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16 pages, 2526 KB  
Article
Genome-Wide Identification of the CRY Gene Family in Solanum tuberosum and Response to Abiotic Stresses
by Yan Gao, Xueying Yang, Xin Lv, Yuxuan Li, Kuihua Li and Yuliang Gao
Genes 2025, 16(10), 1234; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes16101234 (registering DOI) - 18 Oct 2025
Abstract
Background: Cryptochromes (CRYs) are not only blue-light receptors in plants but also participate in abiotic stress responses, making them essential for plant growth and development. Methods: In this study, the CRY gene family in potato (StCRY) was identified and analyzed using [...] Read more.
Background: Cryptochromes (CRYs) are not only blue-light receptors in plants but also participate in abiotic stress responses, making them essential for plant growth and development. Methods: In this study, the CRY gene family in potato (StCRY) was identified and analyzed using bioinformatics approaches, and the expression patterns of StCRY genes under different abiotic stresses were validated through transcriptome datasets and RT-qPCR analysis. Results: A total of 7 StCRY genes were identified, unevenly distributed across 4 chromosomes. The StCRY genes exhibit conserved structures, with predicted subcellular localization primarily in the nucleus, cytoplasm, and plastids. Promoter region analysis revealed the significant presence of cis-acting elements related to light, plant growth and development, hormones, and stress responses. Phylogenetic analysis classified the CRY gene family into three subgroups and identified one pair of collinear genes. StCRY genes show a closer evolutionary relationship with tomato, followed by Arabidopsis thaliana, and are least related to rice. Transcriptome and RT-qPCR analyses under cold, drought, and salt stresses revealed differential expression among StCRY genes: StCRY3 and StCRY7 respond positively to cold stress, StCRY1 and StCRY5 are upregulated under drought and salt stresses, and StCRY7 expression is positively correlated with salt stress. Conclusions: Collectively, this study provides a preliminary characterization of the CRY gene family in potato and establishes a theoretical foundation for further investigations into the molecular mechanisms of blue-light receptors in abiotic stress responses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Plant Genetics and Genomics)
14 pages, 416 KB  
Article
Joint Hypermobility: An Under-Recognised Cause of Palpitations, Dizziness, and Syncope in Young Females
by Zeina Abu Orabi, Sophie E. Thompson, Jan van Vliet, Kate Gee, Ashwin Roy and Jonathan N. Townend
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(20), 7373; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207373 (registering DOI) - 18 Oct 2025
Abstract
Background: Symptoms of dizziness, syncope, and palpitations are common presentations in outpatient and emergency care, frequently attributed to stress and anxiety when conventional neurological and cardiac evaluations are normal. Joint hypermobility (JH) syndromes including hypermobile Ehlers–Danlos syndrome (hEDS), and hypermobility spectrum disorders (HSD) [...] Read more.
Background: Symptoms of dizziness, syncope, and palpitations are common presentations in outpatient and emergency care, frequently attributed to stress and anxiety when conventional neurological and cardiac evaluations are normal. Joint hypermobility (JH) syndromes including hypermobile Ehlers–Danlos syndrome (hEDS), and hypermobility spectrum disorders (HSD) are under-recognised as potential causes. Methods: Our retrospective cohort study examined the clinical features, diagnostic findings, and responses to treatment in patients with JH syndromes, who are referred to a specialised syncope clinic within a UK teaching hospital. It involved 218 patients with joint hypermobility, predominantly young females (median Beighton score: 6), reporting chronic orthostatic intolerance, dizziness, and palpitations. Common comorbidities included joint pain, chronic fatigue, gastrointestinal dysmotility, and psychiatric conditions. Prevalence of symptoms, cardiovascular abnormalities on investigation (ECG, echocardiography, and tilt-table testing), and treatment responses were analysed. Results: History and examination were often diagnostic. Standard cardiac tests rarely provided diagnostic value except to exclude alternate conditions. Tilt-table testing was abnormal in 82.0% of cases, revealing orthostatic hypotension, reflex syncope, or postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS). Conservative measures (hydration, salt intake, and exercise) were effective in over half of the cases; pharmacological treatments (ivabradine, fludrocortisone) were considered for refractory cases. Conclusions: This study emphasises that JH syndromes are a common cause of palpitations, dizziness, and syncope in young females. They are multi-system conditions affecting both physical and mental health, which remain under-recognised and are often dismissed as ‘functional’, particularly in women—highlighting gender bias in diagnosis. A structured diagnostic approach with routine joint assessments for JH and increased awareness can facilitate early recognition and management in general medical settings, reducing reliance on emergency services and improving patient outcomes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cardiology)
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21 pages, 1085 KB  
Review
Reimagining Armadillo Husbandry: Applying an Enrichment Framework to Support Ex Situ Conservation
by Robert Kelly and Paul Rose
Diversity 2025, 17(10), 730; https://doi.org/10.3390/d17100730 (registering DOI) - 18 Oct 2025
Abstract
Environmental enrichment (EE) is a vital component of modern zoo husbandry, improving welfare by encouraging natural behaviours and supporting ex situ conservation goals. While EE is widely integrated into the management of many taxa, its welfare benefits remain poorly understood for certain species. [...] Read more.
