Institution
University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus
Education•San Juan, Puerto Rico, United States•
About: University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus is a education organization based out in San Juan, Puerto Rico, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 1711 authors who have published 1496 publications receiving 27756 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Findings indicate complete compensation of ATP generation in wing muscles across a 10°C temperature range, which supports similar wing-beat frequencies during locomotion at each species' respective temperature.
Abstract: In ectotherms living in cold waters, locomotory performance is constrained by a slower generation of the ATP that is needed to fuel muscle contraction. Both polar and temperate pteropods of the genus Clione, however, are able to swim continuously by flapping their parapodia (wings) at comparable frequencies at their respective habitat temperatures. Therefore, we expected polar species to have increased aerobic capacities in their wing muscles when measured at common temperatures. We investigated muscle and mitochondrial ultrastructure of Clione antarctica from the Southern Ocean (-1.8°C) and populations of a sister species, Clione limacina, from the Arctic (-0.5 to 3°C) and from the North Atlantic (10°C). We also measured oxygen consumption and the activity of the mitochondrial enzyme citrate synthase (CS) in isolated wings of the two species. The Antarctic species showed a substantial up-regulation of the density of oxidative muscle fibers, but at the expense of fast-twitch muscle fibers. Mitochondrial capacity was also substantially increased in the Antarctic species, with the cristae surface density (58.2±1.3μm(2)μm(-3)) more than twice that found in temperate species (34.3±0.8μm(2)μm(-3)). Arctic C. limacina was intermediate between these two populations (43.7±0.5μm(2)μm(-3)). The values for cold-adapted populations are on par with those found in high-performance vertebrates. As a result of oxidative muscle proliferation, CS activity was 4-fold greater in C. antarctica wings than in temperate C. limacina when measured at a common temperature (20°C). Oxygen consumption of isolated wing preparations was comparable in the two species when measured at their respective habitat temperatures. These findings indicate complete compensation of ATP generation in wing muscles across a 10°C temperature range, which supports similar wing-beat frequencies during locomotion at each species' respective temperature. The elevated capacity in the wing muscles is reflected in the partial compensation of whole-animal oxygen consumption and feeding rates.
15 citations
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TL;DR: A new way to reveal some of the nonpolar xenobiotic exposome has been developed that applies to urine samples to suggest xenobiotics for subsequent targeted analysis in the population of people under study, in order to relate the environment to health and disease.
Abstract: Rationale
Testing the urine nonpolar sulfateome can enable discovery of xenobiotics that are most likely to be bioactive. This is based on the fact that nonpolar xenobiotics are more likely to enter cells where they tend to undergo metabolism, in part, to sulfates that are then largely excreted into the urine.
Methods
The following sequence of steps, with conditions that achieve high reproducibility, was applied to large human urine samples: (1) competitive nonpolar extraction with a porous extraction paddle; (2) weak anion-exchange extraction with strong organic washing; and (3) ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC)/negative ion matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization tandem time-of-flight mass spectrometery (MALDI-TOF/TOF-MS) with recording of ions with signal-to-noise (S/N) ≥ 20 that yielded M–1–80 (loss of SO3) or m/z 97 (HSO4−) upon fragmentation.
Results
From a collection of urine samples from six pregnant women, the masses of 1129 putative sulfates were measured. Three lists of candidate compounds (preliminary hits) from these masses were formed by searching METLIN, especially via MATLAB, yielding putative xenobiotic contaminants (35 compounds), steroids (122), and flavonoids (1582).
Conclusions
A new way to reveal some of the nonpolar xenobiotic exposome has been developed that applies to urine samples. The value of the method is to suggest xenobiotics for subsequent targeted analysis in the population of people under study, in order to relate the environment to health and disease. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
15 citations
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01 Jan 1999TL;DR: Malnutrition is a very common condition in the aging population and the interplay of neurotransmitters, hormones, and cytokines is evaluated to examine why older persons might be at a higher risk of developing malnutrition.
Abstract: Malnutrition is a very common condition in the aging population The reasons for this are multiple ranging from socio-economical factors to physiologic and pathologic alterations associated to growing old Multiple changes related to the aging process in feeding modulators for instance, cholecystokinin, opioids, leptin, and nitric oxide are described in the scientific literature and are reviewed Cytokines, their role in feeding behavior, and the alterations in their effects in the elderly are also studied The interplay of these neurotransmitters, hormones, and cytokines is evaluated to examine why older persons might be at a higher risk of developing malnutrition The association of cytokines with catabolism, and anorexia is also discussed
15 citations
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TL;DR: Data from an ongoing health promotion research being conducted in Puerto Rico supports the notion that men of a disadvantaged socioeconomic position may have a poorer sexual health status; with a lower level of education and unemployment leading this disparity.
Abstract: Most of the research among HIV-positive populations has been approached from behavioral risk models. This is particularly true for those otherwise socially vulnerable groups like men who have sex with men (MSM). As a response to this pattern, we examined data from an ongoing health promotion research being conducted in Puerto Rico (PR). The study is limited to HIV-positive MSM and consists of the participation in a survey interview that includes domains used to assess indicators of socio-economic-related factors (age, educational level, employment, religion, and partnership status) and sexual health (sexual satisfaction, condom use, and sexual health knowledge(SHK)). Participants reported a relatively high level (75 %) of sexual satisfaction and inconsistent condom use (50.9 % reported always using a condom). A deficient (61 %) SHK was also reported. In multivariate analyses, a higher educational level was associated with higher sexual satisfaction (aβ = 3.223; 95 % CI 0.291–6.156) and higher levels of SHK (aβ = 1.328; 95 % CI 0.358–2.297), while unemployment was associated with less condom use (aOR 0.314; 95 % CI 0.122–0.810). Not having a primary sexual partner was associated with less sexual satisfaction (aβ = −3.871; 95 % CI −7.534–0.208) and more condom use (aOR 4.292; 95 % CI 1.310–14.068). Findings support the notion that men of a disadvantaged socioeconomic position may have a poorer sexual health status; with a lower level of education and unemployment leading this disparity. Findings also evidence that partnership status may have a role in the sexual health of HIV-positive MSM. To our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive analysis of sexual health and socioeconomic indicators among Hispanic/Latino HIV-positive MSM in PR and in the Caribbean. Findings provide valuable information to address the sexual health needs of an underserved population.
15 citations
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TL;DR: The type of glass used to fabricate patch pipettes influences the kinetic properties of single-channel currents activated by acetylcholine in Xenopus myocytes and the opening rate decreased in a time-dependent manner in patches formed with hard glass pipettes.
14 citations
Authors
Showing all 1734 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Martin C. Mihm | 109 | 611 | 48762 |
Helmut Kettenmann | 104 | 380 | 40211 |
Howard E. Gendelman | 101 | 567 | 39460 |
Glorisa Canino | 81 | 340 | 28559 |
John D. Meeker | 71 | 326 | 16422 |
Kathleen Puntillo | 61 | 176 | 16201 |
Luis M. Vilá | 61 | 247 | 12798 |
Gregory J. Quirk | 61 | 118 | 25677 |
Miles F. Wilkinson | 57 | 163 | 10617 |
Julie K. Andersen | 56 | 176 | 12638 |
Kaumudi Joshipura | 54 | 143 | 13944 |
Mark W. Miller | 54 | 257 | 12825 |
Anthony Auerbach | 48 | 130 | 6572 |
Cynthia Garcia Coll | 45 | 108 | 10664 |
Dean Falk | 41 | 133 | 6200 |