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Qatar Foundation Annual Research Conference Proceedings Volume 2014 Issue 1
- Conference date: 18-19 Nov 2014
- Location: Qatar National Convention Center (QNCC), Doha, Qatar
- Volume number: 2014
- Published: 18 November 2014
141 - 160 of 480 results
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Hospital 7 Days Working. Recommendations And Feasibility
Authors: Rozh Jalil, Andrew Brodie and Jeetesh BhardwaHospital 7 days working. Recommendations and feasibility Introduction: There is increasing evidence that mortality rates for patients admitted to hospitals are higher at weekends. Furthermore, there is evidence that five-day working costs lives. Increased mortality rates over weekends equate to an increased risk of dying of 11% for a patient presenting on a Saturday and a similar rise of 16% for a Sunday when compared to patients presenting Monday to Friday. One reason suggested for this increased mortality rate is the lack of senior doctor cover and the decreased availability of services over the weekend. During the weekend, on average, only 10-15% of consultants are present in the hospital, even though the weekend comprises 30% of the week. There is also data that shows that the risk of death from an elective procedure is 1.4 times higher if the operation is done on a Friday and 1.8 times higher for a Saturday. We review Sir Bruce Keoh's report -NHS medical Director of the UK by focusing on the feasibility and the impact on health services by putting patient in the centre of care. Methods: The Keoh report was published in November 2013 after concerns have been raised about the discrepancy in mortality and morbidity between weekday and weekends. Levels of service has been categorised into 4 levels as shown in the table 1 Most Hospitals currently are at the level 2-3. Results: In order to implement this change into the health care, 10 standards have been recommended (table 2). The local and national incentives are estimated to be over a 3 year period as follows: Year 1 - local contracts will include an Action Plan to deliver the clinical standards within the Service Year 2 - Clinical standards with the greatest impact will be incorporated into the NHS Standard Contract. Year 3 - all clinical standards will be incorporated nationally into the NHS Standard Contract with sanctions in place for non-compliance. Conclusion: With the implementation of this 7 days working model, morbidity and mortality for the weekends is estimated to decrease to the weekday level, resulting in an overall reduction in total mortality and morbidity rates over the whole week. Furthermore, the inappropriate admissions caused by the decreased availability of weekend senior decision making will diminish, in turn, reducing the costs incurred by unnecessary and protracted hospital stays and additional use of health services. Nevertheless one should consider the constrains of such services (table 3) These recommendations are set for the National Health services of the UK and perhaps could be adjusted as per country, locality and patient needs.
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Apolipoprotein E Gene Polymorphism And The Risk Of Left Ventricular Dysfunction Among Egyptian Β-thalassemia Major.
Authors: Mona El-tagui, Mona Hamdy, Iman Shaheen, Hoda Agha and Hoda Abd-elfatahIn Egypt, β-thalassemia is the most common hereditary hemolytic anemia. Cardiac dysfunction, secondary to iron overload with formation of oxygen free radicals, is the most common cause of death in β-thalassemia patients. This study was designed to determine whether the allelic genotype of apolipoprotein E (Apo E), which exhibits antioxidant properties, could represent a genetic risk factor for the development of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in β-thalassemia major. Fifty Egyptian β-thalassemia major patients were subjected to echocardiography to assess LV function. Apo E genotyping by polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) was done for all patients in addition to 50 age and sex matched healthy control subjects. Patients were classified into three groups. Group I and II were clinically asymptomatic. Group II subjects had evidence of LV dilatation, while Group III patients had clinical and echocardiographic findings of LV failure. Apo E4 allele was significantly higher among Group II and III than in controls. In conclusion, Apo E4 allele can be considered as a genetic risk factor for LV dysfunctions in β-thalassemic patients. It could be used as predictive indicator for additional risk of LV failure, particularly in asymptomatic patients with LV dilatation, requiring a closer follow-up, to prevent further disease progression
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A Comprehensive Approach To The Prediction Of Acute Calcular Cholangitis - The Qatar Experience
Authors: Hisham Allam, Mohammed Al Dosouky, Abdulaziz Farooq, Ahmed Naggar and Adarsh VijayIntroduction: The aim of the present study is to identify clinical, laboratory and radiological factors that can predict which patients may develop cholangitis. Methods: This is a retrospective case-control study based on patients admitted to Hamad Hospital from June'06 to November'10 with a diagnosis of AC secondary to CBD stones. The control group included patients with obstructive lithiasic jaundice not complicated by cholangitis. Both groups were compared and analysed with respect to demographics, previous medical/surgical history, laboratory investigations and surgical/endoscopic procedures. Results: The study comprised of 112 patients of 24 different nationalities. 53 patients presented with AC and 59 were admitted for management of obstructive jaundice. Although Asians had a greater prevalence of cholangitis (57.4%) compared to Middle Easterners (35.7%) and Africans (33.3%), this was not statistically significant (P=0.066). Laboratory tests significantly correlated to AC were leukocytosis (P<0.001), elevated Bilirubin (P=0.005), prolonged prothrombin time (P=0.001), elevated INR (P=0.001), elevated serum Creatinine (P=0.001) and BUN (P=0.001). In univariate analysis the logistic regression model showed that dark urine, fever, elevated WBC and BUN were strongly associated with cholangitis. Conclusions: Typical clinical signs of acute cholangitis, history of chronic liver disease, together with certain biochemical criteria are strongly associated with occurrence of acute lithiasic cholangitis. A larger prospective study may probably confirm these findings and help create a reproducible and simple predictive scoring system.
