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Blumberg BS, Faithorn L. Lessons learned from the NASA Astrobiology Institute. In: Salmons J, Wilson L, editors. Handbook of research on electronic collaboration and organizational synergy. Hershey: Information Science Reference; 2009. p. 741-56.
"This book presents a collection of empirical work that examines techniques, strategies and effects of electronic collaboration across disciplines and sectors"--Provided by publisher.
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Block TM, Mehta AS, Blumberg BS, Dwek RA. Does rapid oligomerization of hepatitis B envelope proteins play a role in resistance to proteasome degradation and enhance chronicity?. DNA Cell Biol. 2006 Mar;25(3):165-70.
This review discusses the nature of hepatitis B and C chronicity from a virological perspective. Work described in the literature and our in vitro studies of HBV polypeptide morphogenesis lead us to speculate about a role for HBsAg complex formation in immune evasion that may be especially important during the initial period of infection. Briefly, although viral structural proteins do eventually provide epitopes recognized by the host, we suggest that these HBs Ag complexes, which may themselves be refractory to proteasomal degradation, are an important way by which the virus shields its epitopes and evades early recognition by the cellular immune system. This suggests a central strategy by which the virus has evolved, structurally, to enable the establishment of persistent infection of its host. The concept offers an explanation for the nearly unidirectional and rapid kinetics whereby HBV proteins form multimers and generate a surplus of viral structures that have not been ! thought to serve any useful structural purpose.
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Blumberg BS. The curiosities of hepatitis B virus: Prevention, sex ratio, and demography. Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society. 2006;3(1):14-20.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a deadly pathogenic agent with complex and subtle interactions with its host that are not pathol. The host responses to HBV infection are largely affected by a series of polymorphic alleles at several loci on the human genome, and these loci are also related to other infections. HBV affects the sex ratio in populations, both at birth and later in life. The effects of these dynamic systems on the demog., population biol., and microevolution can be profound. Males infected with HBV are more likely to become carriers of the virus while infected females are more likely to develop anti-HBs. In countries with high HBV prevalence (such as China), the decreased no. of females born, the so-called lost women demog. observation, may due more to the high prevalence of the virus and less to other factors. National vaccination programs targeting HBV have been in place since the early 1980s. These programs have decreased the spread of HBV, particularly in China and East Asia, resulting in a dramatic decline in morbidity from liver disease and saving millions of people from dying. HBV vaccination appears to prevent primary cancer of the liver, and is the first widely used preventive cancer vaccine. [on SciFinder (R)]
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Blumberg BS, Arciero CA, Joseph N, Watson JC, Hoffman JP, Mu Z, Hachem P, Pollack A. Cardif: A protein central to innate immunity is inactivated by the HCV NS3 serine protease. Hepatology. 2006 Feb 22
Mar
Feb 20
Dec 1;43(3):615-7.
The curiosities of hepatitis B virus: prevention, sex ratio, and demography
Partial stomach-partitioning gastrojejunostomy for malignant duodenal obstruction
Lung DNA Adducts Detected in Human Smokers Are Unrelated to Typical Polyaromatic Carcinogens
Antisense Bcl-2 sensitizes prostate cancer cells to radiation. PG - 331-40 AB - BACKGROUND: Bcl-2 is anti-apoptotic and overexpression is associated with prostate tumor aggressiveness. We hypothesized that Bcl-2 has a role in prostate cancer radiation (RT) response. The relationship of Bcl-2 expression in four prostate cancer cell lines, and the effect of modulating expression with a Bcl-2 antisense oligonucleotide (G3139, Genasense, oblimersen sodium, Genta Incorporated), to RT was examined. METHODS: The four cell lines studied were LNCaP (wild type-p53), PC3 (p53 null), Bcl-2 stably transfected LNCaP (LNCaP-BST), and Bcl-2 stably transfected PC3 (PC3-BST) cells. Cells were treated with antisense (AS) Bcl-2 alone or with RT (2-6 Gy). Following RT, cells were processed at 3-6 hr for Western blots, 18 hr for Annexin V staining and flow cytometric analysis, 24 hr for caspases 3+7 quantification by fluorometric assay, and immediately for clonogenic survival. RESULTS: AS caused a significant reduction in Bcl-2 expression in all cell lines. P53 expression was elevated following RT treatment in LNCaP and LNCaP-BST cells. P21 was increased by RT treatment in all cell lines. AS caused a significant increase in caspase 3+7 activity over the mismatch (MM) controls in all cell lines. When AS was combined with RT, caspase 3+7 activity was further increased significantly over all other groups in all cell lines. Moreover, AS+RT resulted in significantly reduced clonogenic survival over MM+RT, which was dampened in the Bcl-2 overexpressing lines. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, these data demonstrate for the first time that a Bcl-2 specific AS oligonucleotide sensitizes prostate cancer cells to RT. p53 is not required for this effect.