Environmental enrichment (EE) is a vital component of modern zoo husbandry, improving welfare by encouraging natural behaviours and supporting ex situ conservation goals. While EE is widely integrated into the management of many taxa, its welfare benefits remain poorly understood for certain species. The armadillos are examples of such species—underrepresented in research with few targeted EE strategies. Importantly, although olfaction is recognised as their primary sensory modality, methods to promote behaviour linked to olfaction (e.g., exploration and foraging) remain unclear. This review synthesises knowledge on EE for armadillos, using Bloomsmith’s five categories of enrichment and Positive Reinforcement Training (PRT) as a framework. We identify species-typical behaviours to maintain in captivity, consider their ecological relevance in the wild, and explore how tailored EE and PRT can adjust environments. We then evaluate how such approaches can enhance behavioural outcomes, support visitor engagement, and promote welfare critical for in situ and ex situ conservation. Furthermore, we highlight EE’s role in safeguarding adaptive traits for population sustainability and argue that integrating EE and PRT into a broader One Plan Approach provides a pathway for aligning ex situ management with wild ecology. Finally, we identify key gaps, emphasising multi-institutional collaboration, standardised metrics, and long-term research to guide evidence-based practices for armadillos. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ecology, Behavior, and Conservation of Armadillos)
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17 pages, 2333 KB  
Article
Overexpression of the Lipid Transfer Protein Gene SpLTP1 from Desert Pioneer Plant Stipagrostis pennata Enhances the Drought Tolerance in Arabidopsis
by Jingru Wang, Jiahuan Niu, Ming Hu, Mingsu Chen, Xiaoying Li, Zhangqi Song, Shan Yin, Faren Zhu, Jiao Jiao, Rui Tang, Fei Wang, Rong Li and Hongbin Li
Plants 2025, 14(20), 3198; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14203198 (registering DOI) - 18 Oct 2025
Abstract
Lipid transfer proteins (LTPs) play crucial regulatory roles in plant growth, development, and abiotic stress responses. Stipagrostis pennata is a species of grass widely distributed in arid and semi-arid regions, particularly adapted to desert and steppe environments. Under extreme drought conditions, it exhibits [...] Read more.
Lipid transfer proteins (LTPs) play crucial regulatory roles in plant growth, development, and abiotic stress responses. Stipagrostis pennata is a species of grass widely distributed in arid and semi-arid regions, particularly adapted to desert and steppe environments. Under extreme drought conditions, it exhibits a variety of physiological and morphological adaptation mechanisms, making it an important species for studying plant drought tolerance. Recently, LTPs have been found to exhibit upregulated expression under drought stress in plants such as wheat and tobacco, enhancing their drought tolerance. However, the functional role of LTPs in S. pennata remains unexplored. In this study, the SpLTP1 gene was isolated from S. pennata via molecular cloning, encoding a 116-amino acid protein. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that this protein contains a highly conserved nsLTP1 (cd01960) domain and has high sequence similarity with LTPs of Setaria viridis, Setaria italica, Musa acuminata and Phragmites australis. qRT-PCR revealed that SpLTP1 was highly expressed and dynamically regulated under drought, suggesting its potential role in root rhizosheath formation and drought tolerance. To investigate SpLTP1 function, SpLTP1-overexpressing (SpLTP1-OE) and complementation (SpLTP1-atltp) Arabidopsis lines were generated using the floral dip method, in comparison with the existing wild-type (WT) and the LTP-deficient mutant (atltp). Drought stress phenotyping and physiological assays indicated that SpLTP1 likely enhances drought tolerance by elevating antioxidant enzyme activities and osmolyte accumulation. Comparative transcriptome analysis of SpLTP1-OE and WT plants further suggested that SpLTP1 modulates critical pathways, including phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, zeatin biosynthesis, and plant hormone signal transduction, thereby influencing plant growth and stress adaptation. These findings not only provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms by which SpLTP1 regulates rhizosheath development in S. pennata but also establish a foundation for deciphering its role in extreme drought adaptation. Full article
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15 pages, 1094 KB  
Article
Genome-Wide Identification of the DVR Gene Family and Expression Analysis of GDF8 Genes in Qihe Gibel Carp
by Jinyan Shan, Yuling Liu, Kaiqi Lian, Xianghui Xiao, Jun Ma, Ren Ren, Xiaolong Li, Guoqiang Wei, Youyi Kuang and Renhai Peng
Fishes 2025, 10(10), 529; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes10100529 - 17 Oct 2025
Abstract
(1) Background: The BMP/GDF (Bone Morphogenetic Protein/Growth Differentiation Factor) subfamily (Decapentaplegic-Vg1-related, DVR) within the transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) superfamily plays critical roles in governing biological developmental processes and physiological functions. (2) Methods: In this study, we systematically investigated the DVR gene family [...] Read more.
