Publications
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Now showing items 2281-2300 of 5325 records
Deletion of Trim28 in committed adipocytes promotes obesity but preserves glucose tolerance.
Simon T Bond; Emily J King; Darren C Henstridge; Adrian Tran; Sarah C Moody; Christine Yang; Yingying Liu; Natalie A Mellett; Artika P Nath; Michael Inouye; Elizabeth J Tarling; Thomas Q de Aguiar Vallim; Peter J Meikle; Anna C Calkin; Brian G Drew
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS - 04 Jan 2021
The effective storage of lipids in white adipose tissue (WAT) critically impacts whole body energy homeostasis. Many genes have been implicated in WAT lipid metabolism, including tripartite motif containing 28 (Trim28), a gene proposed to primarily influence adiposity via epigenetic mechanisms in embryonic development. However, in the current study we demonstrate that mice with deletion of Trim...
Editorial: Central Cardiovascular and Respiratory Control: New Techniques, New Directions, New Horizons.
Vaughan G Macefield; Geoffrey A Head
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2020
Rise and Recharge: Effects on Activity Outcomes of an e-Health Smartphone Intervention to Reduce Office Workers' Sitting Time.
Abigail S Morris; Kelly A Mackintosh; David Dunstan; Neville Owen; Paddy Dempsey; Thomas Pennington; Melitta A McNarry
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH - 12 Dec 2020
This feasibility study evaluated the effects of an individual-level intervention to target office workers total and prolonged sedentary behaviour during working hours, using an e-health smartphone application. A three-arm (Prompt-30 or 60 min Intervention arm and a No-Prompt Comparison arm), quasi-randomised intervention was conducted over 12 weeks. Behavioural outcomes (worktime sitting, stand...
Genomic and drug target evaluation of 90 cardiovascular proteins in 30,931 individuals.
Lasse Folkersen; Stefan Gustafsson; Qin Wang; Daniel Hvidberg Hansen; Åsa K Hedman; Andrew Schork; Karen Page; Daria V Zhernakova; Yang Wu; James Peters; Niclas Eriksson; Sarah E Bergen; Thibaud S Boutin; Andrew D Bretherick; Stefan Enroth; Anette Kalnapenkis; Jesper R Gådin; Bianca E Suur; Yan Chen; Ljubica Matic; Jeremy D Gale; Julie Lee; Weidong Zhang; Amira Quazi; Mika Ala-Korpela; Seung Hoan Choi; Annique Claringbould; John Danesh; George Davey Smith; Federico de Masi; Sölve Elmståhl; Gunnar Engström; Eric Fauman; Celine Fernandez; Lude Franke; Paul W Franks; Vilmantas Giedraitis; Chris Haley; Anders Hamsten; Andres Ingason; Åsa Johansson; Peter K Joshi; Lars Lind; Cecilia M Lindgren; Steven Lubitz; Tom Palmer; Erin Macdonald-Dunlop; Martin Magnusson; Olle Melander; Karl Michaelsson; Andrew P Morris; Reedik Mägi; Michael W Nagle; Peter M Nilsson; Jan Nilsson; Marju Orho-Melander; Ozren Polasek; Bram Prins; Erik Pålsson; Ting Qi; Marketa Sjögren; Johan Sundström; Praveen Surendran; Urmo Võsa; Thomas Werge; Rasmus Wernersson; Harm-Jan Westra; Jian Yang; Alexandra Zhernakova; Johan Ärnlöv; Jingyuan Fu; J Gustav Smith; Tõnu Esko; Caroline Hayward; Ulf Gyllensten; Mikael Landen; Agneta Siegbahn; James F Wilson; Lars Wallentin; Adam S Butterworth; Michael V Holmes; Erik Ingelsson; Anders Mälarstig
NATURE METABOLISM - 01 Oct 2020
Circulating proteins are vital in human health and disease and are frequently used as biomarkers for clinical decision-making or as targets for pharmacological intervention. Here, we map and replicate protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) for 90 cardiovascular proteins in over 30,000 individuals, resulting in 451 pQTLs for 85 proteins. For each protein, we further perform pathway mapping to ob...
Incidence and Predictors of Unplanned Hospital Readmission after Percutaneous Coronary Intervention.
Sinjini Biswas; Diem Dinh; Mark Lucas; Stephen J Duffy; Angela L Brennan; Danny Liew; Nicholas Cox; Voltaire Nadurata; Christopher M Reid; Jeffrey Lefkovits; Dion Stub
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE - 10 Oct 2020
Unplanned readmissions to hospital after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) pose a significant burden to the healthcare system and are potentially preventable. In this study, we sought to determine the incidence of, and risk factors for, unplanned hospital readmissions within 30 days following PCI. We prospectively collected data on 28,488 patients undergoing PCI between 2013 and 2019, wh...
