Publications
By Year
Now showing items 3541-3560 of 5385 records
Inhibition of Neuroinflammation by AIBP: Spinal Effects upon Facilitated Pain States.
Sarah A Woller; Soo-Ho Choi; Eun Jung An; Hann Low; Dina A Schneider; Roshni Ramachandran; Jungsu Kim; Yun Soo Bae; Dmitri Sviridov; Maripat Corr; Tony L Yaksh; Yury I Miller
CELL REPORTS - 29 May 2018
Apolipoprotein A-I binding protein (AIBP) reduces lipid raft abundance by augmenting the removal of excess cholesterol from the plasma membrane. Here, we report that AIBP prevents and reverses processes associated with neuroinflammatory-mediated spinal nociceptive processing. The mechanism involves AIBP binding to Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4) and increased binding of AIBP to activated microglia,...
Mechanisms responsible for increased circulating levels of galectin-3 in cardiomyopathy and heart failure.
My-Nhan Nguyen; Yidan Su; Donna Vizi; Lu Fang; Andris H Ellims; Wei-Bo Zhao; Helen Kiriazis; Xiao-Ming Gao; Junichi Sadoshima; Andrew J Taylor; Julie R McMullen; Anthony M Dart; David M Kaye; Xiao-Jun Du
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS - 29 May 2018
Galectin-3 is a biomarker of heart disease. However, it remains unknown whether increase in galectin-3 levels is dependent on aetiology or disease-associated conditions and whether diseased heart releases galectin-3 into the circulation. We explored these questions in mouse models of heart disease and in patients with cardiomyopathy. All mouse models (dilated cardiomyopathy, DCM; fibrotic cardi...
Body Composition and Metabolic Caging Analysis in High Fat Fed Mice.
Graeme I Lancaster; Darren C Henstridge
JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS : JOVE - 24 May 2018
Alterations to body composition (fat or lean mass), metabolic parameters such as whole-body oxygen consumption, energy expenditure, and substrate utilization, and behaviors such as food intake and physical activity can provide important information regarding the underlying mechanisms of disease. Given the importance of body composition and metabolism to the development of obesity and its subseq...
Stand Out in Class: restructuring the classroom environment to reduce sedentary behaviour in 9-10-year-olds - study protocol for a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial.
Stacy A Clemes; Daniel D Bingham; Natalie Pearson; Yu-Ling Chen; Charlotte Edwardson; Rosemary McEachan; Keith Tolfrey; Lorraine Cale; Gerry Richardson; Mike Fray; Stephan Bandelow; Nishal Bhupendra Jaicim; Jo Salmon; David Dunstan; Sally E Barber
PILOT AND FEASIBILITY STUDIES - 01 Jan 2018
Sedentary behaviour (sitting) is a highly prevalent negative health behaviour, with individuals of all ages exposed to environments that promote prolonged sitting. Excessive sedentary behaviour adversely affects health in children and adults. As sedentary behaviour tracks from childhood into adulthood, the reduction of sedentary time in young people is key for the prevention of chronic diseases...
Differential Impact of Malnutrition on Health Outcomes Among Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Adults Admitted to Hospital in Regional Australia-A Prospective Cohort Study.
Natasha Morris; Simon Stewart; Malcolm Riley; Graeme Maguire
NUTRIENTS - 19 May 2018
The burden of malnutrition in Indigenous people is a major health priority and this study's aims are to understand health outcomes among Indigenous and non-Indigenous patients. This cohort study includes 608 medical inpatients in three regional hospitals. Participants were screened for malnutrition using the Subjective Global Assessment tool. Hospital length of stay, discharge destination, 30-d...
The Impact of Activity Based Working (ABW) on Workplace Activity, Eating Behaviours, Productivity, and Satisfaction.
Lauren Arundell; Bronwyn Sudholz; Megan Teychenne; Jo Salmon; Brooke Hayward; Genevieve N Healy; Anna Timperio
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH - 17 May 2018
The redesign of the physical workplace according to activity-based working (ABW) principles has potential to influence employee health and workplace outcomes. This natural experiment examined changes in accelerometer-derived workplace activity, self-reported eating behaviours, productivity, workplace satisfaction before (March to November 2014) and six to nine months after moving to an ABW work...
Relaxin as a Therapeutic Target for the Cardiovascular Complications of Diabetes.