(1) Background: The BMP/GDF (Bone Morphogenetic Protein/Growth Differentiation Factor) subfamily (Decapentaplegic-Vg1-related, DVR) within the transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) superfamily plays critical roles in governing biological developmental processes and physiological functions. (2) Methods: In this study, we systematically investigated the DVR gene family in hexaploid Qihe gibel carp (Carassius gibelio var. Qihe) through comprehensive genomic identification, phylogenetic analysis, chromosome mapping, and cis-regulatory element prediction. The experimental design for gene expression analysis involved collecting samples from multiple tissues (brain, muscle, liver, kidney, etc.) and different developmental stages (20, 45, and 60 days post hatching, dph) to examine the expression patterns of four GDF8 genes using quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR). (3) Results: We identified 50 DVR members in Qihe gibel carp. Phylogenetic analysis classified the 50 DVR family members into 20 distinct protein types, with 29 BMPs (Bone Morphogenetic Proteins) and 21 GDFs (Growth Differentiation Factors) identified. All 50 DVR proteins of Qihe gibel carp have similar TGF-β domains except for four BMP1 proteins. Chromosomal localization revealed widespread distribution of DVR members across 36 chromosomes, a pattern potentially linked to the hexaploid genome of Qihe gibel carp. Genes within the same subgroup exhibited conserved intron–exon architectures and similar intron numbers; syntenic conservation within subgroups may reflect functional constraints after polyploidization, implying evolutionary pressure to maintain functional domains. Through spatiotemporal expression profiling, we uncovered functional divergence among four GDF8 (myostatin) paralogs: GDF8-1 and GDF8-2 were predominantly expressed in brain and muscle tissues (dorsal and caudal), while GDF8-3 and GDF8-4 showed hepatic, cerebral, and renal specificity. Intriguingly, all paralogs exhibited a gradual upregulation during late development (20–60 days post hatching, dph), with peak expression staggered between 45 dph (GDF8-1/2) and 60 dph (GDF8-3/4). (4) Conclusions: These findings suggest that GDF8 plays a critical regulatory role in the growth and development of Qihe gibel carp. Collectively, these results provide a foundation for further investigations into the functional roles of the DVR gene family during the ontogenetic development of this species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Carp: Genetic Improvement and Biotechnology)
41 pages, 762 KB  
Article
MCMC Methods: From Theory to Distributed Hamiltonian Monte Carlo over PySpark
by Christos Karras, Leonidas Theodorakopoulos, Aristeidis Karras, George A. Krimpas, Charalampos-Panagiotis Bakalis and Alexandra Theodoropoulou
Algorithms 2025, 18(10), 661; https://doi.org/10.3390/a18100661 - 17 Oct 2025
Abstract
The Hamiltonian Monte Carlo (HMC) method is effective for Bayesian inference but suffers from synchronization overhead in distributed settings. We propose two variants: a distributed HMC (DHMC) baseline with synchronized, globally exact gradient evaluations and a communication-avoiding leapfrog HMC (CALF-HMC) method that interleaves [...] Read more.