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Environment Gene Interaction In Parkinson's Disease (egi-pd).
Authors: Mohamed Salama, Thomas Rösler, Ali Shalash, Abdelhaleem Tantawy and Günter HöglingerEnvironment Gene Interaction in Parkinson's disease (EGI-PD) Mohamed M. Salama1, Thomas W. Rösler2, Ali Shalash3, Abdelhaleem Tantawy4, , Günter U. Höglinger2,5 1Toxicology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt 2Department for Translational Neurodegeneration, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Munich, Germany 3. Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt 4. Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt 3 Department of Neurology, Technical University, Munich, Germany Introduction: The prevalence of PD is increased in Egypt compared to reports in other countries. Both genetic and environmental causes might be responsible. E.g. a high rate of LRRK2 mutations has been reported in other North African countries, but has not been systematically studied in Egypt. Also, several epidemiologic studies have supported the hypothesis that broadly defined pesticide exposure may increase the risk of PD. A high degree of pesticide use occurs in Egypt due to the limited availability of agricultural areas in the country. Moreover, lack of precautionary measures on applying pesticides leads to increased pesticide exposures. We aimed to study the link between genes encoding detoxifying enzymes and PD-risk genes on one hand and exposure to pesticides on the other hand in the etiology of PD in Egypt. Methods: This work is undertaken in collaboration between the Technische Universtität München, Germany and a network of 16 Egyptian Universities leaded by Mansoura University (Egyptian Network of Neurodegenerative Diseases [ENND]). PD cases from all over Egypt are recruited. Half of the cases were chosen in areas of low pesticide exposure, the other half with high pesticides exposure (farmers 50 years of age or older). Similar numbers of non-PD controls are chosen from two sources; first, patients arriving to outpatient clinic who are not suffering from any other neurodegenerative disorder; secondly, persons accompanying participating PD patients. Controls are further stratified into low pesticides and high pesticides controls, as described for the PD cases. Patients are assessed with a standardized questionnaire to evaluate past exposure to pesticides or other Parkinson-related environmental factors, a standardized clinical neurological examination to verify presence of PD (UK brain bank criteria) and to quantify disease severity (Hoehn & Yahr stage, UPDRS motor part) and genotyping for presence or absence of risk-carrying alleles in detoxification and Parkinson's associated genes. Results: We were able to establish ENND which is the first collaborative network of this type in Egypt. Moreover, we established a functional Standard Operation Procedure to collect and ship clinical data and blood for analysis to the German cooperation partner at TUM. So far, we collected blood and epidemiological data from 70 cases and 80 controls. Preliminary data on the analysis of gene-environment interaction analysis will be presented. Conclusion: This work will provide further insights into the mechanisms of gene environment interplay in the etiology of PD and hopefully insights which allow the establishment of primary preventive measures. Funding: DAAD-funded Al-Tawasul project EGI-PD
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Overexpression Of Human S100a4 Gene In Drosophila Melanogaster Can Promote Metastasis
More LessThe major problem with cancer is the ability of cancer cells to infiltrate surrounding tissue (invasion) or to spread to distant organs (metastasis), decreasing patient survival. One of the Ca2+ binding proteins of the S100 family, S100A4, is expressed at elevated level in several forms of cancer and has the ability to induce metastasis and invasion in benign mammary cells. In order to generate a genetically tractable experimental model of S100A4-mediated metastasis, we have expressed the human S100A4 in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster to uncover players in tumour progression, invasion and metastasis. Here we demonstrate that the expression of full open reading frame of human S100A4 wild type protein in cooperation with RasVal12 into Drosophila, developed metastatic phenotypes. Fly larvae expressing the human S100A4 as determined by Western blot exhibit metastasis in the ventral nerve cord when crossed with Drosophila strains expressing oncogenic RasVal12 targeted to the optic lobes by the UAS-GAL4 system. However, the mutant of S100A4 (S100A4/∆2) missing the last two lysine reduced the tumour dissemination into the ventral nerve cord in Drosophila flies expressing RasVal12 oncogene. Downstream genes associated with the metastatic behaviour including JNK and MMPs (metalloproteinase) proteins are also investigated. We showed that the MMPs and the JNK are also activated in the flies with S100A4/ RasVal12 genotype. Loss this activation in flies with S100A4∆2/RasVal12 genotype indicated that MMPs and JNK proteins are essential in tumour progression and metastasis pathways. Therefore, MMPs and JNK are excellent targets for cancer therapy.
