistry ,Methyl formate ,Inorganic chemistry ,Oxalate anion ,Hydroxide ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Biochemistry ,MINDO ,Ion ,Gas phase - Abstract
By means of the MINDO/3 method the potential surfaces for the method of attack of hydroxide ion on methyl formate and methyl oxalate anion have been studied. In the case of the neutral ester three competitive mechanisms have been found, in good agreemen with experimental results in the gas phase.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Water molecule migration in walden inversion reaction
- Author
-
Enrique Sánchez Marcos, J. Bertran, and J.J. Maraver
- Subjects
Nucleophile ,law ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Computational chemistry ,Leaving group ,Molecule ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Biochemistry ,Walden inversion ,MINDO ,law.invention - Abstract
Semiempirical MINDO/3 method is used to examine the experimental controversy about the spontaneous migration of a water molecule from the nucleophile to the leaving group in the Walden inversion reaction, HCOOCH 3 + OH − → HCOO − + CH 3 OH, by solvating the nucleophile with different numbers of water molecules.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Kinetic stability in tetrahedral intermediates of anionic esters: A theoretical study
- Author
-
J.J. Maraver, J. Bertran, and Enrique Sánchez Marcos
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chemistry ,Reaction intermediate ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Biochemistry ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hydrolysis ,Dicarboxylic acid ,Computational chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Hydroxide ,Chemical stability ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,MINDO ,Methyl group - Abstract
The semiempirical MINDO/3 method is used to study the kinetic stability of the intermediate that results from the addition of a hydroxide ion to the semiester methyl oxalate anion. The influence of the methyl group orientation is discussed.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Sur le calcul du P K des premiers �tats excit�s singulet et triplet du ? naphtol et de la ? naphtylamine
- Author
-
J. Bertran, C. Ponce, R. Leute, O. Chalvet, J. J. Dannenberg, and Raymond Daudel
- Subjects
Physics ,Naphthylamine ,Physical chemistry ,Chiropractics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Excited singlet - Abstract
En suivant la methode dite du «cycle de Forster», on determine au moyen des methodes de la Chimie Quantique les valeurs des PK des etats excites singulet et triplet de la β-naphtylamine et du β-naphtol. Dans le cas de cette derniere molecule, on propose un modele pour decrire l'ion β-naphtolate intervenant dans les equilibres classiques etudies.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Etude th�orique du pK des �tats excit�s
- Author
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Raymond Daudel, J. Bertran, and O. Chalvet
- Subjects
Physics ,Chiropractics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Humanities - Abstract
On montre a partir de considerations theoriques qu'une molecule conjugee dont un substituant donneur d'electrons est le centre d'acidite doit devenir plus acide quand eile passe de l'etat fondamental au premier etat electronique excite. Le contraire doit se produire lorsque le substituant est accepteur d'electrons. Enfin une molecule conjugee contenant un heteroatome centre de basicite doit devenir plus basique au cours de la mEme transition. On suggere, par ailleurs, une interpretation du fait que dans cette serie de molecules le premier etat excite triplet possede une force acido-basique tres differente de celle du premier etat excite singlet.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Towards a united theoretical treatment of the transition state in the reactions of unsaturated molecules—I
- Author
-
T.F.W. McKillop, Raymond Daudel, O. Chalvet, J. Bertran, and G.H. Schmid
- Subjects
Delocalized electron ,Chemical physics ,Chemistry ,Computational chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Molecule ,State (functional analysis) ,Biochemistry - Abstract
An attempt is made to develop a unified theoretical treatment of the transition state in the reactions of unsaturated molecules. By careful choice of parameters, this treatment is shown to encompass both the Wheland and the delocalized models of the transition state.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Interactions between nucleic acid bases
- Author
-
J Bertran
- Subjects
Statistics and Probability ,Guanine ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Computers ,Adenine ,Applied Mathematics ,Stacking ,Perturbation (astronomy) ,General Medicine ,Molecular physics ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Maxima and minima ,Cytosine ,Energy Transfer ,Biochemistry ,Nucleic Acids ,Modeling and Simulation ,Pairing ,Nucleic acid ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Valence electron ,Wave function ,Mathematics ,Thymine ,Eigenvalues and eigenvectors - Abstract
The pairing and stacking energies of nucleic acid bases have been computed by the perturbation formulas from reliable eigenvalues and wavefunctions involving all valence electrons for the bases and for the base pairs. The position of minimal energies for the electrostatic components, `corresponding to a free rotation of one base pair around the helix axis to a fixed vertical distance between two monomers equal to 3·36 A, will reach angles around 45 °, whilst the minima of dispersion and exchange components will not reach angles higher than 18 °. Consequently, the angle for the minima of total energy, although not directly computable, is reasonably expected to be around 36 °.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. An Investigation of Heat Transfer in a Mechanically Agitated Vessel
- Author
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A. Debab, N. Chergui, K. Bekrentchir, and J. Bertrand
- Subjects
Stirred vessel ,Non-Newtonian liquid ,Experimental design ,Heat transfer coefficient ,Wilson plot ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 - Abstract
The objective of this study is to optimize experimental conditions of agitating a non-Newtonian liquid using experimental design methodology. The measurements of the temperatures have been carried out in a jacketed vessel equipped with Turbine impellers. The rheological properties of aqueous solutions of carboxymethylcellulose sodium salt had been studied using shear stress/shear rate data. The results of the experimental studies, concerning the effect of the diameter of the impeller, the impeller speed and baffled or unbaffled vessel on the overall heat transfer coefficient have been approximated in the form of equations. Based on the optimization criterion, an agitated vessel equipped with Flat Blade Disc Turbine (FBDT) of diameter ratio d/D = 0.6 and baffles is proposed as the most advantageous for heat transfer processes.
- Published
- 2011
44. ChemInform Abstract: Theoretical Study of the Dependence on Substrate of the Reactivity of Carbenes
- Author
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M. MORENO, J. M. LLUCH, A. OLIVA, and J. BERTRAN
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. ChemInform Abstract: A THEORETICAL STUDY OF BENZENE PROTONATION
- Author
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T. SORDO, J. BERTRAN, and E. CANADELL
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. ChemInform Abstract: THE LOCATION OF TRANSITION STATES FOR THE ADDITION OF SINGLET METHYLENE TO SUBSTITUTED ETHYLENES
- Author
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M. MORENO, J. M. LLUCH, A. OLIVA, and J. BERTRAN
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. ChemInform Abstract: ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE OF FRIEDEL-CRAFTS CATALYSTS. BORON TRIFLUORIDE AND ALKYL FLUORIDE
- Author
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J. BERTRAN, F. MORA, and E. SILLA
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. ChemInform Abstract: CATALYTIC EFFECT ON THE MECHANISM OF (2 + 2) POLAR CYCLOADDITIONS
- Author
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M. DURAN and J. BERTRAN
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. ChemInform Abstract: THEORETICAL STUDY OF THE MECHANISM OF SOLVOLYSIS OF METHYL FLUORIDE
- Author
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J. A. REVETLLAT, A. OLIVA, and J. BERTRAN
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. ChemInform Abstract: NITROPHENYL ETHERS AS POSSIBLE PHOTOAFFINITY LABELS. THE NUCLEOPHILIC AROMATIC PHOTOSUBSTITUTION REVISITED
- Author
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J. CERVELLO, M. FIGUEREDO, J. MARQUET, M. MORENO-MANAS, J. BERTRAN, and J. M. LLUCH
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1985
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