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12 pages, 759 KiB  
Article
Privacy-Preserving Byzantine-Tolerant Federated Learning Scheme in Vehicular Networks
by Shaohua Liu, Jiahui Hou and Gang Shen
Electronics 2025, 14(15), 3005; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14153005 - 28 Jul 2025
Abstract
With the rapid development of vehicular network technology, data sharing and collaborative training among vehicles have become key to enhancing the efficiency of intelligent transportation systems. However, the heterogeneity of data and potential Byzantine attacks cause the model to update in different directions [...] Read more.
With the rapid development of vehicular network technology, data sharing and collaborative training among vehicles have become key to enhancing the efficiency of intelligent transportation systems. However, the heterogeneity of data and potential Byzantine attacks cause the model to update in different directions during the iterative process, causing the boundary between benign and malicious gradients to shift continuously. To address these issues, this paper proposes a privacy-preserving Byzantine-tolerant federated learning scheme. Specifically, we design a gradient detection method based on median absolute deviation (MAD), which calculates MAD in each round to set a gradient anomaly detection threshold, thereby achieving precise identification and dynamic filtering of malicious gradients. Additionally, to protect vehicle privacy, we obfuscate uploaded parameters to prevent leakage during transmission. Finally, during the aggregation phase, malicious gradients are eliminated, and only benign gradients are selected to participate in the global model update, which improves the model accuracy. Experimental results on three datasets demonstrate that the proposed scheme effectively mitigates the impact of non-independent and identically distributed (non-IID) heterogeneity and Byzantine behaviors while maintaining low computational cost. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cryptography in Internet of Things)
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16 pages, 11910 KiB  
Article
Characterization and Expression Analysis of β-Glucosidase Gene Under Abiotic Stresses in Pepper (Capsicum annuum L.)
by Jing Wang, Jiaxin Huang, Xu Jia, Zhenxin Hao, Yuancai Yang, Ruxia Tian and Yanping Liang
Genes 2025, 16(8), 889; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes16080889 - 27 Jul 2025
Abstract
Background: Pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) is highly susceptible to various abiotic stresses during their growth and development, leading to severe reductions in both yield and quality. β-Glucosidase (BGLU) is widely involved in plant growth and development, as well as in the [...] Read more.
Background: Pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) is highly susceptible to various abiotic stresses during their growth and development, leading to severe reductions in both yield and quality. β-Glucosidase (BGLU) is widely involved in plant growth and development, as well as in the response to abiotic stress. Methods: We performed a genome-wide identification of pepper BGLU (CaBGLU) genes. Phylogenetic analysis included BGLU proteins from Arabidopsis, tomato, and pepper. Gene structures, conserved motifs, and promoter cis-elements were analyzed bioinformatically. Synteny within the pepper genome was assessed. Protein-protein interaction potential was predicted. Gene expression patterns were analyzed across tissues and under abiotic stresses using transcriptomic data and qRT-PCR. Subcellular localization of a key candidate protein CaBGLU21 was confirmed experimentally. Results: We identified 32 CaBGLU genes unevenly distributed across eight chromosomes. Phylogenetic classification of 99 BGLU proteins into 12 subfamilies revealed an uneven distribution of CaBGLUs across six subfamilies. Proteins within subfamilies shared conserved motifs and gene structures. CaBGLU promoters harbored abundant light-, hormone- (MeJA, ABA, SA, GA), and stress-responsive elements (including low temperature). A duplicated gene pair (CaBGLU19/CaBGLU24) was identified. 27 CaBGLU proteins showed potential for interactions. Expression analysis indicated CaBGLU5 and CaBGLU30 were mesophyll-specific, while CaBGLU21 was constitutively high in non-leaf tissues. CaBGLU21 was consistently upregulated by cold, heat, and ABA. Subcellular localization confirmed CaBGLU21 resides in the tonoplast. Conclusions: This comprehensive analysis characterizes the pepper BGLU gene family. CaBGLU21, exhibiting constitutive expression in non-leaf tissues, strong upregulation under multiple stresses, and tonoplast localization, emerges as a prime candidate gene for further investigation into abiotic stress tolerance mechanisms in pepper. The findings provide a foundation for future functional studies and stress-resistant pepper breeding. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Adaptation and Evolutionary Genetics in Plants)
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19 pages, 1158 KiB  
Article
Community Structure, Growth-Promoting Potential, and Genomic Analysis of Seed-Endophytic Bacteria in Stipagrostis pennata
by Yuanyuan Yuan, Shuyue Pang, Wenkang Niu, Tingting Zhang and Lei Ma
Microorganisms 2025, 13(8), 1754; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms13081754 - 27 Jul 2025
Abstract
 Stipagrostis pennata is an important plant in desert ecosystems. Its seed-endophytic bacteria may play a critical role in plant growth and environmental adaptation processes. This study systematically analyzed the community composition and potential plant growth-promoting (PGP) functions of seed-endophytic bacteria associated with [...] Read more.
