scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

ICM Partners

About: ICM Partners is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Breast cancer. The organization has 1311 authors who have published 1521 publications receiving 33745 citations. The organization is also known as: International Creative Management Partners.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Esses resultados confirmam that as caivas representam uma importante reserva de especies de arvore nativas, mesmo sendo manejadas ha longo tempo.
Abstract: Caivas sao remanescentes de Floresta Ombrofila Mista, com diferentes densidades arboreas, cujo estrato herbaceo e formado por pastagens nativas ou naturalizadas utilizadas para pastejo animal. Este trabalho avaliou a composicao floristica e a estrutura arborea de cinco caivas bem estabelecidas. Foram utilizadas parcelas de um hectare em cada caiva, onde foram medidos e identificados todos os individuos com DAP ≥ 5 cm e calculados os parâmetros fitossociologicos de densidade, frequencia, dominância e valor de importância. Verificou-se a ocorrencia de 24 familias e 52 especies. As familias com maior numero de especies foram Lauraceae, Myrtaceae, Aquifoliaceae e Sapindaceae; e as familias com maior numero de individuos foram Myrtaceae, Araucariaceae, Aquifoliaceae e Lauraceae. O indice de diversidade de Shannon indicou grande diversidade floristica. O indice de Sorensen indicou alta similaridade entre as cinco caivas. As especies que contribuiram para os maiores valores de importância foram: Araucaria angustifolia , Myrcia sp., Ocotea porosa , Cinnamodendron dinisii e Ilex paraguariensis . Esses resultados confirmam que as caivas representam uma importante reserva de especies de arvore nativas, mesmo sendo manejadas ha longo tempo. doi: 10.4336/2010.pfb.30.64.303

