Showing page 260 of 403 pages of list content

  1. The clinical pharmacology of tafenoquine in the radical cure of Plasmodium vivax malaria: An individual patient data meta-analysis

    This article has 13 authors:
    1. James A Watson
    2. Robert J Commons
    3. Joel Tarning
    4. Julie A Simpson
    5. Alejandro Llanos Cuentas
    6. Marcus VG Lacerda
    7. Justin A Green
    8. Gavin CKW Koh
    9. Cindy S Chu
    10. François H Nosten
    11. Richard N Price
    12. Nicholas PJ Day
    13. Nicholas J White
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This competently performed retrospective analysis presents important findings concerning the clinical use of tafenoquine, a drug against Plasmodium vivax malaria. The assembly of the majority of global tafenoquine pharmacology data from clinical treatment studies provides compelling evidence in support of the drug's regimen that includes an increase in dosing, which would lead to a significant enhancement of the drug efficacy, hence a decrease in recurrent parasitemia. The manuscript could benefit from a more detailed analysis and discussion concerning the side effects of the drug affecting more susceptible populations.

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  2. Survival of mineral-bound peptides into the Miocene

    This article has 6 authors:
    1. Beatrice Demarchi
    2. Meaghan Mackie
    3. Zhiheng Li
    4. Tao Deng
    5. Matthew J Collins
    6. Julia Clarke
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      eLife Assessment

      The paper pushes the known preservation of ancient proteins, and their successful recovery, into the late Miocene. The results of the study also have implications for avian taxonomic classification. The findings reported in the paper are a welcome addition to the field of paleoproteomics and encourage future research on ancient proteins in deep antiquity and across various taxa. The paper will be of great interest to paleoscientists.

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  3. Presynaptic contact and activity opposingly regulate postsynaptic dendrite outgrowth

    This article has 2 authors:
    1. Emily L Heckman
    2. Chris Q Doe
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This paper deploys elegant genetic tools to understand how synapses are formed in the Drosophila central nervous system. The synaptic connections between two identified neurons in the Drosophila central nervous system are used as a system to document the role of cell ablation and activity in dendrite growth and circuit wiring. In so doing, they identify a brief window of time that appears critical for these wiring and growth decisions.

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  4. Participation in the nationwide cervical cancer screening programme in Denmark during the COVID-19 pandemic: An observational study

    This article has 6 authors:
    1. Tina Bech Olesen
    2. Henry Jensen
    3. Henrik Møller
    4. Jens Winther Jensen
    5. Marianne Waldstrøm
    6. Berit Andersen
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      eLife assessment

      This article shows how the COVID-19 pandemic affected cervical cancer screening participation in the organized screening program of Denmark. Through registry data covering the entire population, the study shows that while short-term (90 days) participation after invitation dropped, long-term (365 days) participation remained stable. These results will be of interest to public health specialists and researchers working on pandemic recovery efforts related to cancer screening worldwide.

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    This article has 3 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  5. Succinate mediates inflammation-induced adrenocortical dysfunction

    This article has 20 authors:
    1. Ivona Mateska
    2. Anke Witt
    3. Eman Hagag
    4. Anupam Sinha
    5. Canelif Yilmaz
    6. Evangelia Thanou
    7. Na Sun
    8. Ourania Kolliniati
    9. Maria Patschin
    10. Heba Abdelmegeed
    11. Holger Henneicke
    12. Waldemar Kanczkowski
    13. Ben Wielockx
    14. Christos Tsatsanis
    15. Andreas Dahl
    16. Axel Karl Walch
    17. Ka Wan Li
    18. Mirko Peitzsch
    19. Triantafyllos Chavakis
    20. Vasileia Ismini Alexaki
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      eLife assessment

      Acute inflammation in mammals activates the hypothalamic pituatary axis leading to increased glucocorticoid release, which is required to restrain the inflammatory response. However, in settings of severe or prolonged inflammation, such as that seen in sepsis, there is reduced adrenal steridogenesis. The studies described in this paper provide a plausible mechanism for adrenal resistance which develops during excessive inflammation.

