Institution
University of Aberdeen
Education•Aberdeen, United Kingdom•
About: University of Aberdeen is a education organization based out in Aberdeen, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 21174 authors who have published 49962 publications receiving 2105479 citations. The organization is also known as: Aberdeen University.
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: The results demonstrate that the cannabinoid system within the CNS plays a critical role in regulating autoimmune inflammation, with the CNS directly suppressing T-cell effector function via the CB2 receptor.
Abstract: The cannabinoid system is immunomodulatory and has been targeted as a treatment for the central nervous system (CNS) autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis. Using an animal model of multiple sclerosis, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), we investigated the role of the CB1 and CB2 cannabinoid receptors in regulating CNS autoimmunity. We found that CB1 receptor expression by neurons, but not T cells, was required for cannabinoid-mediated EAE suppression. In contrast, CB2 receptor expression by encephalitogenic T cells was critical for controlling inflammation associated with EAE. CB2-deficient T cells in the CNS during EAE exhibited reduced levels of apoptosis, a higher rate of proliferation and increased production of inflammatory cytokines, resulting in severe clinical disease. Together, our results demonstrate that the cannabinoid system within the CNS plays a critical role in regulating autoimmune inflammation, with the CNS directly suppressing T-cell effector function via the CB2 receptor.
331 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that RAC1 is required for expansion of the LGR5 intestinal stem cell (ISC) signature, progenitor hyperproliferation, and transformation, and Mechanistically, Rac1-driven ROS and NF-κB signaling mediate these processes.
331 citations
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TL;DR: Chronic infection with the murine helminth Heligmosomoides polygyrus bakeri altered the intestinal habitat, allowing increased short chain fatty acid (SCFA) production and a similar alteration in the metabolic potential of intestinal bacterial communities was observed with diverse parasitic and host species, suggesting that this represents an evolutionary conserved mechanism of host-microbe-helminth interactions.
331 citations
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TL;DR: This guidance for the management of patients with allergic and non‐allergic rhinitis has been prepared by the Standards of Care Committee of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology (BSACI) and is for use by both adult physicians and paediatricians practicing in allergy.
Abstract: This guidance for the management of patients with allergic and non-allergic rhinitis has been prepared by the Standards of Care Committee (SOCC) of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology (BSACI). The guideline is based on evidence as well as on expert opinion and is for use by both adult physicians and paediatricians practicing in allergy. The recommendations are evidence graded. During the development of these guidelines, all BSACI members were included in the consultation process using a web-based system. Their comments and suggestions were carefully considered by the SOCC. Where evidence was lacking, consensus was reached by the experts on the committee. Included in this guideline are clinical classification of rhinitis, aetiology, diagnosis, investigations and management including subcutaneous and sublingual immunotherapy. There are also special sections for children, co-morbid associations and pregnancy. Finally, we have made recommendations for potential areas of future research.
331 citations
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Harvard University1, Broad Institute2, Brigham and Women's Hospital3, National Institutes of Health4, University of Manchester5, Celera Corporation6, University Health Network7, Karolinska Institutet8, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center9, University of California, San Francisco10, VU University Medical Center11, National Institute for Health Research12, University of Oxford13, University of Aberdeen14, Leiden University15, North Shore-LIJ Health System16, Karolinska University Hospital17, Genome Institute of Singapore18, University of California, Davis19, King's College20, University of Amsterdam21, University of Sheffield22, Hoffmann-La Roche23
TL;DR: To discover new rheumatoid arthritis risk loci, GRAIL used Gene Relationships Across Implicated Loci (GRAIL), a computational method that applies statistical text mining to PubMed abstracts, to score these 179 loci for functional relationships to genes in 16 established RA disease loci.
Abstract: To discover new rheumatoid arthritis (RA) risk loci, we systematically examined 370 SNPs from 179 independent loci with P < 0.001 in a published meta-analysis of RA genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of 3,393 cases and 12,462 controls. We used Gene Relationships Across Implicated Loci (GRAIL), a computational method that applies statistical text mining to PubMed abstracts, to score these 179 loci for functional relationships to genes in 16 established RA disease loci. We identified 22 loci with a significant degree of functional connectivity. We genotyped 22 representative SNPs in an independent set of 7,957 cases and 11,958 matched controls. Three were convincingly validated: CD2-CD58 (rs11586238, P = 1 x 10(-6) replication, P = 1 x 10(-9) overall), CD28 (rs1980422, P = 5 x 10(-6) replication, P = 1 x 10(-9) overall) and PRDM1 (rs548234, P = 1 x 10(-5) replication, P = 2 x 10(-8) overall). An additional four were replicated (P < 0.0023): TAGAP (rs394581, P = 0.0002 replication, P = 4 x 10(-7) overall), PTPRC (rs10919563, P = 0.0003 replication, P = 7 x 10(-7) overall), TRAF6-RAG1 (rs540386, P = 0.0008 replication, P = 4 x 10(-6) overall) and FCGR2A (rs12746613, P = 0.0022 replication, P = 2 x 10(-5) overall). Many of these loci are also associated to other immunologic diseases.
331 citations
Authors
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Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Paul M. Thompson | 183 | 2271 | 146736 |
Feng Zhang | 172 | 1278 | 181865 |
Ian J. Deary | 166 | 1795 | 114161 |
Peter A. R. Ade | 162 | 1387 | 138051 |
David W. Johnson | 160 | 2714 | 140778 |
Pete Smith | 156 | 2464 | 138819 |
Naveed Sattar | 155 | 1326 | 116368 |
John R. Hodges | 149 | 812 | 82709 |
Ruth J. F. Loos | 142 | 647 | 92485 |
Alan J. Silman | 141 | 708 | 92864 |
Michael J. Keating | 140 | 1169 | 76353 |
David Price | 138 | 1687 | 93535 |
John D. Scott | 135 | 625 | 83878 |
Aarno Palotie | 129 | 711 | 89975 |
Rajat Gupta | 126 | 1240 | 72881 |