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Inhaled Magnesium For Moderate And Severe Pediatric Asthma
Objective: We hypothesized that nebulized magnesium sulfate added to combined bronchodilator and systemic steroid therapy would shorten time to discharge without undue risk. Study design: Patients aged 2 to 14 y with moderate and severe asthma (PRAM severity score >4) admitted to infirmary care were randomized double-blind to 800 mg nebulized isotonic magnesium sulfate or normal saline placebo via Aeroneb Pro and Idehaler, after intensive therapy with combined albuterol-ipratropium and intravenous methylprednisolone. Time to medical readiness for discharge was the primary outcome. Improvement over time in PRAM severity score and other secondary outcomes were compared for the overall group and severe asthma subset. Results: 191 magnesium sulfate and 174 placebo patients met criteria for analysis. The groups were similar with mean baseline PRAM scores>7. Blinded active therapy significantly increased blood magnesium level 2 h post-treatment 0.85 (SD 0.07) vs 0.82 (SD 0.06) mmol/L, p=0.001). There were no important adverse effects. Accelerated failure time analysis showed a non-significantly relatively shortened time to medical readiness for discharge of 14% favoring the magnesium sulfate group, OR=1.14, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.40, p=0.20, with an absolute prolonged time at 24 h of 2.1 h, p=0.5 . Mean times until readiness for discharge were 14.6 h [SD 9.7] vs 15.6 h [SD 11.3] for the investigational and placebo groups, respectively, p=0.9. Conclusions: Adding nebulized magnesium sulfate to combined nebulized bronchodilator and systemic steroid therapy is either very weakly or very rarely effective, or futile for benefitting pediatric patients with moderate or severe asthma.
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Application Of Bioluminescence, Cyto And Genotoxicity To Measure The Efficacy Of Oregano Oil As An Antimicrobial Agent
Authors: Nahla Omer Eltai, Vyv Salisbury and John GreenmanObjectives To develop and validate a new technique for hand hygiene for use in healthcare settings; to evaluate correlation between bioluminescence and conventional time consuming viable counting methods; to use bioluminescent constructs of bacterial pathogens as a real time biosensors for rapid bactericidal monitoring and to conduct in vitro toxicity tests of the Himalayan oregano oil (HOO) against human cell lines. The ultimate aim of this study is to improve the quality of care of patients through application of a new hand hygiene which could be more acceptable to users while maintaining the efficacy of current hand hygiene disinfectant. Methods: Representatives of the common UK bacterial pathogens Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Methicillin sensitive Staphylococcus aureus were used in experiments. Strains used had been previously genetically modified with addition of lux CDABE operon to express bioluminescence in order that they could be used as reporter of viable metabolically active cells to show a real time in situ antimicrobial effect of HOO. Oregano oil samples were analysed for the percentage contents of thymol and carvacrol using gas chromatography. Potential toxicity of Oregano oil at a range of concentrations on cultured human keratinocytes and Jurkat cells were determined using Neutral Red, WST and MTS assays. Results: High correlation was obtained between viable count and bioluminescence. Application of HOO in concentrations effective against bacteria was found to be safe to human keratinocytes (fig.1 and 2) Conclusions: Bioluminescence has the capability to replace the plate culture method for evaluating the efficacy of a new antimicrobial product as it provides a rapid means of collecting data on the antimicrobial action of HOO. HOO may have the potential as a natural potent antimicrobial agent in the health care setting, as it has demonstrated biocidal action towards significant pathogens in a short time. Application of the oil in the correct dilution was found to be safe on human keratinocytes.
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Insulin Resistance-associated Impairment Of Preadipocyte Differentiation In Human Abdominal Obesity
OBJECTIVE: Differentiation capacity of human preadipocytes exhibits depot specific variation and is influenced by local cytokine production. The effect of obesity-induced insulin resistance on preadipocyte differentiation and its relation to proinflammatory cytokine release was investigated. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Differentiation of preadipocytes obtained from subcutaneous & omental tissue biopsies isolated from obese patients undergoing weight reduction surgery and their cytokines release were compared between insulin sensitive and insulin resistant subjects. RESULTS: Compared to subcutaneous-derived cells, omental cells expanded from the same patients showed diminished differentiation, marked by increased proinflammatory cytokines secretion. When subjects were dichotomized into insulin sensitive & insulin resistant depending on their HOMA-IR, preadipocytes derived from insulin sensitive subjects exhibited a greater ability to differentiate into larger adipocytes with more lipid droplets, marked by a lower expression and secretion of IL-6 and TNFα. Addition of these cytokines inhibited preadipocyte differentiation in insulin sensitive-derived cultures, suggesting that proinflammatory cytokines may underlie inhibition of differentiation seen in insulin resistant patients-derived cultures. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that insulin-resistance is associated with impaired preadipocyte differentiation and increased proinflammatory cytokines release. Understanding mechanisms underlying impaired preadipocyte differentiation associated with insulin resistance may help future treatment strategies.