The Hamiltonian Monte Carlo (HMC) method is effective for Bayesian inference but suffers from synchronization overhead in distributed settings. We propose two variants: a distributed HMC (DHMC) baseline with synchronized, globally exact gradient evaluations and a communication-avoiding leapfrog HMC (CALF-HMC) method that interleaves local surrogate micro-steps with a single–global Metropolis–Hastings correction per trajectory. Implemented on Apache Spark/PySpark and evaluated on a large synthetic logistic regression (N=107, d=100, workers J{4,8,16,32}), DHMC attained an average acceptance of 0.986, mean ESS of 1200, and wall-clock of 64.1 s per evaluation run, yielding 18.7 ESS/s; CALF-HMC achieved an acceptance of 0.942, mean ESS of 5.1, and 14.8 s, i.e., ≈0.34 ESS/s under the tested surrogate configuration. While DHMC delivered higher ESS/s due to robust mixing under conservative integration, CALF-HMC reduced the per-trajectory runtime and exhibited more favorable scaling as inter-worker latency increased. The study contributes (i) a systems-oriented communication cost model for distributed HMC, (ii) an exact, communication-avoiding leapfrog variant, and (iii) practical guidance for ESS/s-optimized tuning on clusters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Numerical Optimization and Algorithms: 4th Edition)
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16 pages, 3871 KB  
Article
Structural Engineering in Sn-Doped WO3 Multi-Phase Systems for Enhanced Transparent Heat Insulation
by Xinyu Song, Ze Wang, Yue Liu, Xin Li, Chun Du and Shifeng Wang
Molecules 2025, 30(20), 4124; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules30204124 - 17 Oct 2025
Abstract
Building energy conservation through the development of transparent thermal insulation materials that selectively block near-infrared radiation while maintaining visible light transmittance has emerged as a key strategy for global carbon neutrality. WO3 is a semiconductor oxide with near-infrared absorption capabilities. However, the [...] Read more.
Building energy conservation through the development of transparent thermal insulation materials that selectively block near-infrared radiation while maintaining visible light transmittance has emerged as a key strategy for global carbon neutrality. WO3 is a semiconductor oxide with near-infrared absorption capabilities. However, the limited absorption efficiency and narrow spectral coverage of pure WO3 significantly diminish its overall transparent thermal insulation performance, thereby restricting its practical application in energy-saving glass. Therefore, this study successfully prepared Sn-doped WO3 materials using a one-step hydrothermal method, controlling the Sn:W molar ratio from 0.1:1 to 2.0:1. Through evaluation of transparent thermal insulation performance of a series of Sn-doped WO3 samples, we found that Sn:W = 0.9:1 exhibited the most excellent performance, with NIR shielding efficiency reaching 93.9%, which was 1.84 times higher than pure WO3. Moreover, this sample demonstrated a transparent thermal insulation index (THI) of 4.38, representing increases of 184% and 317%, respectively, compared to pure WO3. These enhancements highlight the strong NIR absorption capability achieved by Sn-doped WO3 through structural regulation. When Sn doping reaches a certain concentration, it triggers a structural transformation of WO3 from monoclinic to tetragonal phase. After reaching the critical solubility threshold, phase separation occurs, forming a multiphase structure composed of a Sn-doped WO3 matrix and secondary SnO2 and WSn0.33O3 phases, which synergistically enhance oxygen vacancy formation and W6+ to W5+ reduction, achieving excellent NIR absorption through small polaron hopping and localized surface plasmon resonance effects. This study provides important insights for developing high-performance transparent thermal insulation materials for energy-efficient buildings. Full article
18 pages, 1970 KB  
Article
Hybrid MCMF–NSGA-II Framework for Energy-Aware Task Assignment in Multi-Tier Shuttle Systems
by Ping Du and Gongyan Li
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(20), 11127; https://doi.org/10.3390/app152011127 - 17 Oct 2025
Abstract
The rapid growth of robotic warehouses and smart logistics has increased the demand for efficient scheduling of multi-tier shuttle systems (MTSSs). MTSS scheduling is a complex robotic task allocation problem, where throughput, energy efficiency, and service quality must be jointly optimized under operational [...] Read more.
