Live Breaking News & Updates on Williamr Lagor

Stay updated with breaking news from Williamr lagor. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

New cause identified for metabolic disease that strikes Native Americans: Scientists topple the prevailing explanation for how the incomplete breakdown of a protein causes neurological damage

New cause identified for metabolic disease that strikes Native Americans: Scientists topple the prevailing explanation for how the incomplete breakdown of a protein causes neurological damage
sciencedaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sciencedaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United States , Areeg El Gharbawy , Sarahp Young , James Beasley , Williamc Wetsel , Trevorj Gonzalez , Colling Johnson , Aravind Asokan , Madeline Hemmingsen , Ramonam Rodriguiz , Beatrice Bissig Choisat , Yunhan Ma , Mercedes Barzi , Anna Mae Diehl , Jeffreyi Everitt , Cherylk Peck , Timothyc Wood , Williamr Lagor , Ashleer Stiles , Alan Rosales , Karl Dimiter Bissig , Raquel Maeso Diaz , National Institute , National Heart Lung , Blood Institute , National Institute Of Diabetes ,

Closer to human -- Mouse model more accurately reproduces fatty liver disease


 E-Mail
Human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a little-understood condition that significantly increases the risk of inflammation, fibrosis and liver cancer and ultimately requires liver transplant.
NAFLD has been difficult to study mainly because we had no good animal model, said corresponding author Dr. Karl-Dimiter Bissig, who was at Baylor during the development of this project and is now at Duke University.
The disease has both genetic and nutritional components, which have been hard to understand in human studies, and murine models until now had not accurately reflected typical characteristics of human livers with the disease.
Part mouse, part human ....

United States , Baylor College Of Medicine , Karl Dimiter Bissig , Scotta Ochsner , Malgorzata Borowiak , Beatrice Bissig Choisat , N Thaon Galvan , John Goss , Neil Mckenna , Davide Cohen , Xavier Legras , Barry Zorman , Michele Alves Bezerra , Pavel Sumazin , Davidd Moore , Mercedes Barzi , Williamr Lagor , Diane Yang , National Institute Of Diabetes , American Heart Association , National Heart Lung , Weill Cornell Medical College , Duke University , Blood Institute , Danl Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center , Signaling Pathways Project ,

Closer to human – mouse model more accurately reproduces fatty liver disease


Closer to human – mouse model more accurately reproduces fatty liver disease
Human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a little-understood condition that significantly increases the risk of inflammation, fibrosis and liver cancer and ultimately requires liver transplant.
A chimeric mouse model of NAFLD. On the left, a microscopy image of H&E-stained chimeric liver sections showing separation of liver cells from human or murine origin. Note that the fatty, white filling inside human cells is not present in the murine cells. On the right, the bar graph quantifies macro- and microvesicular steatosis (the abnormal retention of fat within the cells) in human and murine chimeric liver tissue. Image courtesy of the authors/ ....

United States , Baylor College Of Medicine , Karl Dimiter Bissig , Scotta Ochsner , Malgorzata Borowiak , N Thaon Galvan , Beatrice Bissig Choisat , Neil Mckenna , John Goss , Davide Cohen , Xavier Legras , Barry Zorman , Michele Alves Bezerra , Pavel Sumazin , Davidd Moore , Mercedes Barzi , Williamr Lagor , Diane Yang , American Heart Association , National Institute Of Diabetes , National Heart Lung , Duke University , Blood Institute , Weill Cornell Medical College , Danl Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center , Signaling Pathways Project ,

Mouse model closely reproduces human fatty liver disease


Date Time
Mouse model closely reproduces human fatty liver disease
A team at Baylor College of Medicine and other institutions has developed a novel mouse model that reproduces many key features of human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), a little-understood condition that significantly increases the risk of inflammation, fibrosis and liver cancer and ultimately requires liver transplant. With this model, researchers have an opportunity to advance the understanding and treatment of this serious condition for which there is no effective therapy. The study appeared in JHEP Reports.
“NAFLD has been difficult to study since we had no good animal model,” said corresponding author Dr. Karl-Dimiter Bissig, who was at Baylor during the development of this project and is now at Duke University. ....

United States , Baylor College Of Medicine , Karl Dimiter Bissig , Scotta Ochsner , Malgorzata Borowiak , Beatrice Bissig Choisat , N Thaon Galvan , John Goss , Neil Mckenna , Davide Cohen , Xavier Legras , Barry Zorman , Michele Alves Bezerra , Pavel Sumazin , Davidd Moore , Mercedes Barzi , Williamr Lagor , Diane Yang , National Institute Of Diabetes , American Heart Association , National Heart Lung , Weill Cornell Medical College , Duke University , Blood Institute , Baylor College , Danl Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center ,