 Stipagrostis pennata is an important plant in desert ecosystems. Its seed-endophytic bacteria may play a critical role in plant growth and environmental adaptation processes. This study systematically analyzed the community composition and potential plant growth-promoting (PGP) functions of seed-endophytic bacteria associated with S. pennata. The results showed that while the overall diversity of bacterial communities from different sampling sites was similar, significant differences were observed in specific functional genes and species abundances. Nine endophytic bacterial strains were isolated from the seeds, among which Bacillus altitudinis strain L7 exhibited phosphorus solubilizing capabilities, nitrogen fixing, IAA production, siderophore generation, and multi-hydrolytic enzyme activities. Additionally, the genomic sequencing of L7 revealed the key genes involved in plant growth promotion and environmental adaptation, including Na+ efflux systems, K+ transport systems, compatible solute synthesis genes, and the gene clusters associated with nitrogen metabolism, IAA synthesis, phosphate solubilization, and siderophore synthesis. Strain L7 exhibits salt and osmotic stress tolerance while promoting plant growth, providing a promising candidate for desert microbial resource utilization and plant biostimulant development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Plant Microbe Interactions)
31 pages, 6501 KiB  
Review
From Hormones to Harvests: A Pathway to Strengthening Plant Resilience for Achieving Sustainable Development Goals
by Dipayan Das, Hamdy Kashtoh, Jibanjyoti Panda, Sarvesh Rustagi, Yugal Kishore Mohanta, Niraj Singh and Kwang-Hyun Baek
Plants 2025, 14(15), 2322; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14152322 - 27 Jul 2025
Abstract
The worldwide agriculture industry is facing increasing problems due to rapid population increase and increasingly unfavorable weather patterns. In order to reach the projected food production targets, which are essential for guaranteeing global food security, innovative and sustainable agricultural methods must be adopted. [...] Read more.
The worldwide agriculture industry is facing increasing problems due to rapid population increase and increasingly unfavorable weather patterns. In order to reach the projected food production targets, which are essential for guaranteeing global food security, innovative and sustainable agricultural methods must be adopted. Conventional approaches, including traditional breeding procedures, often cannot handle the complex and simultaneous effects of biotic pressures such as pest infestations, disease attacks, and nutritional imbalances, as well as abiotic stresses including heat, salt, drought, and heavy metal toxicity. Applying phytohormonal approaches, particularly those involving hormonal crosstalk, presents a viable way to increase crop resilience in this context. Abscisic acid (ABA), gibberellins (GAs), auxin, cytokinins, salicylic acid (SA), jasmonic acid (JA), ethylene, and GA are among the plant hormones that control plant stress responses. In order to precisely respond to a range of environmental stimuli, these hormones allow plants to control gene expression, signal transduction, and physiological adaptation through intricate networks of antagonistic and constructive interactions. This review focuses on how the principal hormonal signaling pathways (in particular, ABA-ET, ABA-JA, JA-SA, and ABA-auxin) intricately interact and how they affect the plant stress response. For example, ABA-driven drought tolerance controls immunological responses and stomatal behavior through antagonistic interactions with ET and SA, while using SnRK2 kinases to activate genes that react to stress. Similarly, the transcription factor MYC2 is an essential node in ABA–JA crosstalk and mediates the integration of defense and drought signals. Plants’ complex hormonal crosstalk networks are an example of a precisely calibrated regulatory system that strikes a balance between growth and abiotic stress adaptation. ABA, JA, SA, ethylene, auxin, cytokinin, GA, and BR are examples of central nodes that interact dynamically and context-specifically to modify signal transduction, rewire gene expression, and change physiological outcomes. To engineer stress-resilient crops in the face of shifting environmental challenges, a systems-level view of these pathways is provided by a combination of enrichment analyses and STRING-based interaction mapping. These hormonal interactions are directly related to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly SDGs 2 (Zero Hunger), 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production), and 13 (Climate Action). This review emphasizes the potential of biotechnologies to use hormone signaling to improve agricultural performance and sustainability by uncovering the molecular foundations of hormonal crosstalk. Increasing our understanding of these pathways presents a strategic opportunity to increase crop resilience, reduce environmental degradation, and secure food systems in the face of increasing climate unpredictability. Full article
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15 pages, 1961 KiB  
Article
Age-Dependent Immune Defense Against Beauveria bassiana in Long- and Short-Lived Drosophila Populations
by Elnaz Bagheri, Han Yin, Arnie Lynn C. Bengo, Kshama Ekanath Rai, Taryn Conyers, Robert Courville, Mansour Abdoli, Molly K. Burke and Parvin Shahrestani
J. Fungi 2025, 11(8), 556; https://doi.org/10.3390/jof11080556 - 27 Jul 2025
Abstract
Aging in sexually reproducing organisms is shaped by the declining force of natural selection after reproduction begins. In Drosophila melanogaster, experimental evolution shows that altering the age of reproduction shifts the timing of aging. Using the Drosophila experimental evolution population (DEEP) resource, [...] Read more.
