Patients with peripheral nerve injuries, especially severe injury, often face poor nerve regeneration and incompletely functional recovery, even after surgical nerve repair. Current researches have extensively focused on the new approaches for the treatment of peripheral nerve injuries. This review summarizes treatments of peripheral nerve injures, from conventional suturing method, to conduit coaptation with stem cell and growth factor, and review the developments of research and clinical application of these therapies.
Oxygen vacancies (OVs) play a crucial role in the catalytic activity of metal-based catalysts; however, their activation mechanism toward peroxydisulfate (PDS) still lacks reasonable explanation. In this study, by taking bismuth bromide (BiOBr) as an example, we report an OV-mediated PDS activation process for degradation of bisphenol A (BPA) employing singlet oxygen (1O2) as the main reactive species under alkaline conditions. The experimental results show that the removal efficiency of BPA is proportional to the number of OVs and is highly related to the dosage of PDS and the catalyst. The surface OVs of BiOBr provide ideal sites for the inclusion of hydroxyl ions (HO–) to form BiIII–OH species, which are regarded as the major active sites for the adsorption and activation of PDS. Unexpectedly, the activation of PDS occurs through a nonradical mechanism mediated by 1O2, which is generated via multistep reactions, involving the formation of an intermediate superoxide radical (O2 •–) and the redox cycle of Bi(III)/Bi(IV). This work is dedicated to the in-depth mechanism study into PDS activation over OV-rich BiOBr samples and provides a novel perspective for the activation of peroxides by defective materials in the absence of additional energy supply or aqueous transition metal ions.
Autism is a highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorder, and known genetic variants, mostly rare, account only for a small proportion of cases. Here we report a genome-wide association study on autism using two Chinese cohorts as gene discovery (n=2150) and three data sets of European ancestry populations for replication analysis of top association signals. Meta-analysis identified three single-nucleotide polymorphisms, rs936938 (P=4.49 × 10(-8)), non-synonymous rs6537835 (P=3.26 × 10(-8)) and rs1877455 (P=8.70 × 10(-8)), and related haplotypes, AMPD1-NRAS-CSDE1, TRIM33 and TRIM33-BCAS2, associated with autism; all were mapped to a previously reported linkage region (1p13.2) with autism. These genetic associations were further supported by a cis-acting regulatory effect on the gene expressions of CSDE1, NRAS and TRIM33 and by differential expression of CSDE1 and TRIM33 in the human prefrontal cortex of post-mortem brains between subjects with and those without autism. Our study suggests TRIM33 and NRAS-CSDE1 as candidate genes for autism, and may provide a novel insight into the etiology of autism.
BackgroundHigh myopia, with the characteristic feature of refractive error, is one of the leading causes of blindness worldwide. It has a high heritability, but only a few causative genes have been identified and the pathogenesis is still unclear.MethodsWe used whole genome linkage and exome sequencing to identify the causative mutation in a non-syndromic high myopia family. Direct Sanger sequencing was used to screen the candidate gene in additional sporadic cases or probands. Immunofluorescence was used to evaluate the expression pattern of the candidate gene in the whole process of eye development. Real-time quantitative PCR and immunoblot was used to investigate the functional consequence of the disease-associated mutations.ResultsWe identified a nonsense mutation (c.141C>G:p.Y47*) in SLC39A5 co-segregating with the phenotype in a non-syndromic severe high myopia family. The same nonsense mutation (c.141C>G:p.Y47*) was detected in a sporadic case and a missense mutation (c.911T>C:p.M304T) was identified and co-segregated in another family by screening additional cases. Both disease-associated mutations were not found in 1276 control individuals. SLC39A5 was abundantly expressed in the sclera and retina across different stages of eye development. Furthermore, we found that wild-type, but not disease-associated SLC39A5 inhibited the expression of Smadl, a key phosphate protein in the downstream of the BMP/TGF-β (bone morphogenic protein/transforming growth factor-β) pathway.ConclusionsOur study reveals that loss-of-function mutations of SLC39A5 are associated with the autosome dominant non-syndromic high myopia, and interference with the BMP/TGF-β pathway may be one of the molecular mechanisms for high myopia.
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