Dimethyl Fumarate and Its Esters: A Drug with Broad Clinical Utility?
Stephanie Kourakis; Cara A Timpani; Judy B de Haan; Nuri Gueven; Dirk Fischer; Emma Rybalka
PHARMACEUTICALS (BASEL, SWITZERLAND) - 13 Oct 2020
Fumaric acid esters (FAEs) are small molecules with anti-oxidative, anti-inflammatory and immune-modulating effects. Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) is the best characterised FAE and is approved and registered for the treatment of psoriasis and Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis (RRMS). Psoriasis and RRMS share an immune-mediated aetiology, driven by severe inflammation and oxidative stress. DMF, a...
Seventeen-Year Associations between Diet Quality Defined by the Health Star Rating and Mortality in Australians: The Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study (AusDiab).
Xiong-Fei Pan; Dianna J Magliano; Miaobing Zheng; Maria Shahid; Fraser Taylor; Chantal Julia; Cliona Ni Mhurchu; An Pan; Jonathan E Shaw; Bruce Neal; Jason H Y Wu
CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS IN NUTRITION - 01 Nov 2020
The Health Star Rating (HSR) is the government-endorsed front-of-pack labeling system in Australia and New Zealand.We aimed to examine prospective associations of a dietary index (DI) based on the HSR, as an indicator of overall diet quality, with all-cause and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality.We utilized data from the national population-based Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle S...
Dog ownership and adults' objectively-assessed sedentary behaviour and physical activity.
Mohammad Javad Koohsari; Ai Shibata; Kaori Ishii; Sayaka Kurosawa; Akitomo Yasunaga; Tomoya Hanibuchi; Tomoki Nakaya; Gavin R McCormack; Koichiro Oka
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS - 15 Oct 2020
Evidence suggests a positive effect of dog ownership on physical activity. However, most previous studies used self-reported physical activity measures. Additionally, it is unknown whether owning a dog is associated with adults' sedentary behaviour, an emerging health risk factor. In this study, physical activity and sedentary behaviour were objectively collected between 2013 and 2015 from 693 ...
A Multicenter Study of Neutrophil-to-Lymphocyte Ratio in Primary Aldosteronism.
Renata Libianto; Jinbo Hu; Min R Chee; Jesse Hoo; Yin Y Lim; Jimmy Shen; Qifu Li; Morag J Young; Peter J Fuller; Jun Yang
JOURNAL OF THE ENDOCRINE SOCIETY - 01 Dec 2020
Hypertensive patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) have a higher risk of cardiovascular complications than those with blood pressure-matched essential hypertension. The excess cardiovascular consequences of PA can be attributed to the proinflammatory effect of excessive aldosterone and mineralocorticoid receptor activation in a range of peripheral tissues and cell types. The neutrophil-to-ly...
Manipulation of the gut microbiota by the use of prebiotic fibre does not override a genetic predisposition to heart failure.
Hamdi A Jama; April Fiedler; Kirill Tsyganov; Erin Nelson; Duncan Horlock; Michael E Nakai; Helen Kiriazis; Chad Johnson; Xiao-Jun Du; Charles R Mackay; Francine Z Marques; David M Kaye
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS - 21 Oct 2020
Increasing evidence supports a role for the gut microbiota in the development of cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension and its progression to heart failure (HF). Dietary fibre has emerged as a modulator of the gut microbiota, resulting in the release of gut metabolites called short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), such as acetate. We have shown previously that fibre or acetate can protect agai...
Prediction of rifampicin resistance beyond the RRDR using structure-based machine learning approaches.
Stephanie Portelli; Yoochan Myung; Nicholas Furnham; Sundeep Chaitanya Vedithi; Douglas E V Pires; David B Ascher
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS - 22 Oct 2020
Rifampicin resistance is a major therapeutic challenge, particularly in tuberculosis, leprosy, P. aeruginosa and S. aureus infections, where it develops via missense mutations in gene rpoB. Previously we have highlighted that these mutations reduce protein affinities within the RNA polymerase complex, subsequently reducing nucleic acid affinity. Here, we have used these insights to develop a co...
ThermoMutDB: a thermodynamic database for missense mutations.
Joicymara S Xavier; Thanh-Binh Nguyen; Malancha Karmarkar; Stephanie Portelli; Pâmela M Rezende; João P L Velloso; David B Ascher; Douglas E V Pires
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH - 08 Jan 2021
Proteins are intricate, dynamic structures, and small changes in their amino acid sequences can lead to large effects on their folding, stability and dynamics. To facilitate the further development and evaluation of methods to predict these changes, we have developed ThermoMutDB, a manually curated database containing >14,669 experimental data of thermodynamic parameters for wild type and mutan...