The rapid growth of robotic warehouses and smart logistics has increased the demand for efficient scheduling of multi-tier shuttle systems (MTSSs). MTSS scheduling is a complex robotic task allocation problem, where throughput, energy efficiency, and service quality must be jointly optimized under operational constraints. To address this challenge, this study proposes a hybrid optimization framework that integrates the Minimum-Cost Maximum-Flow (MCMF) algorithm with the Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II). The MTSS is modeled as a cyber–physical robotic system that explicitly incorporates task flow, energy flow, and information flow. The lower-layer MCMF ensures efficient and feasible task–robot assignments under state-of-charge (SOC) and deadline constraints, while the upper-layer NSGA-II adaptively tunes cost-function weights to explore Pareto-optimal trade-offs among makespan, energy consumption, and waiting time. Simulation results show that the hybrid framework outperforms baseline heuristics and static optimization methods and reduces makespan by up to 5%, the energy consumption by 2.8%, and the SOC violations by over 90% while generating diverse Pareto fronts that enable flexible throughput-oriented, service-oriented, or energy-conservative scheduling strategies. The proposed framework thus provides a practical and scalable solution for energy-aware robotic scheduling in automated warehouses, thus bridging the gap between exact assignment methods and adaptive multi-objective optimization approaches. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Smart Production in Terms of Industry 4.0 and 5.0)
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12 pages, 646 KB  
Case Report
Perioperative Anesthetic Considerations in HMG-CoA Lyase Deficiency: Case Report and Literature Review
by Vasileia Nyktari, Georgios Papastratigakis, Alexandra Koulousi, Chrysi Mandola, Foteini Chaniotaki, Ioannis Goniotakis, Stavroula Ilia and Alexandra Papaioannou
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(20), 7332; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207332 - 17 Oct 2025
Abstract
Background/Objectives: 3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA lyase deficiency (HMGCLD) is an extremely rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by mutations in the HMGCL gene. HMGCLD disrupts ketogenesis and β-oxidation, leading to energy failure during fasting or stress, with clinical episodes characterized by hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, lactic acidosis, [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: 3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA lyase deficiency (HMGCLD) is an extremely rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by mutations in the HMGCL gene. HMGCLD disrupts ketogenesis and β-oxidation, leading to energy failure during fasting or stress, with clinical episodes characterized by hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, lactic acidosis, and encephalopathy. Only 211 cases have been reported worldwide, with no prior reports on anesthetic management in these patients. Methods: We report a 14.5-year-old girl with known HMGCLD who was admitted with abdominal pain and nausea following a fatty meal. Imaging confirmed acute cholecystitis. Initial conservative management failed due to persistent vomiting and inability to tolerate feeding. Deviation from the metabolic protocol led to lactic acidosis and hypoglycemia, requiring intensive care with bicarbonate, carnitine, and glucose infusion. Once optimized, she underwent emergency laparoscopic cholecystectomy under sevoflurane-based anesthesia. Propofol was avoided, given the patient’s compromised lipid metabolism. Intraoperative glucose and acid-base status were closely monitored, with balanced dextrose-based fluids. Results: The patient remained hemodynamically stable throughout and was discharged three days postoperatively. Conclusions: This case highlights the anesthetic challenges of HMGCLD, where system-level miscommunication can trigger severe metabolic decompensation. A review of the literature emphasizes fasting avoidance, continuous glucose supplementation, careful drug and fluid selection, and multidisciplinary coordination. This report provides the first anesthetic roadmap for HMGCLD, underscoring the need for individualized care and meticulous perioperative metabolic control. Full article
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27 pages, 10471 KB  
Article
A Dual-Horizon Peridynamics–Discrete Element Method Framework for Efficient Short-Range Contact Mechanics
by Kinan Bezem, Sina Haeri and Stephanie TerMaath
Modelling 2025, 6(4), 131; https://doi.org/10.3390/modelling6040131 - 16 Oct 2025
Abstract
Short-range forces enable peridynamics to simulate impact, yet it demands a computationally expensive contact search and includes no intrinsic damping. A significantly more efficient solution is the coupled dual-horizon peridynamics–discrete element method approach, which provides a robust framework for modeling fracture. The peridynamics [...] Read more.
Short-range forces enable peridynamics to simulate impact, yet it demands a computationally expensive contact search and includes no intrinsic damping. A significantly more efficient solution is the coupled dual-horizon peridynamics–discrete element method approach, which provides a robust framework for modeling fracture. The peridynamics component handles the nonlocal continuum mechanics capabilities to predict material damage and fracture, while the discrete element method captures discrete particle behavior. Whereas existing peridynamics–discrete element method approaches assign discrete element method particles to many or all surface peridynamics points, the proposed method integrates dual-horizon peridynamics with a single discrete element particle representing each object. Contact forces are computed once per discrete element pair and mapped to overlapping peridynamics points in proportion to shared volume, conserving linear momentum. Benchmark sphere-on-plate impact demonstrates prediction of peak contact force, rebound velocity, and plate deflection within 5% of theoretical results found in the literature, while decreasing neighbour-search cost by more than an order of magnitude. This validated force-transfer mechanism lays the groundwork for future extension to fully resolved fracture and fragmentation. Full article
24 pages, 8369 KB  
Article
Development of Efficient In-Situ Cleaning Methods for Stained Textile Relics
by Yuhui Wei, Jinxia Guo, Zhaowei Su, Kui Yu, Xue Ling, Zhenlin Zhang, Kaixuan Liu and Wei Pan
Gels 2025, 11(10), 830; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11100830 - 16 Oct 2025
Abstract
To address limitations such as cleaning difficulties or secondary contamination/damage of cultural relics caused by the uncontrollable diffusion of water/cleaning agent/dirty liquids during the cleaning process in traditional cleaning methods, this study, using cotton textiles as an example, systematically investigated the cleaning efficacy [...] Read more.