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  6. Coordinated evolution at amino acid sites of SARS-CoV-2 spike

    This article has 5 authors:
    1. Alexey Dmitrievich Neverov
    2. Gennady Fedonin
    3. Anfisa Popova
    4. Daria Bykova
    5. Georgii Bazykin
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      Neverov and colleagues analyze patterns of correlated changes of amino acids in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to identify networks of interacting positions using an improved version of the previously validated method. Identifying such patterns of co-evolution is important for a better understanding of spike-protein evolution. The evidence for the identified co-evolving pairs is solid, though the degree of certainty varies among the different identified groups of potentially interacting positions.

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  7. Firing patterns of ventral hippocampal neurons predict the exploration of anxiogenic locations

    This article has 3 authors:
    1. Hugo Malagon-Vina
    2. Stéphane Ciocchi
    3. Thomas Klausberger
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This paper is expected to be of interest to systems neuroscientists in the fields of emotion, hippocampal function, and anxiety-related behavior. The authors performed recordings in ventral hippocampus and show that 1) place fields become concentrated near the open areas of a maze, 2) direction-dependent coding decreases in these open areas, and 3) ventral hippocampal population activity in the closed area can be used to predict how mice explore the open area in the immediate future. These valuable findings support a potential role for the ventral hippocampus in the exploration of anxiety-provoking environments, however, the manuscript in its current form is incomplete, with some support for the main findings but also some limitations.

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  8. Community composition shapes microbial-specific phenotypes in a cystic fibrosis polymicrobial model system

    This article has 7 authors:
    1. Fabrice Jean-Pierre
    2. Thomas H Hampton
    3. Daniel Schultz
    4. Deborah A Hogan
    5. Marie-Christine Groleau
    6. Eric Déziel
    7. George A O'Toole
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This article establishes a model experimental bacterial community to represent the microbiome found in ~1/3 of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) with the goal of understanding why these infections do not respond to treatments that are effective in single-species infections. The authors show that susceptibility to the most common antibiotic used against the dominant pathogen P. aeruginosa is different when grown in this mixed community, and a mutant of this pathogen (lasR) that frequently occurs during infections alters this sensitivity. This study is significant for producing an experimental resource for the microbiology of CF, and it could be strengthened by more detailed measures of interactions between species and how the phenotypes produced by lasR alter species interactions.

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    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  9. Multimodal brain age estimates relate to Alzheimer disease biomarkers and cognition in early stages: a cross-sectional observational study

    This article has 18 authors:
    1. Peter R Millar
    2. Brian A Gordon
    3. Patrick H Luckett
    4. Tammie LS Benzinger
    5. Carlos Cruchaga
    6. Anne M Fagan
    7. Jason J Hassenstab
    8. Richard J Perrin
    9. Suzanne E Schindler
    10. Ricardo F Allegri
    11. Gregory S Day
    12. Martin R Farlow
    13. Hiroshi Mori
    14. Georg Nübling
    15. The Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network
    16. Randall J Bateman
    17. John C Morris
    18. Beau M Ances
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This is a useful study exploring multi-modality brain age (structural plus resting state MRI) in people in the early stages or at risk of Alzheimer's disease. They found solid evidence that people with cognitive impairment had older-appearing brains and that older-appearing brains were related to Alzheimer's risk factors such as amyloid and tau deposition. They claim to show that the multi-modality brain age model is more accurate than a unimodal structural MRI model, though the evidence for that is incomplete.

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  10. Differential axonal trafficking of Neuropeptide Y-, LAMP1-, and RAB7-tagged organelles in vivo

    This article has 4 authors:
    1. Joris P Nassal
    2. Fiona H Murphy
    3. Ruud F Toonen
    4. Matthijs Verhage
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This is an important and fundamental, well-written and easily comprehended quantitative imaging study, analyzing the motion of endo-lysosomal compartments within axons in vivo using simultaneous multiphoton imaging in the mammalian brain. Taken together, this is a significant technical advance with interesting observations that substantively move the field forward.

