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Institution

Kettering University

EducationFlint, Michigan, United States
About: Kettering University is a education organization based out in Flint, Michigan, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cancer & RNA. The organization has 6842 authors who have published 7689 publications receiving 337503 citations. The organization is also known as: GMI Engineering & Management Institute & General Motors Institute.
Topics: Cancer, RNA, Antigen, DNA, Population


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Flow cytometric analysis of both heat-stressed and non-heat-Stressed nuclei showed a relationship between dosage and the coefficient of variation of alpha t [red/(red + green fluorescence)] measurements of AO stained nuclei, thereby demonstrating that alterations of chromatin structure occurred in response to ENU.
Abstract: The effects of the mutagenic agent ethylnitrosourea (ENU) on spermatogenic function and sperm chromatin structure were studied by flow cytometry and the results compared with sperm head morphology measurements. Groups of mice received daily exposures ranging from 0 to 75 mg/kg body weight X 5 days and were sacrificed 28 days later. Fresh testicular cell suspensions and epididymal sperm were stained with acridine orange (AO) and measured by flow cytometry. Sperm nuclei were isolated, fixed, rehydrated, and then either subjected to thermal stress or not prior to staining with AO. Body weights were unaffected by the chemical exposure while the testicular weights were reduced by about 50%. Two-parameter (DNA, RNA) flow cytometry measurements showed a dose-response relationship in the loss of certain cell types, particularly the elongated spermatids, from the testes of treated animals. Flow cytometric analysis of both heat-stressed and non-heat-stressed nuclei showed a relationship between dosage and the coefficient of variation of alpha t [red/(red + green fluorescence)] measurements of AO stained nuclei, thereby demonstrating that alterations of chromatin structure occurred in response to ENU. Enzymatic digestions with RNAse, DNAse, and nuclease S1 suggest that the increase in red fluorescence is due to an increase of single-stranded DNA induced by heat or acid treatment of chemically altered chromatin structure. The lowest daily dosage used (5 mg/kg) caused no significant changes in ratios of testicular cell types, a questionable increase in abnormal sperm head morphology and a detectable change in chromatin structure expressed as alpha t. This report shows that our technique for assaying sperm nuclear chromatin structure appears to have the same level of sensitivity to ENU induced nuclear alterations as the sperm head morphology test.

145 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Apr 2015-Cancer
TL;DR: Evaluation of RAS and PIK3CA mutations in metastatic colorectal cancer found to be associated with worse survival and cumulative incidence of metastasis to potentially curable sites of liver and lung and other sites such as bone and brain.
Abstract: BACKGROUND RAS and PIK3CA mutations in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) have been associated with worse survival. We sought to evaluate the impact of RAS and PIK3CA mutations on cumulative incidence of metastasis to potentially curable sites of liver and lung and other sites such as bone and brain. METHODS We performed a computerized search of the electronic medical record of our institution for mCRC cases genotyped for RAS or PIK3CA mutations from 2008 to 2012. Cases were reviewed for patient characteristics, survival, and site-specific metastasis. RESULTS Among the 918 patients identified, 477 cases were RAS wild type, and 441 cases had a RAS mutation (394 at KRAS exon 2, 29 at KRAS exon 3 or 4, and 18 in NRAS). RAS mutation was significantly associated with shorter median overall survival (OS) and on multivariate analysis independently predicted worse OS (HR, 1.6; P < .01). RAS mutant mCRC exhibited a significantly higher cumulative incidence of lung, bone, and brain metastasis and on multivariate analysis was an independent predictor of involvement of these sites (HR, 1.5, 1.6, and 3.7, respectively). PIK3CA mutations occurred in 10% of the 786 cases genotyped, did not predict for worse survival, and did not exhibit a site-specific pattern of metastatic spread. CONCLUSIONS The metastatic potential of CRC varies with the presence of RAS mutation. RAS mutation is associated with worse OS and increased incidence of lung, bone, and brain metastasis. An understanding of this site-specific pattern of spread may help to inform physicians' assessment of symptoms in patients with mCRC. Cancer 2015;121:1195–1203. © 2014 American Cancer Society.

145 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Rab23 acts upstream of Gli transcription factors in patterning neural cell types in the spinal cord and appears to regulate subcellular localization of essential components of the Hedgehog pathway that act downstream of Smoothened and upstream ofGli proteins.

144 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Mar 2005-Nature
TL;DR: Non-invasive lineage tracing shows that even when the first cleavage occurs along the short axis imposed by this experimental treatment, the progeny of the resulting two-cell blastomeres tend to populate the respective embryonic and abembryonic parts of the blastocyst, contributing to breaking the symmetry of the embryo.
Abstract: One of the unanswered questions in mammalian development is how the embryonic-abembryonic axis of the blastocyst is first established. It is possible that the first cleavage division contributes to this process, because in most mouse embryos the progeny of one two-cell blastomere primarily populate the embryonic part of the blastocyst and the progeny of its sister populate the abembryonic part. However, it is not known whether the embryonic-abembryonic axis is set up by the first cleavage itself, by polarity in the oocyte that then sets the first cleavage plane with respect to the animal pole, or indeed whether it can be divorced entirely from the first cleavage and established in relation to the animal pole. Here we test the importance of the orientation of the first cleavage by imposing an elongated shape on the zygote so that the division no longer passes close to the animal pole, marked by the second polar body. Non-invasive lineage tracing shows that even when the first cleavage occurs along the short axis imposed by this experimental treatment, the progeny of the resulting two-cell blastomeres tend to populate the respective embryonic and abembryonic parts of the blastocyst. Thus, the first cleavage contributes to breaking the symmetry of the embryo, generating blastomeres with different developmental characteristics.

144 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that PLZF expression is not restricted to NK T cells but is also expressed by a subset of γδ T cells, functionally defining distinct subsets of this innate T cell population.
Abstract: The broad-complex tramtrack and bric a brac-zinc finger transcriptional regulator(BTB-ZF), promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger (PLZF), was recently shown to control the development of the characteristic innate T cell phenotype and effector functions of NK T cells. Interestingly, the ectopic expression of PLZF was shown to push conventional T cells into an activated state that seems to be proinflammatory. The factors that control the normal expression of PLZF in lymphocytes are unknown. In this study, we show that PLZF expression is not restricted to NK T cells but is also expressed by a subset of γδ T cells, functionally defining distinct subsets of this innate T cell population. A second BTB-ZF gene, ThPOK, is important for the phenotype of the PLZF-expressing γδ T cells. Most importantly, TCR signal strength and expression of inhibitor of differentiation gene 3 control the frequency of PLZF-expressing γδ T cells. This study defines the factors that control the propensity of the immune system to produce potentially disease-causing T cell subsets.

144 citations


Authors

Showing all 6853 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Joan Massagué189408149951
Chris Sander178713233287
Timothy A. Springer167669122421
Murray F. Brennan16192597087
Charles M. Rice15456183812
Lloyd J. Old152775101377
Howard I. Scher151944101737
Paul Tempst14830989225
Pier Paolo Pandolfi14652988334
Barton F. Haynes14491179014
Jedd D. Wolchok140713123336
James P. Allison13748383336
Harold E. Varmus13749676320
Scott W. Lowe13439689376
David S. Klimstra13356461682
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20238
202216
2021211
2020234
2019204
2018225