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Map Kinase Phosphatase Dusp1 Is Overexpressed In Human Obese And Modulated By Physical Exercise
Chronic low-grade inflammation and uncontrolled metabolic stress response are cardinal features of obesity; a major risk factor for the development diabetes. Dual specificity protein phosphatase 1 (DUSP1) is implicated in metabolism and energy expenditure. Mice lacking DUSP1 are resistant to high fat diet-induced obesity. However, the expression of DUSP1 has not been investigated in human obesity. In the current study, we compared the expression pattern of DUSP1 between lean and obese non-diabetic human subjects using subcutaneous adipose tissue and peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The levels of DUSP1 mRNA and protein were significantly increased in obese subjects with concomitant decrease in the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and PGC-1α and an increase in the levels of phospho-JNK and phospho-ERK. Moreover, obese subjects had higher levels of circulating DUSP1 protein that correlated positively with various obesity indicators, triglycerides, glucagon, insulin, leptin and PAI-1 (P<0.05), but negatively with VO2, Max and high-density lipoprotein (P<0.05). The observation that DUSP1 was overexpressed in obese subjects prompted us to investigate if physical exercise could reduce its expression. In this study, we report for the first time that physical exercise significantly attenuated the expression of DUSP1 with a parallel increase in the expression of PGC-1α and a reduction in JNK and ERK activities along with attenuated inflammatory response. Collectively, our data suggest that DUSP1 upregulation is strongly linked to adiposity and physical exercise modulates its expression. This gives further evidence that exercise might be useful as a strategy for managing obesity and preventing its associated complications.
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Effect Of Using Gingival Stem Cells And Therapeutic Ultrasound On Periodontal Ligament During Orthodontic Treatment In Beagle Dogs.
Previous studies have shown that low intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) can prevent orthodontically induced teeth root resorption (OITRR) in human. Also, stem cells have been used to treat different types of bone defects. Severe OITRR is still untreatable problem in orthodontics. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of local injection of osteogenically induced gingival stem cells (OIGSCs) and LIPUS on periodontal ligament (PDL) during tooth movement that induces OITRR in beagle dogs. We hypothesized that local injection of OIGSCs and LIPUS can enhance PDL metabolism and hence enhances the reparative effect of OITRR. Seven adolescent beagle dogs were used and their third and fourth premolars were moved orthodontically. Gingival stem cells were isolated, characterized by flowcytometry and were differentiated into osteoblast -like cells using osteogenic medium to produce osteogenically induced gingival cells (OIGCs). OIGSCs were then re-injected into the alveolar bone in the proximity of the roots of the orthodontically moved teeth. Premolars were randomly divided into five groups. 1) Negative control (OITRR only); 2) Local injection of BMP; 3) OIGSCs; 4) LIPUS and 5) LIPUS +OIGSCs. In LIPUS groups, premolars were treated for four weeks. Animals were then euthanized and tissue blocks were processed for histological and histomorphometric analysis. Cementum thickness, PDL thickness and PDL cell number were counted using Metamorph software. Measurements were made at three levels of the tested roots. Level 1 is the coronal level 9towards the crown); level 2 (middle level of the root) and level 3 (apical, towards the apex of the roots). Variables were compared between groups by Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test using SPSS statistical package. Results showed that LIPUS, BMP2 and LIPUS+OIGCs significantly increased cementum thickness compared to control group in the apical area of the teeth roots (P<0.05). There was statistically significant increases in PDL thickness and PDL cell count in all groups compared to control group (P<0.05). The combined LIPUS+OIGCs showed the highest cell count between al the groups. Conclusion: LIPUS + OIGCs showed the highest PDL regeneration potential and may be used in clinical cases with severe OITRR.
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Molecular Bases Of The Anti-proliferative Action Of The Hypolipidemic Drug Fenofibrate In Vitro In Angiosarcoma-forming Endothelial Cells
Authors: Yasser Majeed, Tarek Taha, Yanal Shaheen, Christopher Triggle and Hong DingIntroduction: Angiosarcomas are aggressive and malignant endothelial tumors. Several risk factors have been identified (eg. BRCA1/2 mutations, radiation, toxins and lymphedema), but pathological mechanisms remain unclear and the prognosis is poor. Fenofibrate is a hypolipidemic drug widely prescribed to treat dyslipidemia. It reduces LDL, vLDL, and triglycerides and increases HDL levels. The primary mechanism of fenofibrate action involves activation of the transcription factor PPARα, but other PPARα-independent mechanisms also exist. More recently, its efficacy as an anti-tumor drug has emerged. However, little is known about the endothelial actions of fenofibrate and whether these contribute to its anti-tumor properties. Here, we explore the actions of fenofibrate in endothelial cells that are capable of forming angiosarcomas in vivo. Methods: Mouse endothelial cells (MS1 VEGF; # CRL-2460) capable of inducing angiosarcoma were purchased from ATCC. These are primary mouse pancreatic islet cells that were transformed with temperature-sensitive SV40 large T antigen and screened for resistance with G418. The G418-selected immortalized cells were then retro-virally infected with a vector encoding primate VEGF. These cells have been shown to induce angiosarcomas in vivo in mice and are a