Hooi Hooi Ng; Chen Huei Leo; Laura J Parry; Rebecca H Ritchie
FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY - 01 Jan 2018
Cardiovascular complications are the major cause of mortality in patients with diabetes. This is closely associated with both macrovascular and microvascular complications of diabetes, which lead to organ injuries in diabetic patients. Previous studies have consistently demonstrated the beneficial effects of relaxin treatment for protection of the vasculature, with evidence of antioxidant and a...
The Right Ventricle: From Bench to Bedside.
Ruxandra Jurcut; Kristina Haugaa; Andre La Gerche
BIOMED RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL - 01 Jan 2001
Association of ambient particulate matter with heart failure incidence and all-cause readmissions in Tasmania: an observational study.
Quan L Huynh; Christopher Leigh Blizzard; Thomas H Marwick; Kazuaki Negishi
BMJ OPEN - 10 May 2018
We sought to investigate the relationship between air quality and heart failure (HF) incidence and rehospitalisation to elucidate whether there is a threshold in this relationship and whether this relationship differs for HF incidence and rehospitalisation.This retrospective observational study was performed in an Australian state-wide setting, where air pollution is mainly associated with wood...
Cdc42 - A tryst between host cholesterol metabolism and infection.
Dmitri Sviridov; Nigora Mukhamedova
SMALL GTPASES - 04 May 2018
Emerging evidence points to an important connection between pathogenesis of intracellular infections and host cholesterol metabolism. In our study we demonstrated that human cytomegalovirus exploits host small GTPase Cdc42 to hijack cellular cholesterol efflux pathway. It appears that the virus uses host machinery to stimulate cholesterol efflux by modifying lipid rafts and altering properties ...
The Effect of ACTN3 Gene Doping on Skeletal Muscle Performance.
Fleur C Garton; Peter J Houweling; Damjan Vukcevic; Lyra R Meehan; Fiona X Z Lee; Monkol Lek; Kelly N Roeszler; Marshall W Hogarth; Chrystal F Tiong; Diana Zannino; Nan Yang; Stephen Leslie; Paul Gregorevic; Stewart I Head; Jane T Seto; Kathryn N North
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS - 03 May 2018
Loss of expression of ACTN3, due to homozygosity of the common null polymorphism (p.Arg577X), is underrepresented in elite sprint/power athletes and has been associated with reduced muscle mass and strength in humans and mice. To investigate ACTN3 gene dosage in performance and whether expression could enhance muscle force, we performed meta-analysis and expression studies. Our general meta-ana...
Rationale and design of a trial to personalize risk assessment in familial coronary artery disease.
Thomas H Marwick; Kristyn Whitmore; Stephen J Nicholls; Tony Stanton; Geoffrey Mitchell; Andrew Tonkin; Christopher Blizzard; Amanda Neil; Catherine Jones; Gerald F Watts;
AMERICAN HEART JOURNAL - 01 May 2018
The lifetime risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) is doubled in people with a family history of premature disease, yet this risk is not captured in most 5- or 10-year risk assessment algorithms. Coronary artery calcium scoring (CCS) is a marker of subclinical CAD risk, which has been shown in observational studies to provide prognostic information that is incremental to clinical assessment; is...
Follicular B Cells Promote Atherosclerosis via T Cell-Mediated Differentiation Into Plasma Cells and Secreting Pathogenic Immunoglobulin G.
Christopher Tay; Yu-Han Liu; Peter Kanellakis; Axel Kallies; Yi Li; Anh Cao; Hamid Hosseini; Peter Tipping; Ban-Hock Toh; Alex Bobik; Tin Kyaw
ARTERIOSCLEROSIS, THROMBOSIS, AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY - 01 May 2018
B cells promote or protect development of atherosclerosis. In this study, we examined the role of MHCII (major histocompatibility II), CD40 (cluster of differentiation 40), and Blimp-1 (B-lymphocyte-induced maturation protein) expression by follicular B (FO B) cells in development of atherosclerosis together with the effects of IgG purified from atherosclerotic mice.Using mixed chimeric mice w...
Infective dermatitis associated with human T-lymphotropic virus type 1 infection in Adelaide, South Australia.
Fiona Menz; Jennifer Menz; Kim Wilson; Jocelyn Turpin; Charles Bangham; Lloyd Einsiedel
THE AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY - 01 May 2018
Evidence that TLR4 Is Not a Receptor for Saturated Fatty Acids but Mediates Lipid-Induced Inflammation by Reprogramming Macrophage Metabolism.
