Cytosolic valosin-containing protein (p97(VCP)) is translocated to the ER membrane by binding to selenoprotein S (SelS), which is an ER membrane protein, during endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD). Selenoprotein K (SelK) is another known p97(VCP)-binding selenoprotein, and the expression of both SelS and SelK is increased under ER stress. To understand the regulatory mechanisms of SelS, SelK, and p97(VCP) during ERAD, the interaction of the selenoproteins with p97(VCP) was investigated using N2a cells and HEK293
cells. Both SelS and SelK co-precipitated with p97(VCP). However, the association between SelS and SelK did not occur in the absence of p97(VCP). SelS had the ability to recruit p97(VCP) to the ER membrane but SelK did not. The interaction betweenSelK and p97(VCP) did not occur in SelS knockdown cells, whereas SelS interacted with p97(VCP) in the presence or absence of SelK. These results suggest that p97(VCP) is first translocated to the ER membrane via its interaction with SelS, and then SelK associates with the complex on the ER membrane. Therefore, the interaction between SelK and p97(VCP) is SelSdependent, and the resulting ERAD complex (SelS-p97(VCP)-SelK) plays an important role in ERAD and ER stress.
Many body regions are prone to injury in the elite judo population. Women, especially those in the heavyweight classification, were more prone to severe injuries. Lightweights experienced more injuries than heavyweights among male athletes. Specifically, further studies are needed to confirm these findings and to address the impact of rapid weight loss practices on injury risk to implement effective preventive measures.
In elite South Korean taekwondo athletes, most injuries occur in the lower extremities and were graded as minor. Injury severity depended on weight class.
This study examined the relationship between the western North Pacific monsoon (WNPM) and the tropical cyclone (TC) activity over western North Pacific during the summer (June to August) in a period from 1977 to 2013. According to the western North Pacific monsoon index (WNPMI), 10 years with high indices (referred to as the positive WNPMI phase) and 10 years with low indices (referred to as the negative WNPMI phase) were chosen. TCs frequently formed in the southeast quadrant of the subtropical western North Pacific in the positive WNPMI phase, and in the northwest quadrant in the negative phase. With respect to the TC track, TCs tended to move northward from the distant sea off the east coast of the Philippines towards Korea and Japan past the East China Sea in the positive WNPMI phase, whereas the characteristic pattern of the negative phase was the TC movement from the Philippines to southern China and the Indochinese peninsula over the South China Sea. As for the TC intensity, the TCs were stronger in the positive WNPMI phase than in the negative WNPMI phase. The anomalous cyclonic circulations in the south of the 30 ∘ N signified strong convection, causing the high TC genesis frequency in the positive WNPMI phase. In addition, the East China Sea, Korea and Japan were shown to be influenced by the anomalous southeasterly, which contributed as the anomalous steering flows and was favourable for the TCs to move into these regions in the positive WNPMI phase. Meanwhile, the positive anomaly of 600 hPa relative humidity and sea surface temperature as well as the negative anomaly of vertical wind shear presented in most regions of the subtropical western North Pacific, creating an environment that facilitated the generation of TCs in the positive WNPMI phase.
ObjectivesTo report injury patterns associated with the training activities of elite male and female South Korean wrestling athletes preparing for the Olympic Games.MethodsFrom 2008 to 2017, we prospectively collected data on elite wrestling athletes at the Korea National Training Center. Athletes were assessed by two sports medicine doctors, and data were stratified according to sex, wrestling style, weight class, injury location and injury severity. Χ2tests were used to compare groups. Injury risk was expressed in relative ratios with 95% confidence intervals (RR, 95% CI).ResultsThere were 238 male and 75 female elite wrestlers. Training time totalled 382 800 hours. We recorded 1779 injuries in 313 athletes aged >18 years (annual average, 4.04 injuries/athlete); 59% of these were mild injuries. When all athletes were considered, most injuries occurred in the lower extremities (37.5%), followed by the upper extremities (27.4%), trunk (25.4%) and the head and neck area (9.7%). Weight class significantly influenced injury severity for both wrestling styles among male athletes (Greco-Roman, P=0.031; freestyle, P=0.028), as well as among female freestyle wrestling athletes (P=0.013). The relative ratio of injury incidence for the lightweight class compared with the heavyweight class was high for Greco-Roman style compared with freestyle (RR 1.13, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.27; P=0.011).ConclusionsAmong male and female South Korean elite wrestling athletes training for the Olympic Games, most injuries were mild and occurred in the lower extremities. Weight class influenced injury severity in both wrestling styles, and lightweight athletes had higher injury rates.
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