good model system for studies of cancers, particularly angiosarcomas. Results: Incubation of MS1 VEGF cells with clinically relevant concentrations of fenofibrate (25-100 μM) strongly reduced their viability, with cell numbers reduced by approximately 10-fold after a 48h incubation with 50 μM fenofibrate {Cells/ml: ~1.8 million (control) versus ~0.2 million (50 μM fenofibrate)}. Morphologically, the cells were characterized by the appearance of perinuclear cytoplasmic vacuoles. In contrast, fenofibrate had a smaller effect on cell viability in primary human endothelial cells {Cells/ml: ~0.6 million (control) versus ~0.4 million (50 μM fenofibrate)}, thereby suggesting a relatively selective effect on MS1 VEGF cells. Hypothesizing that the effect of fenofibrate in these cells occurred through the induction of apoptosis, the effect of fenofibrate on the expression of proteins critical for cell survival and apoptosis was investigated biochemically. The data revealed down-regulation of the anti-apoptotic Bcl family protein Bcl-2 and the inhibitor of apoptosis protein survivin after treatment with fenofibrate. Fenofibrate treatment also decreased the expression of Akt and Erk proteins. In contrast, expression of Bcl-xl was relatively unaffected. Expression of the anti-diabetic hormone FGF-21 was detected in MS1 VEGF cells and this was also decreased after fenofibrate incubation. Conclusions: The data revealed a strong anti-proliferative action of fenofibrate in angiosarcoma-inducing endothelial cells but not primary human endothelial cells. These effects potentially occurred through regulation of proteins critical for cell survival and apoptosis. Future studies: Future investigations will focus on: (a) delineating the mechanisms involved (PPARα-dependent or -independent) (b) direct measurements of apoptosis by flow cytometry (c) the effect of fenofibrate on endothelial migration, invasion, proliferation, wound healing and tubule formation and (d) testing the possibility that fenofibrate acts by triggering changes in cellular calcium handling and (e) testing fenofibrate efficacy in angiosarcomas in vivo in mice. Key words: Apoptosis, Bcl-2, cancer, fenofibrate, FGF-21, survivin. This work was supported by a National Priorities Research Program grant (NPRP 6-428-3-113).
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Optimizing The Expression And Purification Of Eukaryotic Cdc25c In E. Coli
Authors: Stephanie Ramadan and Khaled MachacaCdc25C is a member of the dual specific protein phosphatase family capable of dephosphorylating both phospho-Tyr and phospho-Ser/Thr residues. In vertebrates, there are three isoforms of the Cdc25 enzyme (Cdc25A, Cdc25B and Cdc25C). The N-terminal (regulatory domain) region of these three enzymes is highly divergent (~20-25% identity) while the C-terminal (catalytic domain) region is more conserved (~60% identity). The Cdc25C isoform is of particular importance because it dephosphorylates Cdc2, which is part of the Cdc2/Cyclin B complex, allowing the cell to transition into mitosis. We want to gain further insight into how Cdc25C interacts with its substrate Cdc2. One way to do this is to utilize the ability of E. coli to heterologously express recombinant Cdc25c. This will allow us to obtain large amounts of the protein for in vitro characterization. First, several E. coli cell lines were tested (each with unique properties; e.g. expression of toxic protein, expression of disulfide rich proteins) for their ability to overexpress Cdc25C. The cell line and expression condition having the highest yield of full-length protein was chosen and purified using a single immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) column that will bind a 6xHis affinity tag fused to the N-terminus of Cdc25C or a tandem approach that utilizes two affinity tags (an N-terminal 6xHis affinity tag and a C-terminal StrepII tag). The pure protein will then be subjected to a variety of chromatography techniques such as UV-Vis spectroscopy and circular dichrosim (CD) to characterize structural changes the protein undergoes when binding to its zinc cofactor. Site directed mutagenesis will be used to create mutations in the zinc binding region of Cdc25C and these proteins will also be characterized for their ability to bind or not to bind the zinc cofactor.
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Risk Factors For Wound Infection Following Cardiac Surgery In Qatar.
Authors: Cornelia S Carr, Nasir Mughal and Abdulaziz M AlkhulaifiObjective: Qatar has one of the highest rates of diabetes in the world (20% of the general population), with many patients having poor control. In Qatar 68% of the isolated CABG group has diabetes. We wanted to assess the risk factors involved in the development of wound infections following cardiac surgery in Qatar. Methods: All patients undergoing cardiac surgery between 1/12/2012 and 30/11/2013 were followed and all wound infections noted. Patients' pre-operative haemoglobin, HbA1C, BMI, and ethnicity were also noted. Results: 252 patients underwent cardiac surgery within the study period. There were 24 females and 228 males (90%). The age range was 15 to 74 (mean 51, mode 54, median 54). 54 (21%) developed some form of wound infection. The average (modal) pre-operative haemoglobin for the patients who developed post-operative wound infection was 13.5, and for the non-infected 15.0. The infection group had an average HbA1C of 7.8 (range 4.5 to 12.9) and the non-infection group 7.0 (range 2 to 14.8). There were no differences in BMI or the ethnic group affected. Conclusions: Although there is a high rate of wound infection in our group, the majority are superficial and in the leg. Is the haemoglobin a marker of overall poor nutrition and poor health or a specific risk factor with decreased oxygen carrying capacity leading to the development of wound infections? We also have a high rate of poorly controlled diabetes. We are now doing multivariate analysis on the data.