Downregulation of by Cholic Acid and Chenodeoxycholic Acid in Double Knockout Mice: Differential Cardiovascular Outcome.Cyp7a1
Line Zurkinden; Dmitri Sviridov; Bruno Vogt; Genevieve Escher
FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY - 01 Jan 2020
Sterol 27-hydroxylase (CYP27A1) is a key enzyme in bile acids (BAs) biosynthesis and a regulator of cholesterol metabolism. double knockout (DKO) mice fed with western diet (WD) are protected from atherosclerosis up-regulation of hepatic and . Since feeding BAs ameliorates metabolic changes in KO mice, we tested BAs feeding on the development of atherosclerosis in DKO mice. DKO mice were fe...
Combining structure and genomics to understand antimicrobial resistance.
Tanushree Tunstall; Stephanie Portelli; Jody Phelan; Taane G Clark; David B Ascher; Nicholas Furnham
COMPUTATIONAL AND STRUCTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL - 01 Jan 2020
Antimicrobials against bacterial, viral and parasitic pathogens have transformed human and animal health. Nevertheless, their widespread use (and misuse) has led to the emergence of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) which poses a potentially catastrophic threat to public health and animal husbandry. There are several routes, both intrinsic and acquired, by which AMR can develop. One major route is...
Interventional Approaches for Loin Pain Hematuria Syndrome and Kidney-Related Pain Syndromes.
Leslie Marisol Lugo-Gavidia; Janis M Nolde; Márcio Galindo Kiuchi; Sharad Shetty; Omar Azzam; Revathy Carnagarin; Markus P Schlaich
CURRENT HYPERTENSION REPORTS - 31 Oct 2020
Loin pain hematuria syndrome (LPHS) frequently presents with severe chronic pain that poses a clinical challenge. Current treatment approaches are mostly empirical and include a wide range of therapeutic strategies such as physical therapy, local and systemic analgesia, interventional and surgical approaches usually flanked by psycho-behavioral therapy, and other strategies. LPHS often impacts ...
Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation, Atrial Fibrillation, and Bleeding: A Surprisingly Fatal Attraction.
James D McFadyen; Karlheinz Peter
THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS - 01 Nov 2020
Physiological principles of Starling-like control of rotary ventricular assist devices.
Andrew F Stephens; Shaun D Gregory; Aidan J C Burrell; Silvana Marasco; Dion Stub; Robert F Salamonsen
EXPERT REVIEW OF MEDICAL DEVICES - 01 Nov 2020
: This review explores the Starling-like physiological control method (SLC) for rotary ventricular assist devices (VADs) for severe heart failure. The SLC, based on mathematical models of the circulation, has two functions modeling each ventricle. The first function controls the output of the VAD to the arterial pool according to Starling's law, while the second function accounts for how the bl...
Efficacy of an Online Physical Activity Intervention Coordinated With Routine Clinical Care: Protocol for a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial.
Bonny Rockette-Wagner; Gary S Fischer; Andrea M Kriska; Molly B Conroy; David Dunstan; Caroline Roumpz; Kathleen M McTigue
JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS - 03 Nov 2020
Most adults are not achieving recommended levels of physical activity (150 minutes/week, moderate-to-vigorous intensity). Inadequate activity levels are associated with numerous poor health outcomes, and clinical recommendations endorse physical activity in the front-line treatment of obesity, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypertension. A framework for physical activity prescription and referral ...
TMEPAI/PMEPA1 Is a Positive Regulator of Skeletal Muscle Mass.
Adam Hagg; Swati Kharoud; Georgia Goodchild; Craig A Goodman; Justin L Chen; Rachel E Thomson; Hongwei Qian; Paul Gregorevic; Craig A Harrison; Kelly L Walton
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2020
Inhibition of myostatin- and activin-mediated SMAD2/3 signaling using ligand traps, such as soluble receptors, ligand-targeting propeptides and antibodies, or follistatin can increase skeletal muscle mass in healthy mice and ameliorate wasting in models of cancer cachexia and muscular dystrophy. However, clinical translation of these extracellular approaches targeting myostatin and activin has ...
Inhibition of interleukin-1β signalling promotes atherosclerotic lesion remodelling in mice with inflammatory arthritis.
Dragana Dragoljevic; Man Kit Sam Lee; Cynthia Louis; Waled Shihata; Michael J Kraakman; Jacinta Hansen; Seth L Masters; Beatriz Y Hanaoka; Prabhakara R Nagareddy; Graeme I Lancaster; Ian P Wicks; Andrew J Murphy
CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL IMMUNOLOGY - 01 Jan 2020
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA), an inflammatory joint disorder, independently increases the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). IL-1β contributes to both RA and CVD. We hypothesised that inhibiting IL-1 signalling with the IL-1R antagonist, anakinra, would dampen inflammation and promote resolution of atherosclerosis in arthritic mice.Low-density lipoprotein receptor (Ldlr)-deficient mice were fed...
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