To address limitations such as cleaning difficulties or secondary contamination/damage of cultural relics caused by the uncontrollable diffusion of water/cleaning agent/dirty liquids during the cleaning process in traditional cleaning methods, this study, using cotton textiles as an example, systematically investigated the cleaning efficacy of four in situ methods (blank gel, cleaning gel, ultrasonic emulsification, and gel + ultrasonic emulsification synergistic cleaning) on eight types of stains, including sand, clay, rust, blood, ink, oil, and mixed solid/liquid stains. Building upon this, this study proposed an efficient, targeted, in situ, and controllable cleaning strategy tailored for fragile, stained textile relics. Results demonstrated that, regardless of the stain type, the synergistic cleaning method of G+U (gel poultice + ultrasonic emulsification) consistently outperformed the cleaning methods of blank gel poultice, cleaning gel poultice, and ultrasonic emulsification. Furthermore, the gel loaded with cleaning agents was always more effective than the blank gel (unloaded cleaning agents). The poultice methods of blank gel and cleaning gel were better suited for solid stains, while the ultrasonic emulsification cleaning method was more effective for liquid stains. Meanwhile, it was also found that the optimal cleaning method proposed in this study (the G+U synergistic cleaning method) was a cleaning method that restricted the cleaning agent within the gel network/emulsion system, and utilized the porous network physical structure of gel, the chemical action of emulsion’s wetting/dissolving dirt, and the cavitation synergistic effect of ultrasound to achieve the targeted removal of contaminants from relics’ surfaces. Crucially, the cleaning process of G+U also had the characteristics of controlling the cleaning area at the designated position and effectively regulating the diffusion rate of the cleaning solution within the treatment zone, as well as the reaction intensity. Therefore, the proposed optimal (the synergistic cleaning method of G+U) cleaning method conforms to the significant implementation of the “minimal intervention and maximal preservation” principle in modern cultural heritage conservation. Consequently, the synergistic cleaning method of G+U holds promise for practical application in artifact cleaning work. Full article
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12 pages, 1452 KB  
Article
High Satisfaction and Strength Recovery After Mini-Open Double-Row Repair of Partial Gluteal Tears Without Advanced Osteoarthritis: A Unicentric Retrospective Cohort Study
by Ingo J. Banke, Amr Seyam, Kilian Blobner, Rüdiger von Eisenhart-Rothe and Vanessa Twardy
Medicina 2025, 61(10), 1863; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina61101863 - 16 Oct 2025
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Partial gluteal tendon tears in native hips are often misdiagnosed as greater trochanteric pain syndrome, resulting in ineffective conservative treatment and persistent symptoms. Although surgical repair techniques exist, data on objective strength outcomes in non-arthritic hips remain limited. The [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: Partial gluteal tendon tears in native hips are often misdiagnosed as greater trochanteric pain syndrome, resulting in ineffective conservative treatment and persistent symptoms. Although surgical repair techniques exist, data on objective strength outcomes in non-arthritic hips remain limited. The objective of this study was to evaluate pain reduction, patient-reported outcomes (PROMs), and isometric hip abductor strength following mini-open, knotless double-row repair using the Hip Bridge technique. Material and Methods: This retrospective, single-center cohort study (Level III) with prospective outcome evaluation included 27 patients (mean age 53 years, BMI 27 kg/m2) with partial gluteal tendon tears and no advanced osteoarthritis (Tönnis grade ≤ 1), treated between 2015 and 2022 using the mini-open, knotless double-row Hip Bridge technique. The mean follow-up was 29.3 ± 24.3 months (minimum 6 months). Diagnosis was confirmed by 3-Tesla MRI, and other sources of lateral hip pain were excluded. Clinical outcomes included the Visual Analog Scale (VAS), modified Harris Hip Score (mHHS), Hip Outcome Score (HOS), normalized Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (nWOMAC), and Copenhagen Hip and Groin Outcome Score (HAGOS). Isometric hip abductor strength was assessed in 22 patients using a dynamometer, comparing the operated and contralateral limbs. Results: Postoperative satisfaction was high: 93% would undergo surgery again, 88% reported improved Trendelenburg gait, and 85% noted subjective strength gains. Pain improved significantly from VAS 8 (range, 3 to 10) preoperatively to VAS 2 (range, 0 to 7) postoperatively (p < 0.001); 100% reported pain relief. Patient-reported outcome scores were mHHS, 84.2; nWOMAC, 86.5; HOS, 80.7; and HAGOS, 70.7. Isometric strength testing showed significant improvement on the operated side (Fmax: p = 0.006; Fmean: p = 0.009). The mean limb symmetry index was 118% for Fmax and 122% for Fmean. Conclusions: Mini-open, knotless double-row repair of partial gluteal tears in non-arthritic hips yields adequate pain relief, high satisfaction, and objective strength recovery. The Hip Bridge technique could be an effective option after failed conservative treatment. Future prospective comparative studies are warranted to validate mid-term outcomes and establish long-term efficacy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Clinical Research in Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery)
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29 pages, 17301 KB  
Article
Novel Cross-Cancer Hub Genes in Doxorubicin Resistance Identified by Transcriptional Mapping
by Arseny D. Moralev, Oleg V. Markov, Marina A. Zenkova and Andrey V. Markov
Biomedicines 2025, 13(10), 2527; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13102527 - 16 Oct 2025
Abstract
Background: Doxorubicin (DOX) is a widely used chemotherapeutic agent, but its efficacy is often limited by cancer cell resistance. Although multiple DOX resistance mechanisms have been characterized, the global transcriptomic alterations underlying this phenomenon remain poorly understood. The aim of this work was [...] Read more.
Background: Doxorubicin (DOX) is a widely used chemotherapeutic agent, but its efficacy is often limited by cancer cell resistance. Although multiple DOX resistance mechanisms have been characterized, the global transcriptomic alterations underlying this phenomenon remain poorly understood. The aim of this work was to determine whether a common transcriptional response associated with DOX desensitization exists across tumor cells of different origins and to identify the core elements of this response. Methods: We performed an integrated bioinformatics analysis, including: analysis of independent transcriptomic datasets (comparing DOX-resistant neuroblastoma, breast, and cervical carcinoma cells to their DOX-sensitive counterparts), functional annotation of differentially expressed genes, reconstruction and topology analysis of gene networks, text mining, and survival analysis. The findings were validated through in vitro functional tests, RT-PCR, and analysis of the Cancer Therapeutics Response Portal and The Cancer Genome Atlas. Results: We showed that DOX resistance in cancer cells is associated with cytoskeletal reorganization, modulation of cell adhesion, cholesterol biosynthesis, and dysregulation of mTORC1, Wnt, and Gβγ signaling pathways. Network analysis identified a conserved regulome of 37 resistance-linked genes, with GJA1, SEH1L, TCF3, TUBA4A, and ZYX emerging as central hubs (mean degree: 8.7–19.7; mean fold change: 2.4–21.3). Experimental validation in DOX-resistant KB-8-5 cervical carcinoma cells and their sensitive counterparts (KB-3-1) confirmed enhanced cellular adhesion and reduced intracellular cholesterol levels associated with chemoresistance, supporting our in silico findings. A detailed follow-up analysis verified the upregulation of these hub genes in chemoresistant cells and their correlation with poor clinical outcomes across multiple cancer types. Conclusions: This integrative analysis identifies conserved transcriptomic signatures of DOX resistance and highlights hub genes GJA1, SEH1L, TCF3, TUBA4A, and ZYX with potential as predictive biomarkers and therapeutic targets. Targeting these pathways may help overcome chemoresistance and improve treatment outcomes in cancer patients. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Drug Resistance and Tumor Microenvironment in Human Cancers)
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17 pages, 265 KB  
Article
“Returning to Sport Is Not Just About the Knee”: Physiotherapists’ Experiences of the Management of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury: A Qualitative Study
by Sultan A. Alanazi, Samia A. Alamrani, Sarah S. Bajuaifer, Layan Alhammad, Nouf Alotaibi, Naif Z. Alrashdi, Msaad Alzhrani, Ahmad D. Alanazi, Ahmed M. Almansour, Abdulmajeed Alfayyadh and Aqeel M. Alenazi
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(20), 7301; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207301 - 16 Oct 2025
Viewed by 27
Abstract
Objectives: To explore sport physiotherapists’ perspectives and experiences on the management of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in Saudi Arabia and to understand the key challenges that influence rehabilitation practice. Methods: A qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with sport physiotherapists recruited from different [...] Read more.
