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Parasite fitness depends on a successful journey from one host to another. For parasites that are transmitted environmentally, abiotic conditions might modulate the success of this journey. Here we evaluate how light, a key abiotic factor, influences spatiotemporal patterns of zooplankton disease where light varies seasonally, across lakes, and with depth in a lake. In an in situ experiment using those three sources of variation, we tested sensitivity of spores of two parasites to ambient light. Infectivity of both parasites was lower when exposed to ambient light in comparison to parasites exposed to otherwise similar conditions in the dark. The more sensitive parasite (the fungus, Metschnikowia) was damaged even under lower ambient light during late fall (November). With this differential sensitivity established, we evaluated links between light environment and natural outbreaks in lakes. Consistent with the incubations, epidemics of the less sensitive parasite (the bacterium, Pasteuria) started earlier in the fall (under higher ambient light), and both parasites had smaller outbreaks in more transparent lakes. Overall, light environment may impact the timing and size of disease outbreaks. Outbreaks could thus become exacerbated by human activities that darken waters, including lake browning associated with climate change and eutrophication.The association between physical activity and health has been clearly established, and the promotion of physical activity should be viewed as a cost-effective approach that is universally prescribed as a first-line treatment for nearly every chronic disease. Health care providers involved in the care for individuals with cerebral palsy (CP) are encouraged to take an active role in promoting their health and well-being. Balancing activity behaviours across the whole day, with improved physical activity, reduced sedentary time, and healthy sleep behaviours, can set up infants, preschool-, and school-aged children with CP for a healthy trajectory across their lifetime. However, most clinicians do not apply a systematic surveillance, assessment, and management approach to detect problems with physical activity or sleep in children with CP. Consequently, many children with CP miss out on an important first line of treatment. This article presents an evidence-informed clinical practice guide with practical pointers to help practitioners in detecting 24-hour activity problems as a critical step towards adoption of healthy lifestyle behaviours for children with CP that provide long-term health benefits.Rheumatic diseases such as osteoarthritis (OA) are a major social and economic burden because of the population aging and the lack of curative solutions. An effective cell therapy may be the best treatment option for OA and other cartilage diseases. However, the main cellular strategy used to repair articular cartilage, the transplantation of autologous chondrocytes, is limited to a small number of patients with traumatic lesions. The use of joint replacement after years of disease progression proves the great medical need in current practice. Mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) provide an alternative cell source for cartilage regeneration due to numerous advantages, comprising relative ease to isolate and culture, chondrogenic capacity, and anti-inflammatory effects. Initial clinical trials with MSCs have led to encouraging results, but many variables have to be considered to attain true amelioration of disease or repair (type and status of cartilage disease, source and conditions of cells, administration regime, combinatorial approaches). Particularly, allogeneic MSCs are an advantageous cellular product. The animal models chosen for preclinical evaluation are also relevant for successful translation into clinical practice. Considering the limitations in the field, rigorous comparative and validating studies in well-established animal models (including large animals) are still needed to set up the bases for additional clinical trials. The present review of studies performed in small and large animal models should help clarify the applicability of MSC-based therapies for articular cartilage repair.Hyperuricemia is defined by a blood urate level > 405 µmol/L, the cut-off value at which urate forms crystals in vivo. In 15-20% these individuals develop gout, clinically characterized by attacks of acute arthritis, initially and most commonly affecting MTP 1 or other joints, tendons and soft tissues of the foot. These attacks usually subside within 1 to 2 weeks. Over time attacks occur more frequently and can transform into chronic arthritis characterized by tophi. The gold standard for diagnosis relies on identification of urate crystals by polarization microscopy in aspirated joint fluid. This procedure is rarely performed in primary care where the majority of patients are seen, and gout is usually diagnosed by clinical criteria. New imaging technologies (ultrasound, dual-energy CT) can be helpful when aspiration is not available and when the diagnosis is unclear. Gout has a prevalence of 1.7% and incidence rate of approximately 200 per 100000 person-years in Sweden, figures that increase over time.Urate lowering therapy (ULT) should, according to recent guidelines, be initiated in the majority of cases already after the first attack of gout. Allopurinol is the first line choice of ULT and should be started with low dose, which is increased until the treatment target is reached. The treatment target should be a blood urate of less then 360 µmol/l or less then 300 µmol/l (in the presence of topfi), which should be maintained until topfi have resolved. NSAID/cox-inhibitors, colchicine and glucocorticoids are all valid short-term treatments of gout attacks. SHR-3162 solubility dmso ULT should not be paused/terminated during attacks and can be initiated during an attack that is adequately treated. Recent RCTs of ULT treatment