Aging in sexually reproducing organisms is shaped by the declining force of natural selection after reproduction begins. In Drosophila melanogaster, experimental evolution shows that altering the age of reproduction shifts the timing of aging. Using the Drosophila experimental evolution population (DEEP) resource, which includes long- and short- lived populations evolved under distinct reproductive schedules, we investigated how immune defense against Beauveria bassiana changes with age and evolved lifespan. We tested survival post-infection at multiple ages and examined genomic differentiation for immune-related genes. Both population types showed age-related declines in immune defense. Long-lived populations consistently exhibited age-specific defense when both long- and short-lived populations were tested. Genomic comparisons revealed thousands of differentiated loci, yet no enrichment for canonical immune genes or overlap with gene sets from studies of direct selection for immunity. These results suggest that enhanced immune defense can evolve alongside extended lifespan, likely via general physiological robustness rather than traditional immune pathways. A more detailed analysis may reveal that selection for lifespan favors tolerance-based mechanisms that reduce infection damage without triggering immune activation, in contrast to direct selection for resistance. Our findings demonstrate the utility of experimentally evolved populations for dissecting the genetic architecture of aging and immune defense to inform strategies to mitigate age-related costs associated with immune activation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Research on Entomopathogenic Fungi)
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16 pages, 3903 KiB  
Article
Identification of Salt Tolerance-Related NAC Genes in Wheat Roots Based on RNA-Seq and Association Analysis
by Lei Zhang, Aili Wei, Weiwei Wang, Xueqi Zhang, Zhiyong Zhao and Linyi Qiao
Plants 2025, 14(15), 2318; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14152318 - 27 Jul 2025
Abstract
Excavating new salt tolerance genes and utilizing them to improve salt-tolerant wheat varieties is an effective way to utilize salinized soil. The NAC gene family plays an important role in plant response to salt stress. In this study, 446 NAC sequences were isolated [...] Read more.
Excavating new salt tolerance genes and utilizing them to improve salt-tolerant wheat varieties is an effective way to utilize salinized soil. The NAC gene family plays an important role in plant response to salt stress. In this study, 446 NAC sequences were isolated from the whole genome of common wheat and classified into 118 members based on subgenome homology, named TaNAC1 to TaNAC118. Transcriptome analysis of salt-tolerant wheat breeding line CH7034 roots revealed that 144 of the 446 TaNAC genes showed significant changes in expression levels at least two time points after NaCl treatment. These differentially expressed TaNACs were divided into four groups, and Group 4, containing the largest number of 78 genes, exhibited a successive upregulation trend after salt treatment. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the TaNAC gene family in 114 wheat germplasms were retrieved from the public database and were subjected to further association analysis with the relative salt-injury rates (RSIRs) of six root phenotypes, and then 20 SNPs distributed on chromosomes 1B, 2B, 2D, 3B, 3D, 5B, 5D, and 7A were correlated with phenotypes involving salt tolerance (p < 0.0001). Combining the results of RT-qPCR and association analysis, we further selected three NAC genes from Group 4 as candidate genes that related to salt tolerance, including TaNAC26-D3.2, TaNAC33-B, and TaNAC40-B. Compared with the wild type, the roots of the tanac26-d3.2 mutant showed shorter length, less volume, and reduced biomass after being subjected to salt stress. Four SNPs of TaNAC26-D3.2 formed two haplotypes, Hap1 and Hap2, and germplasms with Hap2 exhibited better salt tolerance. Snp3, in exon 3 of TaNAC26-D3.2, causing a synonymous mutation, was developed into a Kompetitive Allele-Specific PCR marker, K3, to distinguish the two haplotypes, which can be further used for wheat germplasm screening or marker-assisted breeding. This study provides new genes and molecular markers for improvement of salt tolerance in wheat. Full article
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14 pages, 960 KiB  
Article
Backward Chaining Method for Teaching Long-Term Care Residents to Stand Up from the Floor: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
by Anna Zsófia Kubik, Zsigmond Gyombolai, András Simon and Éva Kovács
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(15), 5293; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14155293 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 71
Abstract
Objectives: Older adults who worry about not being able to stand up from the floor after a fall, reduce their physical activity, which leads to a higher risk of falling. The Backward Chaining Method (BCM) was developed specifically for this population to [...] Read more.