Antiviral immunity against a pathogen is mounted upon recognition by the host of virally associated structures. One of these viral 'signatures', double-stranded (ds) RNA, is a replication product of most viruses within infected cells and is sensed by Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) and the recently identified cytosolic RNA helicases RIG-I (retinoic acid inducible gene I, also known as Ddx58) and Mda5 (melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5, also known as Ifih1 or Helicard 1.) Both helicases detect dsRNA, and through their protein-interacting CARD domains, relay an undefined signal resulting in the activation of the transcription factors interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) and NF-kappaB. Here we describe Cardif, a new CARD-containing adaptor protein that interacts with RIG-I and recruits IKK-alpha, IKK-beta and IKK-epsilon kinases by means of its C-terminal region, leading to the activation of NF-kappaB and IRF3. Overexpression of Cardif results in interferon-beta and NF-kappaB promoter activation, and knockdown of Cardif by short interfering RNA inhibits RIG-I-dependent antiviral responses. Cardif is targeted and inactivated by NS3-4A, a serine protease from hepatitis C virus known to block interferon-beta production. Cardif thus functions as an adaptor, linking the cytoplasmic dsRNA receptor RIG-I to the initiation of antiviral programmes. AD - Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA. AU - Evans JD AU - Seeger C LA - ENG PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE DEP - 20060222 TA - Hepatology JID - 8302946
BACKGROUND: Standard methods of palliative gastrojejunostomy lead to delayed gastric emptying in up to 67% of patients. Partial stomach-partitioning gastrojejunostomy (PSPG) allows for the preferential passage of ingested material into the jejunum while maintaining endoscopic access to the diseased region and obviating the risk of leakage after antrectomy. METHODS: A retrospective examination of all patients undergoing PSPG from February 1999 through November 2004 was undertaken. Successful palliative bypass was based on the patient's ability to tolerate a regular diet. RESULTS: Thirty-nine patients underwent PSPG during the study period. All patients had locally advanced or metastatic gastrointestinal tract tumors. Sixteen patients presented with obstructive symptoms. The majority of patients (97%) were tolerating a regular diet at their last follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: PSPG is an alternative method of providing palliative bypass and allows for excellent palliation with delayed gastric emptying rates lower than that of standard gastrojejunostomy procedures.
