Mathiassenadcock5102
Sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) is a common complication of sepsis that may seriously affect the prognosis and quality of life of patients with sepsis. Microglial activation is vital to the neuroinflammation and the pathology of SAE. In the present study, in vitro cultured BV-2 microglial cells stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were employed as a model of microglia activation. The altered profiles of long noncoding (lnc)RNAs, circular (circ)RNAs and mRNAs in BV-2 cells after 4 h of LPS exposure were arrayed by using the Agilent competing endogenous (ce)RNA Microarray Chip. Using fold change >2 and P less then 0.05 as the cutoff criteria, 1,135 mRNAs and 2,488 lncRNAs were determined to be upregulated and 630 mRNAs and 744 lncRNAs to be downregulated. The number of differentially expressed circRNAs was lower, with 140 upregulated and 123 downregulated. Gene Ontology and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes analysis of DE mRNAs suggested that inflammatory responses, as well as lipid metabolism, were involved in microglial activation. Furthermore, analyses of ceRNA networks of the lncRNA-miRNA-mRNA or circRNA-miRNA-mRNA interrelations were performed. The present study revealed a multitude of novel candidate mRNAs, lncRNAs and circRNAs involved in microglial activation, which may improve the current knowledge on neuroinflammation and provide potential therapeutic targets for SAE.Bone marrow stromal cell antigen 2 (BST2) has been reported to act as an oncogene in the tumorigenesis of numerous types of cancer. Bioinformatics analysis has predicted the binding interaction between BST2 and specificity protein 1 (SP1) and the involvement of SP1 in pancreatic cancer. Therefore, the present study set out to verify this interaction and determine how it may affect pancreatic cancer progression. Normal human pancreatic duct epithelial cells (HPDE6-C7) and pancreatic cancer cell lines (SW1990, BxPC3, PANC1 and PSN-1) were selected for western blotting and reverse transcription-quantitative PCR detection of BST2 expression. Colony formation, Cell Counting Kit-8 and wound healing assays were performed to detect the proliferative and migratory abilities of PANC1 cells following transfection with small interfering RNA against BST2. The expression of proliferation and migration markers were assayed using western blotting. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and luciferase reporter assays were employed to verify the bioinformatics prediction of BST2-SP1 binding. PANC1 cell proliferation and migration were analyzed following BST2 knockdown and SP1 overexpression. In comparison with HPDE6-C7 cells, all four pancreatic cancer cell lines were found to exhibit increased BST2 expression levels to varying degrees, with the highest levels observed in PANC1 cells. BST2 knockdown inhibited PANC1 cell colony formation, proliferation and migration. Additionally, SP1 was shown to bind to the BST2 promoter and could promote PANC1 cell proliferation and migration when overexpressed. However, BST2 knockdown rescued SP1 overexpression-induced PANC1 cell colony formation, proliferation and migration. In conclusion, activation of BST2 by the transcription factor SP1 was shown to accelerate pancreatic cancer cell proliferation and migration, suggesting that BST2 and SP1 may be plausible therapeutic targets in targeted therapy for pancreatic cancer.The aim of the present study was to investigate the regulatory effect and mechanism of microRNA (miR)-185 in diabetic angiopathy. The expression of miR-185 and nitric oxide synthase 2 (NOS2) in the blood from diabetic patients was examined by reverse transcription-quantitative PCR and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. After establishment of diabetic rats, the expression of miR-185 and NOS2 in vascular tissues and blood was also measured. Then, miR-185 was overexpressed in HMEC-1 cells and the expression of NOS2 was determined. Dual-luciferase reporter assay was used to identify the direct interaction between miR-185 and NOS2 mRNA. The expression of NOS2 was upregulated and the expression of miR-185 was downregulated in the blood from patients with diabetes. Vascular tissues and blood of diabetic rats showed similar trends compared with that of human. HMEC-1 cells with overexpression of miR-185 had decreased expression of NOS2. Dual-luciferase reporter assay demonstrated the direct binding between miR-185 and NOS2. The present study demonstrates that upregulation of NOS2 in diabetic patients is associated with the downregulation of miR-185, which participates in the progression of diabetes possibly through regulating NOS2 expression.Skeletal muscle injury is one of the most common sports injury, which accounts for ~40% of all sports-related injuries among the elderly. In addition, cases of full recovery from treatment are rare. Although electroacupuncture (EA) is an integral aspect of traditional Chinese medicine, the effects of EA on skeletal muscle fibrosis and the possible underlying mechanism remain unclear. To investigate the effect and potential mechanism of EA on skeletal inflammation, collagen deposition and macrophage function, a skeletal muscle injury model was established by injecting 100 µl cardiotoxin into the anterior tibial muscle of Sprague Dawley rats. The animals were randomly divided into the following three groups Control, model and EA. The expression of inflammation-related factors (IL-6, IL-4, IL-33, IL-10 and TNF-α) were measured using ELISA. H&E staining, Masson's staining and immunohistochemistry (collagen II, Axin2 and β-catenin) were performed to assess collagen deposition and fibrosis in the muscle tissues. Ade activation of ERK1/2 was significantly elevated. In conclusion, EA can inhibit inflammation and collagen deposition whilst promoting the transformation of macrophages from the M1 into the M2 sub-type. The underlying mechanism was found to be associated with TGF-β1/Smad3/p38/ERK1/2 signaling.Endometrial