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    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  11. THINGS-data, a multimodal collection of large-scale datasets for investigating object representations in human brain and behavior

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Martin N Hebart
    2. Oliver Contier
    3. Lina Teichmann
    4. Adam H Rockter
    5. Charles Y Zheng
    6. Alexis Kidder
    7. Anna Corriveau
    8. Maryam Vaziri-Pashkam
    9. Chris I Baker
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      Hebart et al., present a new massive multi-model dataset to support the study of visual object representation, including data measured from functional magnetic resonance imaging, magnetoencephalography, and behavioral similarity judgments. The general, condition-rich design, conducted over a thoughtfully curated and sampled set of object concepts will be highly valuable to the cognitive/computational/neuroscience community, yielding data that will be amenable to many empirical questions beyond the field of visual object recognition. The dataset is accompanied by quality control evaluations as well as examples of analyses that the community can re-run and further explore for building new hypotheses that can be tested with such a rich dataset.

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    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  12. High genetic diversity in the pelagic deep-sea fauna of the Atacama Trench revealed by environmental DNA

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Salvador Ramírez-Flandes
    2. Carolina E. González
    3. Montserrat Aldunate
    4. Julie Poulain
    5. Patrick Wincker
    6. Ronnie N. Glud
    7. Rubén Escribano
    8. Sophie Arnaud Haond
    9. Osvaldo Ulloa
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This manuscript from Ramírez-Flandes will be of interest to marine biologists, deep ocean ecologists, conservation biologists, and biogeographers. At times, the comparison of merely a pair of samples or sampling locales can substantially widen our view of biological and ecological systems and processes. In the case of this study, the pattern of metazoan diversity from eDNA samples from across the water columns in comparable series from two deep trench systems (to below 8000 m) is markedly different, including evidence of substantial biological diversity deep in the Atacama Trench (to a much greater extent than observed in the Kermadec Trench), contradicting existing paradigms about biodiversity potential in abyssal-hadal regions.

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  13. Trisomy 21 induces pericentrosomal crowding delaying primary ciliogenesis and mouse cerebellar development

    This article has 14 authors:
    1. Cayla E Jewett
    2. Bailey L McCurdy
    3. Eileen T O'Toole
    4. Alexander J Stemm-Wolf
    5. Katherine S Given
    6. Carrie H Lin
    7. Valerie Olsen
    8. Whitney Martin
    9. Laura Reinholdt
    10. Joaquín M Espinosa
    11. Kelly D Sullivan
    12. Wendy B Macklin
    13. Rytis Prekeris
    14. Chad G Pearson
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This work investigates the cellular and cerebellar origins of trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) phenotypes. One human chromosome 21 gene is Pericentrin (PCNT), encoding a component of the centrosome. The authors use several models with 3 or 4 copies of human chromosome 21 (or mouse equivalents) to reveal how increasing PCNT gene dosage alters ciliogenesis and ciliary signaling.

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    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  14. An automated feeding system for the African killifish reveals the impact of diet on lifespan and allows scalable assessment of associative learning

    This article has 11 authors:
    1. Andrew McKay
    2. Emma K Costa
    3. Jingxun Chen
    4. Chi-Kuo Hu
    5. Xiaoshan Chen
    6. Claire N Bedbrook
    7. Rishad C Khondker
    8. Mike Thielvoldt
    9. Param Priya Singh
    10. Tony Wyss-Coray
    11. Anne Brunet
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      McKay, et al. describe development of a new wireless, network-enabled automated feeder system with which diet amount and schedule can be controlled across individually housed killifish. The system is constructed using open-source components and software and is amenable to manufacture by individual research groups and is highly scalable. The authors then use this system to explore dietary restriction effects on killifish lifespan and to develop an associative learning assay, two important goals in the KF /longevity field. The authors demonstrate that precise control of food allows automated investigation of lifespan extension under calorie restriction conditions. Secondly, they show an exciting modification of the system that involves only addition of a simple LED light. This modification allows use of the system in an associative learning / conditioning paradigm. Finally, using this paradigm, they demonstrate an age-dependent decline in learning.

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    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  15. Cell circuits between leukemic cells and mesenchymal stem cells block lymphopoiesis by activating lymphotoxin beta receptor signaling

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Xing Feng
    2. Ruifeng Sun
    3. Moonyoung Lee
    4. Xinyue Chen
    5. Shangqin Guo
    6. Huimin Geng
    7. Marcus Müschen
    8. Jungmin Choi
    9. Joao Pedro Pereira
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This study describes a previously unrecognized positive feedback loop between leukemic cells and stromal cells impeding normal hematopoiesis mediated by lymphotoxin produced by cancer cells and its receptor expressed in stromal cells. These valuable findings will guide future research in both basic and clinical medicine. However, additional experimental evidence including more comparator groups would have further substantiated the authors' conclusions.

