Heat waves that trigger severe droughts are predicted to increase globally; however, we lack an understanding of how trees respond to the combined change of extreme temperatures and water availability. Here, we studied the impacts of two consecutive heat waves as well as post-stress recovery in young Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco (Douglas-fir) and Robinia pseudoacacia L. (black locust) growing under controlled conditions. Responses were compared under water supply close to the long-term average and under reduced irrigation to represent drought. Exposure to high temperatures (+10 °C above ambient) and vapour pressure deficit strongly affected the trees in terms of water relations, photosynthesis and growth. Douglas-fir used water resources conservatively, and transpiration decreased in response to mild soil water limitation. In black locust, heat stress led to pronounced tree water deficits (stem diameter shrinkage), accompanied by leaf shedding to alleviate stress on the hydraulic system. The importance of water availability during the heat waves became further apparent by a concurrent decline in photosynthesis and stomatal conductance with increasing leaf temperatures in both species, reaching the lowest rates in the heat-drought treatments. Stress severity determined both the speed and the amount of recovery. Upon release of stress, photosynthesis recovered rapidly in drought-treated black locust, while it remained below control rates in heat (t = -2.4, P < 0.05) and heat-drought stressed trees (t = 2.96, P < 0.05). In Douglas-fir, photosynthesis recovered quickly, while water-use efficiency increased in heat-drought trees because stomatal conductance remained reduced (t = -2.92, P < 0.05). Moreover, Douglas-fir was able to compensate for stem-growth reductions following heat (-40%) and heat-drought stress (-68%), but most likely at the expense of storage and other growth processes. Our results highlight the importance of studying heat waves alongside changes in water availability. They further suggest that we should look beyond the actual stress event to identify lagged effects and acclimation processes that may determine tree resilience in the long term.
Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is becoming much more genetically complex than was initially considered. Thus, the role of HAE genetics is expanding beyond research laboratories and the genotyping of subjects suffering from HAE has become diagnostically indispensable in clinical practice. The synthesis and interpretation of the clinical and biochemical analyses to facilitate appropriate genetic test selection has thus also become significantly more complex. With this in mind, an international multidisciplinary group of 13 experts in HAE genetics and disease management was convened in October 2018. The objective was to develop clear, actionable, evidence-and consensus-based statements aiming to facilitate the communication between physicians treating HAE patients and clinical geneticists, and thus promote the effective use of genetics in the management of the disease. Eleven consensus statements were generated, encompassing considerations regarding the clinical indications for genotyping angioedema patients, the methods of detection of HAE causative variants, the variant pathogenicity curation, the genotyping of HAE patients in the clinic, and genetic counseling. These statements are intended both to guide clinicians and to serve as a framework for future educational and further genetic testing developments as the field continues to evolve rapidly.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most frequent visceral neoplasms worldwide. Using RT-PCR, ELISA, microdissection and immunohistochemistry, we investigated the expression profiles of CCL19, CCL20, CCL21 and CXCL12 and their receptors in tumourous and tumour neighbouring tissues from patients with HCC and in nonmalignant liver lesions, respectively. All chemokines were found to be expressed in normal liver and HCC tissues, yet CCL20 was the only chemokine showing significant upregulation in HCC tissues. Clinicopathological analysis revealed a distinct increase in CCL20 expression rates in HCC tissues of grade III tumours in comparison to HCC tissues from grade II tumours. On mRNA level, only chemokine receptor CCR6 revealed significant upregulation in HCC tissues. However, immunohistochemical studies indicated a marked CCR6 expression accumulated in a streak of normal cells along the tumour invasion front in all our HCC specimens which could provide a stimulative signal for the tumour to further expand. The present findings show significant overexpression of CCL20 in the tumour tissues and marked overexpression of the corresponding receptor CCR6 in the tumour invasion front of HCC patients in comparison to normal liver. Moreover, CCL20 expression was found to correlate with tumour grade and therefore, we suggest that the CCL20/CCR6 system may be involved in hepatocarcinogenesis.
(2011). Evaluation of a gas sensor array and pattern recognition for the identification of bladder cancer from urine headspace. Analyst, 136 (2) Previous studies have indicated that volatile compounds specific to bladder cancer may exist in urine headspace, raising the possibility that headspace analysis could be used for diagnosis of this particular cancer. In this paper, we evaluate the use of a commercially available gas sensor array coupled with a specifically designed pattern recognition algorithm for this purpose. The 10 best diagnostic performance that we were able to obtain with independent test data provided by healthy volunteers and bladder cancer patients was 70% overall accuracy (70% sensitivity and 70% specificity). When the data of patients suffering from other non-cancerous urological diseases were added to those of the healthy controls, the classification accuracy fell to 65% with 60% sensitivity and 67% specificity. While this is not sufficient for a diagnostic test, it is significantly better than random chance, leading us to conclude that there is useful information in the urine headspace but that a more informative analytical technique, 15 such as mass spectrometry, is required if this is to be exploited fully.
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