Several studies have reported the presence of DNA adducts derived from benzo(a)pyrene and other polyaromatics by (32)P-postlabeling/TLC by measuring diagonal radioactive zones (DRZs) in lung tissues of human smokers. However, our experimental studies in rodent models, which used modified chromatographic conditions to obtain distinct adduct spots, suggested that cigarette smoke-related lipophilic DNA adducts may not be derived from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) or aromatic amines. In the present study, we have performed similar analysis of human lung tissues to study the chemical nature of DNA adducts. Fifty human lung tissues from cancer patients (ages 42-83 years) with active, ex-, or never-smoking status were analyzed for highly lipophilic DNA adducts by nuclease P1- and n-butanol enrichment-mediated (32)P-postlabeling assay. All DNA samples yielded low to highly intense adduct DRZs when adducts were resolved by PEI-cellulose TLC in standard high-salt, high-urea solvents. Adduct burden ranged from 6.6 to 2930 per 10(10) nucleotides. However, when adducts were resolved in a different solvent system comprising of high-salt, high-urea in direction 3 and dilute ammonium hydroxide in direction 4, which retained adducts derived from PAHs and aromatic amines on the chromatograms, this yielded no detectable adducts from human lung DNAs. Furthermore, analysis of human lung DNAs mixed with reference adducted DNAs in multisolvent systems confirmed an absence of PAH- and aromatic amine-derived adducts in human smoker lung DNA. To determine the origin of cigarette smoke-associated DNA adducts, calf thymus DNA was incubated with formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, which are known to be present in cigarette smoke in significant quantities. Analysis of purified DNAs by (32)P-postlabeling resulted in adduct DRZs in the aldehyde-modified DNAs when adducts were resolved in standard urea-containing solvents, but no adducts were detected when the ammonium hydroxide-based solvent was used, suggesting that even nonpolyaromatic electrophiles can result in adduct DRZs on the chromatograms similar to those from PAH metabolites. Taken together, our data demonstrate that cigarette smoke-associated lung DNA adducts appear on chromatograms as DRZs, consistent with the literature, but they are not related to PAHs and aromatic amines.
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Block TM, Comunale MA, Lowman M, Steel LF, Romano PR, Fimmel C, Tennant BC, London WT, Evans AA, Blumberg BS, Dwek RA, Mattu TS, Mehta AS. Use of targeted glycoproteomics to identify serum glycoproteins that correlate with liver cancer in woodchucks and humans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Jan 18;102(3):779-84.
Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is associated with the majority of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The diagnosis of HCC is usually made in the late stages of the disease, when treatment options are limited and prognosis is poor. We therefore have developed a method of glycoproteomic analysis in an attempt to discover serum markers that can assist in the early detection of HBV-induced liver cancer. Briefly, a comparative method for analysis of oligosaccharides released from serum glycoproteins and for recovery and identification of proteins with aberrant glycosylation, as a function of cancer diagnosis, is described. The model we have used is the woodchuck (Marmota monax), which shares similarities in the glycosylation pattern associated with liver proteins in human HCC. In this report, we show that woodchucks diagnosed with HCC have dramatically higher levels of serum-associated core alpha-1,6-linked fucose, as compared with woodchucks without a diagnosis of H CC. The coupling of this methodology with 2D gel proteomics has permitted the identification of several glycoproteins with altered glycosylation as a function of cancer. One such glycoprotein, Golgi Protein 73 (GP73), was found to be elevated and hyperfucosylated in animals with HCC. Further, the study showed GP73 to be elevated in the serum of people with a diagnosis of HCC, providing a validation of our approach. The potential of this technology for biomarker discovery and the implications of increased levels of GP73 in liver cancer are discussed.
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Szewczyk NJ, Mancinelli RL, McLamb W, Reed D, Blumberg BS, Conley CA. Caenorhabditis elegans survives atmospheric breakup of STS-107, space shuttle Columbia. Astrobiology. 2005 Dec;5(6):690-705.
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a popular organism for biological studies, is being developed as a model system for space biology. The chemically defined liquid medium, C. elegans Maintenance Medium (CeMM), allows axenic cultivation and automation of experiments that are critical for spaceflight research. To validate CeMM for use during spaceflight, we grew animals using CeMM and standard laboratory conditions onboard STS-107, space shuttle Columbia. Tragically, the Columbia was destroyed while reentering the Earth's atmosphere. During the massive recovery effort, hardware that contained our experiment was found. Live animals were observed in four of the five recovered canisters, which had survived on both types of media. These data demonstrate that CeMM is capable of supporting C. elegans during spaceflight. They also demonstrate that animals can survive a relatively unprotected reentry into the Earth's atmosphere, which has implications with regard to the packaging of living material during space flight, planetary protection, and the interplanetary transfer of life.
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