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Biosynthesis, Characterization And Antibacterial Efficacy Of Silver Nanoparticles From The Soil Fungus Curvularia Tuberculata
Authors: Tawfik Muhammad Muhsin and Ahmad K HachimAbstract Nanobiotechnology has been recently widely applied in multidisciplinary fields including pharmaceutical applications. The last decade has witnessed an increase research interests focused on the biosynthesis of metal nanoparticles from fungi as a natural sources and as bionanofactories. However, silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are of great importance particularly in medical therapy applications and can be used as antimicrobial agent. The objective of this study was to biosynthesize silver nanoparticles from the soil fungus Curvularia tuberculata and to examine their efficacy against five strains of pathogenic bacteria namely; Escherichia coli, Proteus mirabilis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhi and Staphylococcus aureus using agar well diffusion technique. The synergistic efficacy of biosynthesized silver nanoparticles in a combination with commercially used antibiotic Gentamycin against the selected bacteria was also examined. The biosynthesized silver nanoparticles from fungal free-cell filtrate were characterized by using UV-Vis spectrophotometer analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and scanning electron microscope (SEM). UV-Vis spectrophotometer analysis revealed a peak at 420 nm indicating the synthesis of silver nanoparticles. FTIR analysis verified the detection of protein capping of silver nanoparticles while SEM micrographs showed that the synthesized silver nanoparticles are dispersed and mostly having spherical shape within the size range between 10-50 nm. The biosynthesized silver nanoparticles possessed a varied growth inhibition activity ranged between 12- 28 mm diam inhibition zones at different concentrations against the tested pathogenic bacterial strains. A remarkable increase of bacterial growth inhibition (25.5-35.5 mm diam) was detected when a combination of silver nanoparticles and Gentamycin was used. A significant increase in fold area of antibacterial efficacy was observed when AgNPs in combination with Gentamycin was applied as compared with the efficacy of Gentamycin alone. The biosynthesized AgNPs did not show any toxicity against human blood. The synthesized silver nanoparticles by the fungus C.tuberculata is promising to be used as an antimicrobial agent in medical therapy due to their broad spectrum efficacy against pathogenic bacteria. Nevertheless, further studies are needed to investigate the activity of silver nanoparticles as antibacterial agent in vivo.
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Mapping New Hiv Infections In Morocco By Modes Of Transmission Model In 2013
Background Countries in the Middle East and North Africa are experiencing emerging HIV epidemics in high-risk populations, including people who inject drugs (PWID), men who have sex with men (MSM), and female sex workers (FSWs). This study was initiated by the Morocco Ministry of Health to identify the key modes of exposure to HIV infection among the Moroccan population and to provide recommendations for national HIV prevention strategies for the coming years. This work represents the second national modes of transmission (MoT) analysis in Morocco after the 2010 MoT study. Methods The MoT mathematical model developed by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS was used to update the 2010 model results. The model was parameterized based on recent integrated bio-behavioral surveillance survey (IBBSS) studies and quality data provided by the Morocco Ministry of Health and through a comprehensive review and synthesis of HIV and risk behavior data in Morocco. Uncertainty analyses were used to assess the reliability of, and uncertainty around, our calculated estimates. Results FSWs, clients of FSWs, MSM, and PWID contributed 11.1%, 24.7%, 22.4%, and 4.8% of new HIV infections, respectively. More than two-thirds (70%) of new HIV infections occurred among FSWs, clients of FSWs, MSM, and PWID, or among the stable sexual partners of these populations. Casual heterosexual sex contributed 8% of HIV infections. About half (44%) of HIV incidence was among females, but 73% of these infections were due to an infected spouse. The vast majority of HIV infections among men (92%) were due to high-risk behavior. A very small HIV incidence was predicted to be arising from medical injections or blood transfusion (0.1%). Conclusions The HIV epidemic in Morocco is driven by HIV incidence in high-risk groups, with commercial heterosexual sex networks being the leading driver of the epidemic, and MSM networks contributing to a larger share of new HIV infections than the 2010 model estimates (24% versus 14%). There is a need to further focus HIV response on high-risk populations through scaling up of prevention services such as condom promotion among FSWs and their clients, voluntary counseling and testing, harm reduction, and expanded treatment coverage. It is also essential to continue with repeated rounds of IBBSS studies among these population groups.