Graeme I Lancaster; Katherine G Langley; Nils Anton Berglund; Helene L Kammoun; Saskia Reibe; Emma Estevez; Jacquelyn Weir; Natalie A Mellett; Gerard Pernes; James R W Conway; Man K S Lee; Paul Timpson; Andrew J Murphy; Seth L Masters; Steve Gerondakis; Nenad Bartonicek; Dominik C Kaczorowski; Marcel E Dinger; Peter J Meikle; Peter J Bond; Mark A Febbraio
CELL METABOLISM - 01 May 2018
Chronic inflammation is a hallmark of obesity and is linked to the development of numerous diseases. The activation of toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) by long-chain saturated fatty acids (lcSFAs) is an important process in understanding how obesity initiates inflammation. While experimental evidence supports an important role for TLR4 in obesity-induced inflammation in vivo, via a mechanism thought...
Selective vs. Global Renal Denervation: a Case for Less Is More.
Marat Fudim; Asher A Sobotka; Yue-Hui Yin; Joanne W Wang; Howard Levin; Murray Esler; Jie Wang; Paul A Sobotka
CURRENT HYPERTENSION REPORTS - 01 May 2018
Review the renal nerve anatomy and physiology basics and explore the concept of global vs. selective renal denervation (RDN) to uncover some of the fundamental limitations of non-targeted renal nerve ablation and the potential superiority of selective RDN.Recent trials testing the efficacy of RDN showed mixed results. Initial investigations targeted global RDN as a therapeutic goal. The repeat ...
RAGE Deletion Confers Renoprotection by Reducing Responsiveness to Transforming Growth Factor-β and Increasing Resistance to Apoptosis.
Shinji Hagiwara; Karly Sourris; Mark Ziemann; Wu Tieqiao; Muthukumar Mohan; Aaron D McClelland; Eoin Brennan; Josephine Forbes; Melinda Coughlan; Brooke Harcourt; Sally Penfold; Bo Wang; Gavin Higgins; Raelene Pickering; Assam El-Osta; Merlin C Thomas; Mark E Cooper; Phillip Kantharidis
DIABETES - 01 May 2018
Signaling via the receptor of advanced glycation end products (RAGE)-though complex and not fully elucidated in the setting of diabetes-is considered a key injurious pathway in the development of diabetic nephropathy (DN). We report here that RAGE deletion resulted in increased expression of fibrotic markers (collagen I and IV, fibronectin) and the inflammatory marker MCP-1 in primary mouse mes...
The Productivity Burden of Diabetes at a Population Level.
Dianna J Magliano; Valencia J Martin; Alice J Owen; Ella Zomer; Danny Liew
DIABETES CARE - 01 May 2018
Recent studies suggest that diabetes may impact work productivity. In the current study, we sought to estimate the lifetime and population impact of diabetes on productivity using the novel measure of "productivity-adjusted life years" (PALYs).Using age-specific mortality rates and a productivity index attributable to diabetes (akin to the quality of life index, but which adjusts for reduction ...
Impact of age at diagnosis and duration of type 2 diabetes on mortality in Australia 1997-2011.
Lili Huo; Dianna J Magliano; Fanny Rancière; Jessica L Harding; Natalie Nanayakkara; Jonathan E Shaw; Bendix Carstensen
DIABETOLOGIA - 01 May 2018
Current evidence suggests that type 2 diabetes may have a greater impact on those with earlier diagnosis (longer duration of disease), but data are limited. We examined the effect of age at diagnosis of type 2 diabetes on the risk of all-cause and cause-specific mortality over 15 years.The data of 743,709 Australians with type 2 diabetes who were registered on the National Diabetes Services Sch...
Y-chromosome lineage determines cardiovascular organ T-cell infiltration in the stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat.
Shanzana I Khan; Karen L Andrews; Kristy L Jackson; Basimah Memon; Ann-Maree Jefferis; Man K S Lee; Henry Diep; Zihui Wei; Grant R Drummond; Geoffrey A Head; Garry L Jennings; Andrew J Murphy; Antony Vinh; Amanda K Sampson; Jaye P F Chin-Dusting
FASEB JOURNAL : OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE FEDERATION OF AMERICAN SOCIETIES FOR EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY - 01 May 2018
The essential role of the Y chromosome in male sex determination has largely overshadowed the possibility that it may exert other biologic roles. Here, we show that Y-chromosome lineage is a strong determinant of perivascular and renal T-cell infiltration in the stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat, which, in turn, may influence vascular function and blood pressure (BP). We also show, fo...
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