have demonstrated the importance of thorough and adequate information to the patient and regular follow-up until treatment targets are reached. Such a strategy improve both compliance and outcomes of ULT treatment.Hyperuricemia (HU) and gout are strongly associated with CVD, associations that are most likely due to shared etiologies rather than causality. HU is for example causally related to the metabolic syndrome and in particular to obesity. Gout and HU can both be caused by and lead to decreased kidney function. On the other hand, there are observational data suggesting that HU may protect against neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer and Parkinson's disease. Ongoing RCTs with urate and urate lowering therapy (ULT) will help to resolve some of these controversies. Nevertheless, gout is a "curable disease" by ULT, a treatment which in adequate doses may also have positive effect on several associated co-morbidities.Germ cell tumors (GCTs) are a rare disease, but they account for 15% of all malignancies diagnosed during adolescence. The biological mechanisms underpinning their development are only starting to be explored. Current GCT treatment may be associated with significant toxicity. Therefore, there is an urgent need to understand the molecular basis of GCT and identify biomarkers to tailor the therapy for individual patients. However, this research is severely hamstrung by the rarity of GCTs in individual hospitals/institutes. A publicly available genomic data commons with GCT datasets compiled from different institutes/studies would be a valuable resource to facilitate such research. In this study, we first reviewed publicly available web portals containing GCT genomics data, focusing on comparing data availability, data access, and analysis tools, and the limitations of using these resources for GCT molecular studies. Next, we specifically designed a GCT data commons with a web portal, GCT Explorer, to assist the research community to store, manage, search, share, and analyze data. The goal of this work is to facilitate GCT molecular basis exploration and translational research.While the majority of patients with advanced testicular germ cell tumors (GCT) achieve complete responses after chemotherapy and if indicated after postchemotherapy resection of residual lesions, about 20% of patients have incomplete responses or show relapses. link2 Moreover, toxicity of chemotherapy is high, and severe adverse chronic effects have been described. Therefore, there is an urgent need for biomarkers that could help to improve tumor staging, and support decision-making, ideally including monitoring of therapy response and prediction of relapse. Besides the well-established serum markers lactate dehydrogenase, α-fetoprotein, and β-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin, during recent years new noninvasive liquid biopsy markers have been investigated in GCT, including cell-free nucleic acids like microRNAs, and circulating tumor cells (CTCs).Prognostic relevance has been demonstrated for circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in patients with different cancers. However, little is known in GCT patients. Histologically, GCT are a very heterogeneous group of tumors comprising pure seminomas (consisting of cells that remember primordial germ cells) and nonseminomas, which are either undifferentiated (embryonal carcinoma) or differentiated, exhibiting different degrees of embryonic (teratoma) or extraembryonic (yolk sac tumor and choriocarcinoma) differentiation. This heterogeneity hampers capture and detection of CTCs deriving from those tumors using a single method or a single antibody. To date, label-independent capture methods that enrich tumor cells according to the density of GCT cells, which is similar to that of mononuclear cells, have been successfully applied. Since testicular GCT might also express epithelial proteins, methods based on enrichment of CTCs using epithelial markers are promising to detect CTCs in certain subgroups of patients with GCTs as well.Here, we describe and discuss a combination of methods to capture and detect GCT cells with epithelial and germ cell characteristics in blood.Reverse transcription (RT) based quantitative PCR (qPCR) for quantifying microRNAs (miRNAs) in in the circulation presents specific challenges. Here, we describe an optimized research protocol to assess serum sample quality and quantify levels of a panel of four test miRNAs (miR-371a-3p, miR-372-3p, miR-373-3p, and miR-367-3p) that enables highly sensitive and specific malignant germ cell tumor (GCT) diagnosis and monitoring. link3 This protocol utilizes a multiplex RT step using Taqman miRNA stem-loop primers. A multiplexed preamplification stage is then employed to increase the sensitivity of the final quantification step, which is performed using standard singleplex Taqman qPCR methodology.Genomewide association studies (GWAS) have been widely used in recent years to identify common variants that are associated with multiple types of cancer, including testicular germ cell tumors. These studies require no a priori hypotheses and have advantages, including the ability to highlight new pathways relevant to the biology of common diseases. GWAS require collection of germline DNA from individuals with and without the disease of interest. Following DNA extraction and quantification, a variety of array based platforms are available to evaluate common and moderately rare germline variation throughout the genome in an agnostic fashion. Here, we describe DNA extraction methods from samples typically used in the evaluation of germline genetic variation (blood and saliva). We also describe assays used to assess DNA quality and quantity. Finally, we include methods describing array based genotyping using the Illumina platform and validation of relevant variants using the iPLEX Agena Multiplexed Genotyping (formerly Sequenom).

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