1.Analysis on relationship between MTHFR C677T locus polymorphism and unexplained adverse pregnancy by gene chip method
Zhengmin SUN ; Hua WANG ; Dong FENG
International Journal of Laboratory Medicine 2017;38(4):473-474,477
Objective To investigate the relationship between 5 ,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene C677T locus polymorphism and unexplained adverse pregnancy.Methods Three hundreds and twenty pregnant women with unknown ad-verse pregnancy ≥ 2 times in the infertility department ,and obstetrics and gynecology department of our hospital from June 2014 to May 2016 were selected as the case group and 388 healthy non-abortion parous women were taken as the control group.The MTH-FR gene C677T locus polymorphism in the two groups was analyzed by using gene chip method.The differences in genotype and al-lele frequency distribution were compared between the two groups ,and the relationship between unexplained adverse pregnancy and MTHFR C677T locus polymorphism was analyzed.Results The frequency distribution of MTHFR genotype C677T C/C had sta-tistically significant difference between the case group and control group (P<0.05 ,OR=0.284).The frequency distribution of gen-otype C/T had no statistical difference between the case group and control group (P=0.400 ,OR=1.140).The frequency distribu-tion of genotype T/T had statistical difference between the case group and control group (P<0.05 ,OR=7.672).The frequency distribution of allele C and T had statistical difference between the case group and control group ( P< 0.05 ,OR= 0.304 ). Conclusion The high expression of MTHFR C677T genotype T/T may be a risk factor of unknown adverse pregnancy in child-bearing age women.
2.Effects of dexmedetomidine on expressions ofmesenteric artery proteins in rats
Zhengmin MA ; Shufang WU ; Guixia JING ; Qiang WANG ; Hongzhi SUN
Journal of Xi'an Jiaotong University(Medical Sciences) 2017;38(5):679-683
Objective To observe the effects of dexmedetomidine (DEX) on the expressions of TNF-α, IL-1β and apoptosis-related proteins in rat mesenteric artery.Methods Male SD rats of SPF grade were sacrificed and the mesenteric artery was separated under the stereo-microscope.We established an experimental model of vascular injury induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and randomly divided the injured vessels into dexmedetomidine treatment group and control group.DEX treatment group was divided into 10-8, 10-7, and 10-6 mol/L subgroups according to the different concentrations of DEX.RNA and total protein was extracted in each group.The mRNA expressions of TNF-α, IL-1β and CaSR were detected by RT-PCR and the protein expression of TNF-α, Caspase-3 and AMPK were tested by Western blot.Results DEX (10-8, 10-7, and 10-6mol/L) obviously reduced vascular inflammatory reaction induced by lipopolysaccharide, reduced the mRNA and protein expressions of TNF-α as well as mRNA expression of IL-1β.Caspase 3 protein expression significantly lowered in blood vessels in DEX group compared with LPS group.DEX had no obvious effect on lipopolysaccharide-induced vascular AMPK and CaSR mRNA or protein expressions.Conclusion DEX obviously deceased the expressions of inflammation-related proteins, suggesting that DEX has anti-inflammatory effects.
3.Paragonimus skrjabini Infection in Animal Reservoir Hosts and Questionnairing in Residents at a Village of Hubei Province
Zhengmin XU ; Ling LI ; Xiaoying WU ; Hanfen ZHAO ; Aiping DU ; Shengmei HU ; Yongping TAO ; Li SUN ; Yucheng TANG ; Minghua LI ; Zhiyong ZHANG ; Zhishan LI
Chinese Journal of Parasitology and Parasitic Diseases 1987;0(01):-
Freshwater crabs (Sinopotamon denticulatum) were examined for metacercariae. Cats and dogs were also examined for Paragonimus infection. Questionnairing was carried out on health knowledge and behaviors among local residents in a village of Baokang County, Hubei Province. Results showed that the infection rate of Paragonimus skrjabini metacercariae in Sinopotamon denticulatum was 20.5% (46/214), with 15.6% (20/128) in a mining area and 30.2%(26/86) for the non-mining area respectively ( ?2=6.5, P0.05). Questionnairing showed that dogs and cats were with the habit of foraging and defecating at streams and children had the habits of eating raw or under-cooked crabs. The natural and ecological environments are in favor of the life cycle of P. skrjabini.