stromal sarcoma (ESS) is a rare tumor, predominantly occurring as a primary tumor of the uterus. Rare cases of primary extrauterine ESS (EESS) have been reported. Low-grade ESS (LG-ESS) is more common than high-grade ESS (HG-ESS). We present five cases of ESS and one case of EESS. All cases received external radiotherapy (EBRT) at the Radiotherapy Department of the Emergency Clinical Hospital 'Sfantul Apostol Andrei' Galati, during 2004-2020. Five cases underwent EBRT in two-dimensional (2D) technique and only one patient received EBRT with three-dimensinal conformational radiotherapy (3DCRT) technique with a linear accelerator, Elekta Synergy. Five patients were referred to postoperative radiotherapy after hysterectomy. The median age of the patients was 57.4 years. One patient was referred to radiotherapy with palliative intent. EESS localized in the retroperitoneum, in the para-aortic region, was identified in one 64-year-old patient with a personal history of hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in 1997; EESS was complicated with vertebral extension at the L1-L2 level and spinal cord compression syndrome. ESS represents a rare diagnosis and a high- or low-grade tumor profile is distinguished by immunohistochemistry (IHC) tests. Up to 30% of patients have EESS at presentation. The treatment of ESS is multimodal, its management requiring a multidisciplinary team, and it is different according to the primary tumor location and tumor staging. The role of adjuvant radiotherapy remains controversial in high-grade EESS and due to the rarity of these cases there are limited data concerning the efficacy of adjuvant EBRT available from prospective randomized control clinical trials.Groove pancreatitis represents a rare pathological condition which is usually associated with chronic alcohol intake. However, the differential diagnosis between groove pancreatitis and groove pancreatic carcinoma is difficult to establish pre-operatively. In this respect, a significant number of cases are treated as malignant conditions, with the final diagnosis of benign disease being established post-operatively. The present study describes the case of a 46-year-old male who was diagnosed with groove pancreatitis. Due to the uncertainty of the pre-operative diagnosis, the patient was subjected to radical surgery consisting of pancreatoduodenectomy. The final histopathological diagnosis confirmed the presence of groove pancreatitis. Moreover, it excluded the possibility of an association with any element of malignancy and provided the effective management of the disease, all the symptoms being significantly alleviated at the 3-month follow-up. In addition, the present study also provides a brief summary and discussion of the disease and associated treatment options. On the whole, as demonstrated herein, pancreatoduodenectomy appears to be a safe and effective method for the treatment of groove pancreatitis, being associated with a significant improvement in the quality of life of the patient; moreover, it represents the sole method which can exclude the diagnosis of malignancy.Decreased mitochondrial metabolism suppresses glucose metabolism, resulting in obesity and diabetes. The present study aimed to investigate mechanisms underlying the 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) hydrochloride-mediated increase in glucose uptake in high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice in vivo and C2C12 myotube cells in vitro. C57BL/6N male mice (20 weeks old) were fed either HFD or normal diet (ND) for 4 weeks. A total of five HFD-fed mice were orally administered with 300 mg/kg 5-ALA hydrochloride and 47.1 mg/kg sodium ferrous citrate (SFC; HFD + 5-ALA/SFC), whereas ND and other HFD-fed mice were orally administered with saline. After 4 weeks, these mice were intraperitoneally administered with 2 g/kg glucose and 3.2 mg/kg 2-deoxyglucose (2DG) for intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test (IPGTT) and glucose uptake test. Body weights, plasma glucose levels and the area under the curve of IPGTT were lower in mice treated with HFD + 5-ALA/SFC compared with in those treated with HFD alone. 2DG uptake in the gastrocnemius muscle and heart were more significantly improved in the HFD + 5-ALA/SFC mice compared with the HFD-fed mice. Furthermore, 5-ALA/SFC increased 2DG uptake in C2C12 cells to a similar level to the insulin-treated group. Moreover, it increased glucose transport (GLUT)1 translocation in the plasma membrane by 2.5-fold relative to the controls without affecting GLUT1 expression; however, it had no effect on GLUT4 translocation. Therefore, 5-ALA/SFC enhanced gastrocnemius and cardiac glucose uptake in HFD-fed mice, and upregulated GLUT1 translocation to the plasma membrane, but not GLUT4 in C2C12 myotube cells. Therefore, it could potentially be used as a novel drug for the treatment of diabetes.This study was aimed at identifying molecular markers associated with the pathogenesis of sudden cardiac death (SCD). It provides a proteomic analysis of human left anterior descending coronary artery from subjects diagnosed with SCD through histological examination and cases of nondisease accidental deaths through autopsy. A total of 2784 proteins were obtained from label-free quantitative proteomic analysis. This included a total of 265 differential proteins which were involved in SCD-related processes, such as inflammation, muscle system process regulation, metal ion transport, and lysosomal pathway. Western blotting was carried out to measure the expressions of cathepsin C (CTSC), focal adhesion kinase (FAK), p-FAK, and proteins related to the p38/MAPK signaling pathway, whereas immunohistochemistry was performed to determine the localization and expression of CTSC, TNF-α, and CD206 in arterial tissues. EGFR inhibitor review It was found that CTSC were the most expressed proteins with a significant upward trend in SCD cases. Besides, CTSC regulated macrophage polarization to M1 through the FAK-induced p38/MAPK signaling pathway.