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Jan 2013-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: This study provides a novel method to produce functional pancreatic exocrine cells from ESC by direct differentiation of mouse ESC into pancreatic acinar cells, suggesting a selective activation of the acinar differentiation program.
Abstract: Pluripotent embryonic stem cells (ESC) are a promising cellular system for generating an unlimited source of tissue for the treatment of chronic diseases and valuable in vitro differentiation models for drug testing. Our aim was to direct differentiation of mouse ESC into pancreatic acinar cells, which play key roles in pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer. To that end, ESC were first differentiated as embryoid bodies and sequentially incubated with activin A, inhibitors of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) pathways, fibroblast growth factors (FGF) and retinoic acid (RA) in order to achieve a stepwise increase in the expression of mRNA transcripts encoding for endodermal and pancreatic progenitor markers. Subsequent plating in Matrigel® and concomitant modulation of FGF, glucocorticoid, and folllistatin signalling pathways involved in exocrine differentiation resulted in a significant increase of mRNAs encoding secretory enzymes and in the number of cells co-expressing their protein products. Also, pancreatic endocrine marker expression was down-regulated and accompanied by a significant reduction in the number of hormone-expressing cells with a limited presence of hepatic marker expressing-cells. These findings suggest a selective activation of the acinar differentiation program. The newly differentiated cells were able to release α-amylase and this feature was greatly improved by lentiviral-mediated expression of Rbpjl and Ptf1a, two transcription factors involved in the maximal production of digestive enzymes. This study provides a novel method to produce functional pancreatic exocrine cells from ESC.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For multiple lesions, RANC seems to be the best compromise, due to the ability to deliver a good conformity and homogeneity plan while sparing healthy brain tissue, and for a single lesion close to organs at risk, RAT is the most appropriate technique.
Abstract: The aim was to analyze arc therapy techniques according to the number and position of the brain lesions reported by comparing dynamic noncoplanar conformal arcs (DCA), two coplanar full arcs (RAC) with volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT), multiple noncoplanar partial arcs with VMAT (RANC), and two full arcs with VMAT and 10° table rotation (RAT). Patients with a single lesion (n= 10), multiple lesions (n = 10) or a single lesion close to organs at risk (n = 5) and previously treated with DCA were selected. For each patient, the DCA treatment was replanned with all VMAT techniques. All DCA plans were compared with VMAT plans and evaluated in regard to the different quality indices and dosimetric parameters. For single lesion, homogeneity index (HI) better results were found for the RANC technique (0.17 ± 0.05) compared with DCA procedure (0.27± 0.05). Concerning conformity index (CI), the RAT technique gave higher and better values (0.85 ± 0.04) compared with those obtained with the DCA technique (0.77 ± 0.05). DCA improved healthy brain protection (8.35 ± 5.61 cc vs. 10.52 ± 6.40 cc for RANC) and reduced monitor unit numbers (3046 ± 374 MU vs. 4651 ± 736 for RANC), even if global room occupation was higher. For multiple lesions, VMAT techniques provided better HI (0.16) than DCA (0.24 ± 0.07). The CI was improved with RAT (0.8 ± 0.08 for RAT vs. 0.71 ± 0.08 for DCA). The V10Gy healthy brain was better protected with DCA (9.27 ± 4.57 cc). Regarding the MU numbers: RANC < RAT< RAC < DCA. For a single lesion close to OAR, RAT achieved high degrees of homogeneity (0.27 ± 0.03 vs. 0.53 ± 0.2 for DCA) and conformity (0.72± 0.06vs. 0.56 ± 0.13 for DCA) while sparing organs at risk (Dmax = 12.36 ± 1.05Gyvs. 14.12 ± 0.59 Gy for DCA, and Dmean = 3.96 ± 3.57Gyvs. 4.72 ± 3.28Gy for DCA). On the other hand, MU numbers were lower with DCA (2254 ± 190 MUvs. 3438 ± 457 MU for RANC) even if overall time was inferior with RAC. For a single lesion, DCA provide better plan considering low doses to healthy brain even if quality indexes are better for the others techniques. For multiple lesions, RANC seems to be the best compromise, due to the ability to deliver a good conformity and homogeneity plan while sparing healthy brain tissue. For a single lesion close to organs at risk, RAT is the most appropriate technique.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2019-Traffic
TL;DR: Exosome secretion can be considered as a cell process that participates in and reflects cell homeostasis, and care must be taken when studying potential extracellular function of exosomes due to the possible copurification of proteasome 20S CP.
Abstract: The aim of our study was to investigate the impact of macroautophagy on exosome secretion. Exosomes are small membrane vesicles released in the extracellular space upon fusion of multivesicular endosomes with the plasma membrane. They were initially discovered as a way to remodel the reticulocyte plasma membrane before entering the blood circulation (Current Opinion in Hematology 2010, 17:177-183) and are now essentially studied as mediators of intercellular communication. Using iTRAQ proteomics, we compared the protein composition of purified exosomes secreted by cells impaired or not for macroautophagy by Atg5 depletion, during serum starvation conditions or complete medium culture. We show that the absence of serum modifies exosomal content, especially inducing secretion of two cytoplasmic protein complexes, namely proteasomal 19S regulatory particle (RP) and components of noncanonical translation preinitiation complex (PIC). This process is enhanced when autophagy is impaired by Atg5 depletion. Moreover, we show that the proteasome 20S core particle (CP) is released in the extracellular space. However, in striking contrast to what seen for its 19S RP regulator, release is independent of the exosomal vesicles, Atg5 expression and cell culture conditions. Exosome secretion can thus be considered as a cell process that participates in and reflects cell homeostasis, and care must be taken when studying potential extracellular function of exosomes due to the possible copurification of proteasome 20S CP.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results reveal that baseline hepatic transcriptome is reflective of subsequent glucocorticoid non-response and indicate impaired regenerative potential of the liver as an underlying phenomenon in NR.
Abstract: Patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis (SAH) not responding to glucocorticoid therapy have higher mortality, though they do not differ in their baseline clinical characteristics and prognostic scores from those who respond to therapy. We hypothesized that the baseline hepatic gene expression differs between responders (R) and non-responders (NR). Baseline liver transcriptome was compared between R and NR in Indian (16 each) and French (5 NR, 3 R) patients with SAH. There were differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between NR and R, in Indian (1106 over-expressed, 96 under-expressed genes) and French patients (65 over-expressed, 142 under-expressed genes). Indian NR had features of hepatocyte senescence and French NR exhibited under-expression of genes involved in cell division, indicating a central defect in the capacity of hepatocytes for self-renewal in both populations. Markers of hepatic progenitor cell proliferation were either very few (Indian patients) or absent (French patients). No DEGs were enriched in inflammatory pathways and there were no differences in nuclear receptor subfamily 3 group C member 1 (NR3C1) transcript expression and splicing between NR and R. Our results reveal that baseline hepatic transcriptome is reflective of subsequent glucocorticoid non-response and indicate impaired regenerative potential of the liver as an underlying phenomenon in NR.

18 citations


Authors

Showing all 1311 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alexis Brice13587083466
Bruno Dubois12464678784
Harald Hampel10960165160
Alexandra Durr10459447018
Laurent D. Cohen9441742709
Jürgen Eckert92136842119
Stéphane Lehéricy8933227214
Antoine Danchin8048330219
Marie Vidailhet7939121836
Josep M. Gasol7731322638
Mélanie Boly7623221552
Etienne C. Hirsch7521822591
Måns Ehrenberg7423417637
Elizabeth M. C. Fisher7429821150
Isabelle Arnulf7333118456
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
174.2K papers, 8.3M citations

88% related

University of Paris
174.1K papers, 5M citations

87% related

Université libre de Bruxelles
56.9K papers, 2M citations

85% related

University of Turin
77.9K papers, 2.4M citations

84% related

University of Münster
69K papers, 2.2M citations

84% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20223
2021141
2020171
2019167
2018160
2017172