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Seat Belt And Mobile Phone Use Among Drivers In Doha City: An Observational Study
Worldwide 1.24 million deaths occur annually due to road traffic injuries. Additionally, 20-50 million are injured or disabled. Similarly, within the Gulf Cooperation Council countries injury and mortality due to road traffic injury are high. In the State of Qatar, for example, the road traffic fatality rate for the year 2010 is estimated to be 14 per 100,000. Young adult males are disproportionately affected. Road safety risk factor laws namely, seat belt use, driving under the influence of alcohol, helmet use and speed management exist in Qatar but enforcement is lax. An additional new risk factor causing distraction while driving and causing road traffic injury and fatalities is the use of mobile phone whilst driving a vehicle. Currently, in Qatar baseline national data pertaining to seat belt and mobile phone use among drivers is not available. We have thus conducted an observational study to estimate the prevalence of these two variables among vehicle drivers in Doha. Additionally, we will examine and present the associations between phone and seat belt use, and variables such as the gender of the driver, type of vehicle and the time of the day during which the observations were made. Furthermore, policy implications of the study findings will be discussed. Acknowledgement: This work is supported by the Biomedical Research Program at Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar, a program funded by Qatar Foundation.
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How To Cure Cancer With A Pill? A Structure-based Drug Design Study On Human Hexokinase 2 Targeting Different Tumor Types
Authors: Wael Rabeh and Mir Hussain NawazCancer is a major challenge worldwide with nearly 8 million people die from cancer every year, and it is one of the major causes of death in GCC Countries. Tumor and cancer cells in general utilize glucose at elevated levels to support their growth and proliferation, historically known as the Warburg effect, a phenomena used clinically in the Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scan to detect glycolytic tumors. Targeting glucose metabolism in cancer cells to limit tumor growth will enhance the survival rate and improve quality of life for cancer patients. Hexokinase, the first enzyme in the glycolytic pathway, catalyzes the phosphorylation of glucose, and is one of the three major steps in the regulation of the glycolytic pathway. However, humans have four isozymes of hexokinase in which Hexokinase 2 (HK2) is the most active and specifically expressed in cancer cells but not in normal tissues. In addition, gene expression profiling experiments of different types of cancer showed high expression levels of HK2, and various biological studies highlighted the importance of HK2 in tumor metastasis making it an ideal target for the development of new class of cancer therapeutics. Since HK2 is not found in normal cells, therapeutics that inhibit HK2 activity will target cancer cells only and will have minimum or no side effects. The new class of therapeutic will be safe and can be delivered orally to replace the current traditional chemotherapy that has to be administered on an in-patient basis, which dramatically increases the cost of cancer therapy. We solved the crystal structure of human HK2 in complex with glucose and glucose-6-phosphate (PDB code: 2NZT), where it is a homodimer with catalytically active N- and C-terminal domains linked by a seven-turn helix. A hydrophobic α-helix at the beginning of the protein is known to interact with a voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) on the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) to facilitate coupling HK2 to ATP used in phosphorylation of glucose, thereby "kicking off" glucose metabolism. In addition, the localization of HK2 to OMM prevents apoptosis through repression of the formation of mitochondrial permeability transition pores. Through biochemical and biophysical characterization of HK2, we found that the N-terminal domain not only catalyze glucose phosphorylation but also regulate the stability and activity of the enzyme. In addition, deletion of the N-terminal helix altered the stability and catalytic activity of the full-length enzyme and N-terminal domain when expressed separately. Understanding the kinetic and regulation mechanism of human HK2 will accelerate the design and development of inhibitors to be used as cancer therapeutics. Our initial screen of a small drug library yielded an inhibitor that is a natural product that is known for its anticancer activity. Currently, we are implementing a structure-based drug design to further develop the target using 3D structural simulations of HK2. The new class of cancer therapeutics will increase the quality and lifespan of cancer patients and will cut the cost dramatically of the current expensive cancer chemotherapy.
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Using Surveillance Data To Identify Areas Of Research And Healthcare System Improvement: The Case Of Diagnosis Delay.
More LessOne of the key objectives of the surveillance of communicable disease (CDs) is the identification of areas for research and healthcare system improvement. In a recent paper published in Qatar Medical Journal (http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2014.9) is shown the delay in diagnosis of CDs of cases reported at The Cuban Hospital (TCH) during 2012 and 2013. Examples of delay in diagnosis was for tuberculosis 61.7 days, acute hepatitis 18.5 days, typhoid fever 17 days, food poisoning 9.5 days, measles 8.0 days and meningitis 3.8 days. These are diseases that require immediate reporting because of their public health importance and some of them are highly transmissible (e.g. tuberculosis and measles). Additional evaluation of patients with tuberculosis admitted at The Cuban Hospital (many reported in Hamad General Hospital and referred to TCH because of bed crisis) from January 2013 to June 2014 (105 patients) show diagnosis delay of 49.5 days (standard deviation 51.9 years) with a maximum figure of 365 days. In patients with positive smear (highly infectious) the delay was 49.7 days (SD 53.5 days) (minimum 2 days, maximum 365 days). The delay was superior in cases with pulmonary tuberculosis (51.3 days (SD 52 days)) than in non pulmonary (36.1 days (SD 51.9 days). Delay in diagnosis of CDs is significant with regard to not only disease prognosis at the individual level but also transmission within the community. The delay could be divided in ¨patient delay and system delay¨. Patient delay refers to the time between onset of symptom and the first contact with a healthcare professional. The system delay refers to the time between this first contact to the diagnosis or confirmation of the disease. The knowledge of the two components of the delay is essential to identify actions to minimize the delay and reduce the probability of disease transmission at the community. In summary data from the surveillance of CDs suggest the need of research to identify the causes of diagnostic delay and subsequently implement actions its reduction, which will contribute to the prevention and control of CDs in Qatar.
