Obesity and associated chronic inflammation were shown to facilitate breast cancer (BC) growth and metastasis. Leptin, adiponectin, estrogen, and several pro-inflammatory cytokines are involved in the development of obesity-driven BC through the activation of multiple oncogenic and pro-inflammatory pathways. The aim of this study was to assess the reported mechanisms of obesity-induced breast carcinogenesis and effectiveness of conventional and complementary BC therapies. We screened published original articles, reviews, and meta-analyses that addressed the involvement of obesity-related signaling mechanisms in BC development, BC treatment/prevention approaches, and posttreatment complications. PubMed, Medline, eMedicine, National Library of Medicine (NLM), and ReleMed databases were used to retrieve relevant studies using a set of keywords, including “obesity,” “oncogenic signaling pathways,” “inflammation,” “surgery,” “radiotherapy,” “conventional therapies,” and “diet.” Multiple studies indicated that effective BC treatment requires the involvement of diet- and exercise-based approaches in obese postmenopausal women. Furthermore, active lifestyle and diet-related interventions improved the patients’ overall quality of life and minimized adverse side effects after traditional BC treatment, including postsurgical lymphedema, post-chemo nausea, vomiting, and fatigue. Further investigation of beneficial effects of diet and physical activity may help improve obesity-linked cancer therapies.
Objective: To investigate the differential expression of microRNA (miRNA) in patients with endometrial cancer and its relationship with prognosis and survival. Method: We used The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database to analyze differentially expressed miRNAs in endometrial cancer tissues and adjacent normal tissues. In addition, we successfully screened out key microRNAs to build nomogram models for predicting prognosis and we performed survival analysis on the key miRNAs as well. Result: We identified 187 differentially expressed miRNAs, which includes 134 up-regulated miRNAs and 53 down-regulated miRNAs. Further univariate Cox regression analysis screened out 47 significantly differentially expressed miRNAs and selected 12 miRNAs from which the prognostic nomogram model for ECA patients by LASSO analysis was constructed. Survival analysis showed that high expression of hsa-mir-138-2, hsa-mir-548f-1, hsa-mir-934, hsa-mir-940, and hsa-mir-4758 as well as low-expression of hsa-mir-146a, hsa-mir-3170, hsa-mir-3614, hsa-mir-3616, and hsa-mir-4687 are associated with poor prognosis in EC patients. However, significant correlations between the expressions levels of has-mir-876 and hsa-mir-1269a and patients’ prognosis are not found. Conclusion: Our study found that 12 significantly differentially expressed miRNAs might promote the proliferation, invasion, and metastasis of cancer cells by regulating the expression of upstream target genes, thereby affecting the prognosis of patients with endometrial cancer.
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is a global healthcare crisis. The TgF344-AD rat is an AD model exhibiting age-dependent AD pathological hallmarks. We confirmed that AD rats developed cognitive deficits at 6 months without alteration of any other major biophysical parameters. We longitudinally characterized cerebral hemodynamics in AD rats at 3, 4, 6, and 14 months. The myogenic responses of the cerebral arteries and arterioles were impaired at 4 months of age in the AD rats. Consistent with the ex vivo results, the AD rat exhibited poor autoregulation of surface and deep cortical cerebral blood flow two months preceding cognitive decline. The dysfunction of cerebral hemodynamics in AD is exacerbated with age associated with reduced cerebral perfusion. Further, abolished cell contractility contributes to cerebral hemodynamics imbalance in AD. This may be attributed to enhanced ROS production, reduced mitochondrial respiration and ATP production, and disrupted actin cytoskeleton in cerebral vascular contractile cells.
Photocatalytic nonoxidative coupling of CH4 to C2H4 with a high rate and selectivity is considered challenging and impractical due to complex chemical pathways and unfavorable thermodynamics. This work introduces a strategy of tandem photocatalysis based on Au and Pd nanoparticles codeposited on a Bi2NbO5F photocatalyst, which divides the CH4 to C2H4 reaction into two distinct steps carried out in tandem by multiple activity components, i.e., CH4 coupling to C2H6 on Au and C2H6 dehydrogenation on Pd. As a result, the optimized Au–Pd/Bi2NbO5F shows CH4 coupling to C2H4 with a high yield of 22.6 μmol g–1 h–1 and selectivity of 63% under simulated solar light irradiation. The reaction pathway is investigated by a series of activity experiments and in situ characterizations, demonstrating separate steps on Au and Pd. This work proposes a general strategy for the future design of photocatalysts to drive complex reactions efficiently and selectively based on the concept of a tandem system.
Although the causes of cognitive impairment are multifactorial, emerging evidence indicates that cerebrovascular dysfunction plays an essential role in dementia. One of the most critical aspects of cerebrovascular dysfunction is autoregulation of cerebral blood flow (CBF), mainly mediated by the myogenic response, which is often impaired in dementia individuals with comorbidities, such as diabetes and hypertension. However, many unsolved questions remain. How do cerebrovascular networks coordinately modulate CBF autoregulation in health and disease? Does poor CBF autoregulation have an impact on cognitive impairment, and what are the underlying mechanisms? This review summarizes the cerebral vascular structure and myogenic (a three-phase model), metabolic (O2, CO2, adenosine, and H+), and endothelial (shear stress) factors in the regulation of CBF; and the consequences of CBF dysautoregulation. Other factors contributing to cerebrovascular dysfunction, such as impaired functional hyperemia and capillary abnormalities, are included as well. Moreover, this review highlights recent studies from our lab in terms of novel mechanisms involved in CBF autoregulation and addresses a hypothesis that there is a three-line of defense for CBF autoregulation in the cerebral vasculature.
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