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    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  16. Opposite polarity programs regulate asymmetric subsidiary cell divisions in grasses

    This article has 10 authors:
    1. Dan Zhang
    2. Roxane P Spiegelhalder
    3. Emily B Abrash
    4. Tiago DG Nunes
    5. Inés Hidalgo
    6. M Ximena Anleu Gil
    7. Barbara Jesenofsky
    8. Heike Lindner
    9. Dominique C Bergmann
    10. Michael T Raissig
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This manuscript characterizes the localization and function of two proteins promoting division asymmetry in developing stomata of the grass Brachypodium distachyon. The authors demonstrate that the opposing polarity domains of these proteins are linked to cell division orientation. While both proteins have been studied previously in other systems, there was no prior evidence of cooperative functions in a single cell type, as shown here. With further clarification of some of the localization findings, this study will be of strong interest to plant cell biologists and those interested in asymmetric cell division generally.

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    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  17. The RAM signaling pathway links morphology, thermotolerance, and CO2 tolerance in the global fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans

    This article has 6 authors:
    1. Benjamin J Chadwick
    2. Tuyetnhu Pham
    3. Xiaofeng Xie
    4. Laura C Ristow
    5. Damian J Krysan
    6. Xiaorong Lin
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This study provides compelling evidence for the involvement of RAM pathway in the survival of C. neoformans in high CO2 concentrations. The work is important to understand how this fungus adapts to the high CO2 concentrations in host tissues. The experimental approach combines genetic and biochemical approaches to explore a complex topic that is of essential for cryptococcal pathogenesis.

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    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  18. Community diversity is associated with intra-species genetic diversity and gene loss in the human gut microbiome

    This article has 5 authors:
    1. Naïma Jesse Madi
    2. Daisy Chen
    3. Richard Wolff
    4. B Jesse Shapiro
    5. Nandita R Garud
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      The authors re-analyzed a previously published dataset and identify patterns suggestive of increased bacterial biodiversity in the gut may creating new niches that lead to gene loss in a focal species and promote generation of more diversity. Two limitations are (i) that sequencing depth may not be sufficient to analyze strain-level diversity and (ii) that the evidence is exclusively based on correlations, and the observed patterns could also be explained by other eco-evolutionary processes. The claims should be supported by a more detailed analysis, and alternative hypotheses that the results do not fully exclude should be discussed. Understanding drivers of diversity in natural microbial communities is an important question that is of central interest to biomedically oriented microbiome scientists, microbial ecologists and evolutionary biologists.

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  19. Sparse dimensionality reduction approaches in Mendelian randomisation with highly correlated exposures

    This article has 4 authors:
    1. Vasileios Karageorgiou
    2. Dipender Gill
    3. Jack Bowden
    4. Verena Zuber
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    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This paper is of broad interest to infer the causal effect of exposures on outcomes. It proposed an interesting idea for the identification of risk factors amongst highly correlated traits in a Mendelian randomization paradigm. The intuition for this method is clearly presented. However, critical details about implementation are missing and its application is not sufficiently demonstrated in the current form.

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    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  20. Single spikes drive sequential propagation and routing of activity in a cortical network

    This article has 4 authors:
    1. Juan Luis Riquelme
    2. Mike Hemberger
    3. Gilles Laurent
    4. Julijana Gjorgjieva
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife assessment

      This manuscript is relevant to experimental and theoretical neuroscientists interested in the trade-off between chaos and reliability in the brain, and may also pique the interest of the machine learning community, particularly those seeking to understand the computational capacity of recurrent neural networks. The findings are valuable, with practical and theoretical implications for this subfield. Using a spiking neural network model firmly anchored in experimental data from the turtle brain, the authors examine the reliability and flexibility of spike train sequences and determine the differential roles of strong and weak connections. The results show clearly that strong but sparse connections in a sub-network can produce a highly reliable response to single spikes, with reliability and multiplexing across sub-networks controlled by weak connectivity. The strength of evidence for the claims is convincing, using appropriate and validated methodology in line with current state-of-the-art.

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