Valylprolyvalyl pentafluoroethyl ketones with different N-protecting groups were evaluated in vitro and in vivo as inhibitors of human neutrophil elastase (HNE). Several of these compounds were found to be orally active in HNE-induced rat and hamster lung hemorrhage models. The compound with 4-(4-morpholinylcarbonyl)benzoyl as the protecting group, 71 (MDL 101,146), was studied in greater detail. Hydration and epimerization studies were performed on 71 and related compounds in various media, including human blood serum. High-performance liquid chromatography studies on a reversed-phase system as a measure of the lipophilicity of 71 and related compounds revealed a small range of relative retention times wherein the orally active compounds fell. The Ki value determined for 71 vs HNE was 25 nM.
SUMMARYHundreds of small-scale influenza outbreaks in schools are reported in mainland China every year, leading to a heavy disease burden which seriously impacts the operation of affected schools. Knowing the transmissibility of each outbreak in the early stage has become a major concern for public health policy-makers and primary healthcare providers. In this study, we collected all the small-scale outbreaks in Changsha (a large city in south central China with ~7·04 million population) from January 2005 to December 2013. Four simple and popularly used models were employed to calculate the reproduction number (R) of these outbreaks. Given that the duration of a generation interval Tc = 2·7 and the standard deviation (s.d.)
σ = 1·1, the mean R estimated by an epidemic model, normal distribution and delta distribution were 2·51 (s.d. = 0·73), 4·11 (s.d. = 2·20) and 5·88 (s.d. = 5·00), respectively. When Tc = 2·9 and σ = 1·4, the mean R estimated by the three models were 2·62 (s.d. = 0·78), 4·72 (s.d. = 2·82) and 6·86 (s.d. = 6·34), respectively. The mean R estimated by gamma distribution was 4·32 (s.d. = 2·47). We found that the values of R in small-scale outbreaks in schools were higher than in large-scale outbreaks in a neighbourhood, city or province. Normal distribution, delta distribution, and gamma distribution models seem to more easily overestimate the R of influenza outbreaks compared to the epidemic model.
Human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), like other members of the glycoprotein hormone family, contains a common alpha subunit and a hormone-specific beta subunit. The latter is a 145 amino acid residue polypeptide with six sites of glycosylation. Positions 2 and 104 are occupied by basic amino acid residues in the 12 known amino acid sequences of mammalian beta subunits from CG and LH, a related gonadotrophin that acts through the same receptor. Lysine residues are found in both these positions in hCG-beta. Using site-directed mutagenesis, each of these two lysines in hCG-beta was replaced with glutamic acid. The mutant and wild-type cDNAs were subcloned into a eukaryotic expression vector, which was then transiently transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells containing a stably integrated gene for the bovine alpha subunit. Holoprotein formation occurred with each of the two heterologous gonadotrophin mutants, i.e. the bovine alpha subunit bound to hCG-beta (Glu2) and to hCG-beta (Glu104), as well as with the control, i.e. the bovine alpha subunit bound to the hCG-beta wild-type subunit. In two in-vitro assays, one a competitive binding assay with 125I-labelled hCG as bound ligand and the other based on stimulation of progesterone production in a transformed murine Leydig cell line, MA-10, both the heterodimers containing a mutant beta subunit exhibited bioactivity, but their potencies were lower than that of the bovine alpha subunit bound to the hCG-beta wild-type subunit. These results suggest that the basic amino acid residues at positions 2 and 104 in hCG-beta participate, either directly or indirectly, in receptor binding.
Results from this retrospective study provide information that may be used for pricing strategy and resource allocation by the administrative board of MDU.
Extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma is a rare tumor and has to be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of small cell tumors of soft tissue. We present here an unusual case involving the right arm, without bony or skin involvement and treated successfully with radiotherapy and chemotherapy
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