Objectives: To explore sport physiotherapists’ perspectives and experiences on the management of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in Saudi Arabia and to understand the key challenges that influence rehabilitation practice. Methods: A qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with sport physiotherapists recruited from different regions and clinical settings (Public, private and sport clubs) in Saudi Arabia. Eligibility criteria included ≥2 years’ post-qualification experience in ACL injuries management. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. A total of twenty-six sport physiotherapists (18 males; mean age 31 years, range 26–39) participated, including 13 working primarily as clinicians and 13 with combined clinical and research roles. Results: Five themes were identified: (1) disruptions of ACL injury in daily life and sport; (2) managing fear of re-injury and uncertainty in surgical vs. conservative care; (3) guiding rehabilitation through challenges of workload, progression, adherence and supportive tools; (4) variability in protocols, assessment tools, and available resources; and (5) returning to sport is more than just passing a test. These themes demonstrate that ACL injuries rehabilitation in Saudi Arabia is shaped by physical and psychological readiness, cultural expectations, and disparities in resources. Conclusions: Physiotherapists described ACL rehabilitation as a long-term process that needs an integration of physical, psychological, and contextual factors. This study’s findings highlight the need for resource-sensitive, standardized guidelines and the inclusion of psychological readiness assessments within rehabilitation processes. This study provides context-specific evidence that can be used to inform the development of culturally responsive, evidence-based approaches to strengthen ACL rehabilitation in Saudi Arabia. Full article
28 pages, 6502 KB  
Article
Energy Conservation and Production Efficiency Enhancement in Herbal Medicine Extraction: Self-Adaptive Decision-Making Boiling Judgment via Acoustic Emission Technology
by Jing Lan, Hao Fu, Haibin Qu and Xingchu Gong
Pharmaceuticals 2025, 18(10), 1556; https://doi.org/10.3390/ph18101556 - 16 Oct 2025
Viewed by 35
Abstract
Background: Accurately detecting the onset of saturated boiling in herbal medicine extraction processes is critical for improving production efficiency and reducing energy consumption. However, the traditional monitoring methods based on temperature suffer from time delays. To address the challenge, acoustic emission (AE) signals [...] Read more.
Background: Accurately detecting the onset of saturated boiling in herbal medicine extraction processes is critical for improving production efficiency and reducing energy consumption. However, the traditional monitoring methods based on temperature suffer from time delays. To address the challenge, acoustic emission (AE) signals were used in this study owing to its sensitivity to bubble behavior. Methods: An AE signal acquisition system was constructed for herbal extraction monitoring. Characteristics of AE signals at different boiling stages were analyzed in pure water systems with and without herbs. The performance of AE-based and temperature-based recognition of boiling stages was compared. To enhance applicability in different herb extraction systems, multivariate statistical analysis was adopted to compress spectral–frequency information into Hotelling’s T2 and SPE statistics. For real-time monitoring, a self-adaptive decision-making boiling judgment method (BoilStart) was proposed. To evaluate the robustness, the performance of BoilStart under different conditions was investigated, including extraction system mass and heating medium temperature. Furthermore, BoilStart was applied to a lab-scale extraction process of Dabuyin Wan, which is a practical formulation, to assess its performance in energy conservation and efficiency improvement. Results: AE signal in the 75–100 kHz frequency band could reflect the boiling states of herbal medicine extraction. It was more sensitive to the onset of saturated boiling than the temperature signal. Compared with SPE, Hotelling’s T2 was identified as the optimal indicator with higher accuracy. BoilStart could adaptively monitor saturated boiling across diverse herbal systems. The absolute error of BoilStart’s boiling determination ranged from 1.5 min to 2.0 min. The increasing-temperature time was reduced by about 22–36%. For the extraction process of Dabuyin Wan, after adopting BoilStart, the increasing-temperature time was reduced by about 29%, and the corresponding energy consumption was lowered by about 26%. Conclusions: The first AE-based method for precise boiling state detection in herbal extraction was established. BoilStart’s model-free adaptability met industrial demands for multi-herb compatibility. This offered a practical solution to shorten ineffective heating phases and reduce energy consumption. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pharmaceutical Technology)
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