4.Study on blood donor deferral strategy by analyzing anti-TP test results
Jing SUN ; Rui WANG ; Zhengmin LIU ; Jin GUO ; Nan GAO ; Junjie JIA ; Hongwei GE ; Ling LI
Chinese Journal of Blood Transfusion 2022;35(2):176-179
【Objective】 To discuss the reliability and applicability of the current blood deferral strategy concerning anti-TPreactive blood donors (by ELISA). 【Methods】 TPPA confirmatory test was performed on the samples routinely detected by two different anti-TP ELISA reagents(reagent 1 and reagent 2), and the test data of dual reagent reactive and one reagent reactive blood donors were analyzed to determine the possibility of true positivity. 【Results】 1 624 anti-TP reactive samples(by ELISA) were collected, among which 1 467 were dual reagent reactive, 77 were reagent 1 reactive, and 80 were reagent 2 reactive. TPPA results showed that the positive predictive value (PPV) of dual reactive samples was 85.48%. Samples with high S/CO value (reagent 1≥13 and/or reagent 2 >17) were more likely to be true positive, with the PPV at 98.56% (reagent 1) and 99.13% (reagent 2), respectively, which were significantly higher than that when the S/CO value was≥1. Among the samples reactive to one reagent, 2 were confirmed positive in reagent 1 and 3 in reagent 2, with the PPV at 2.60% and 3.75% respectively, and had no correlation with high S/CO value. 【Conclusion】 Dual-reagent reactive donors with high S/CO value showed high possibility of true positivity, therefore should be deferred. TPPA test is helpful to identify true positivity in one-reagent reactive donors. Confirmatory test and follow-up should be a supplement to the current blood donor deferral strategy to ensure blood safety.
5.Temporal and spatial stability of the EM/PM molecular subtypes in adult diffuse glioma.
Jing FENG ; Zheng ZHAO ; Yanfei WEI ; Zhaoshi BAO ; Wei ZHANG ; Fan WU ; Guanzhang LI ; Zhiyan SUN ; Yanli TAN ; Jiuyi LI ; Yunqiu ZHANG ; Zejun DUAN ; Xueling QI ; Kai YU ; Zhengmin CONG ; Junjie YANG ; Yaxin WANG ; Yingyu SUN ; Fuchou TANG ; Xiaodong SU ; Chuan FANG ; Tao JIANG ; Xiaolong FAN
Frontiers of Medicine 2023;17(2):240-262
Detailed characterizations of genomic alterations have not identified subtype-specific vulnerabilities in adult gliomas. Mapping gliomas into developmental programs may uncover new vulnerabilities that are not strictly related to genomic alterations. After identifying conserved gene modules co-expressed with EGFR or PDGFRA (EM or PM), we recently proposed an EM/PM classification scheme for adult gliomas in a histological subtype- and grade-independent manner. By using cohorts of bulk samples, paired primary and recurrent samples, multi-region samples from the same glioma, single-cell RNA-seq samples, and clinical samples, we here demonstrate the temporal and spatial stability of the EM and PM subtypes. The EM and PM subtypes, which progress in a subtype-specific mode, are robustly maintained in paired longitudinal samples. Elevated activities of cell proliferation, genomic instability and microenvironment, rather than subtype switching, mark recurrent gliomas. Within individual gliomas, the EM/PM subtype was preserved across regions and single cells. Malignant cells in the EM and PM gliomas were correlated to neural stem cell and oligodendrocyte progenitor cell compartment, respectively. Thus, while genetic makeup may change during progression and/or within different tumor areas, adult gliomas evolve within a neurodevelopmental framework of the EM and PM molecular subtypes. The dysregulated developmental pathways embedded in these molecular subtypes may contain subtype-specific vulnerabilities.
Humans
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Brain Neoplasms/pathology*
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Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/metabolism*
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Glioma/pathology*
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Neural Stem Cells/pathology*
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Oligodendrocyte Precursor Cells/pathology*
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Tumor Microenvironment