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Inflammation And Er Stress Downregulate Bdh2 Expression And Dysregulate Intracellular Iron In Macrophages
More LessAltered iron homeostasis is associated with many chronic diseases and characterized by misdistribution of iron that manifests in hypoferremia and iron retention in the reticuloendothelial system. Macrophages play a very important role in host defense and in iron homeostasis by engulfing senescent red blood cells and recycling iron. Hepcidin is the master iron regulating hormone that limits dietary iron absorption from the gut and limits iron egress from macrophages; therefore, upon infection macrophages retain iron to limit its bioavailability which limits bacterial growth. Recently, a short chain butyrate dehydrogenase type 2 (BDH2) protein was reported to contain an iron responsive element and to mediate cellular iron trafficking by catalyzing the synthesis of the mammalian siderophore that binds labile iron; therefore, BDH2 plays a crucial role in intracellular iron homeostasis. However, BDH2 expression and regulation in macrophages has not yet been described. Here we show that LPS-induced inflammation combined with ER stress led to massive BDH2 downregulation, increased the expression of ER stress markers, upregulated hepcidin expression, downregulated ferroportin, caused iron retention in macrophages, and dysregulated cytokine release from macrophages. We also show that ER stress combined with inflammation synergistically upregulated the expression of the iron carrier protein NGAL and the stress-inducible heme degrading enzyme heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) leading to iron liberation. However, vitamin D treatment prior to LPS exposure restored BDH2 expression. Taken together, the data suggest that inflammation combined with ER stress dysregulated intracellular iron homeostasis in macrophages. This is the first report to show that inflammation and ER stress downregulates the expression of BDH2 in human THP-1 macrophages. A clinical translational study of this finding will be conducted on patients with Alzheimer disease, cystic fibrosis disease and COPD compared to healthy subjects to investigate iron status i.e. anemia of chronic inflammation, iron indexes, inflammation markers (proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines such as IL-6 and MCP-1) and expression of BDH2, hepcidin-ferroprotin axis and intracellular iron retention in peripheral monocytes. Since vitamin D improves iron status, relieves ER stress and restores BDH2 expression we propose to translate our finding in a double blind clinical study where subjects will receive high dose of vitamin D or placebo as therapy to restore altered iron homeostasis.
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Identification And Genomic Characterization Of Herv-k (hml-10) In Human Genome Grch37/hg19 Assembly
Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) have been classified into three different classes I, II, III. Betaretrovirus-like sequences, including HERV-K, belong to the class II and contains ten groups, termed HML1-10. It has been reported that an HML-10 sequence, termed HERV-K(C4), is inserted within the gene coding for the human complement C4 in an antisense orientation (Tassabehij et al. 1994). The expression of the HERV-K(C4) RNA has been hypothesized to possibly modulate C4 expression as well as to act as a possible mechanism of defense against retroviral infections (Schneider et al 2001). Recently, it has been demonstrated that low HERV-K(C4) copy number is associated with type 1 diabetes, raising the possibility that this retroviral element contributes to functional protection against this autoimmune disease (Mason et al. 2014). Given the correlation between lower HERV-K(C4) copy number and expression, it has also been proposed that HERV-K(C4) may influence C4 RNA processing and/or have an impact on other endogenous retroviral sequences (Mason et al. 2014). To have more insights into this hypothesis, we identified, lassified and characterized the HML-10 sequences that are present in the human genome GRCh37/hg19 assembly. We used the model-based software Retrotector (Sperberg et al 2007) to search HML-10 sequences in the human genome assembly GRCh37/hg19 and identified 10 HML-10 proviruses in chromosomes 1, 6, 16, 19 and Y. These proviruses were confirmed to belong to the HERV-K (HML-10) group and shown to have the Rec sequence. Out of the 10 identified HML-10s, 5 sequences have both LTRs, 4 have only 3'-LTR and 1 sequence is without LTRs. Age estimation analysis performed on the 5 sequences with both LTRs indicated that they inserted into the human genome >25 Mya ago. Five sequences conserved the primer binding site (PBS) region, all recognizing the Lys tRNA. Translational analysis showed that all proviral sequences have multiple stop codons that preclude their production of functional proteins. Phylogenetic analyses were performed with complete DNA sequences as well as with the Pol amino acid sequences and will be presented. Overall, we have identified and characterized 10 HML-10 sequences in the human genome GRCh37/hg19 assembly. Precise knowledge of all HML-10 sequences will allow further investigation of their physiological and pathological role in autoimmune diseases (Yu & Whitacre 2004), particularly their possible involvement in type 1 diabetes, giving new insights into their understanding. References 1. Tassabehij et al. NAR 22, 5211-17 (1994). 2. Mason et al. Diabetes 63, 1789-95 (2014). 3. Sperber et al. NAR 35, 4964-76 (2007). 4. Yu & Whitacre Trends in immunology 25, 694-99 (2004).
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