Objectives: Older adults who worry about not being able to stand up from the floor after a fall, reduce their physical activity, which leads to a higher risk of falling. The Backward Chaining Method (BCM) was developed specifically for this population to safely teach and practice the movement sequence required to stand up from the floor. Our aim is to evaluate the effectiveness of using the BCM to teach older adults how to stand up from the floor, and to determine whether this training has an impact on functional mobility, muscle strength, fear of falling, and life-space mobility. Methods: A total of 26 residents of a long-term care facility were randomly allocated to two groups. Residents in the intervention group (IG, n = 13) participated in a seven-week training program to learn how to stand up from the floor with BCM, in addition to the usual care generally offered in long-term care facilities. The participants in the control group (CG, n = 13) received the usual care alone. The primary outcome measure was functional mobility, assessed by the Timed Up and Go test. Secondary outcome measures included functional lower limb strength, grip strength, fear of falling, and life-space mobility. The outcomes were measured at baseline and after the seven-week intervention period. Results: We found no significant between-group differences in functional mobility, lower limb strength and grip strength; however, IG subjects demonstrated significantly lower fear of falling scores, and significantly higher life-space mobility and independent life-space mobility scores compared to CG subjects after the training program. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that the Backward Chaining Method is a feasible, well-tolerated intervention in a long-term care setting and it may have meaningful benefits, particularly in lessening fear of falling and improving life-space mobility and independent life-space mobility when incorporated into the usual physiotherapy interventions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Geriatric Medicine)
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18 pages, 1885 KiB  
Review
Non-Canonical Functions of Adenosine Receptors: Emerging Roles in Metabolism, Immunometabolism, and Epigenetic Regulation
by Giovanni Pallio and Federica Mannino
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(15), 7241; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26157241 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 63
Abstract
Adenosine receptors (ARs) are G protein-coupled receptors that are widely expressed across tissues, traditionally associated with cardiovascular, neurological, and immune regulation. Recent studies, however, have highlighted their non-canonical functions, revealing critical roles in metabolism, immunometabolism, and epigenetic regulation. AR subtypes, particularly A2A and [...] Read more.
Adenosine receptors (ARs) are G protein-coupled receptors that are widely expressed across tissues, traditionally associated with cardiovascular, neurological, and immune regulation. Recent studies, however, have highlighted their non-canonical functions, revealing critical roles in metabolism, immunometabolism, and epigenetic regulation. AR subtypes, particularly A2A and A2B, modulate glucose and lipid metabolism, mitochondrial activity, and energy homeostasis. In immune cells, AR signaling influences metabolic reprogramming and polarization through key regulators such as mTOR, AMPK, and HIF-1α, contributing to immune tolerance or activation depending on the context. Additionally, ARs have been implicated in epigenetic modulation, affecting DNA methylation, histone acetylation, and non-coding RNA expression via metabolite-sensitive mechanisms. Therapeutically, AR-targeting agents are being explored for cancer and chronic inflammatory diseases. While clinical trials with A2A antagonists in oncology show encouraging results, challenges remain due to receptor redundancy, systemic effects, and the need for tissue-specific selectivity. Future strategies involve biased agonism, allosteric modulators, and combination therapies guided by biomarker-based patient stratification. Overall, ARs are emerging as integrative hubs connecting extracellular signals with cellular metabolic and epigenetic machinery. Understanding these non-canonical roles may unlock novel therapeutic opportunities across diverse disease landscapes. Full article
23 pages, 7901 KiB  
Article
Research on the Load Characteristics of Aerostatic Spindle Considering Straightness Errors
by Guoqing Zhang, Yu Guo, Guangzhou Wang, Wenbo Wang, Youhua Li, Hechun Yu and Suxiang Zhang
Lubricants 2025, 13(8), 326; https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants13080326 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 52
Abstract
As the core component of ultra-precision machine tools, the manufacturing errors of aerostatic spindles are inevitable due to the limitations of machining and assembly processes, and these errors significantly affect the spindle’s static and dynamic performance. To address this issue, a force model [...] Read more.
As the core component of ultra-precision machine tools, the manufacturing errors of aerostatic spindles are inevitable due to the limitations of machining and assembly processes, and these errors significantly affect the spindle’s static and dynamic performance. To address this issue, a force model of the unbalanced air film, considering the straightness errors of the rotor’s radial and thrust surfaces, was constructed. Unlike conventional studies that rely solely on idealized error assumptions, this research integrates actual straightness measurement data into the simulation process, enabling a more realistic and precise prediction of bearing performance. Rotors with different tolerance specifications were fabricated, and static performance simulations were carried out based on the measured geometry data. An experimental setup was built to evaluate the performance of the aerostatic spindle assembled with these rotors. The experimental results were compared with the simulation outcomes, confirming the validity of the proposed model. To further quantify the influence of straightness errors on the static characteristics of aerostatic spindles, ideal functions were used to define representative manufacturing error profiles. The results show that a barrel-shaped error on the radial bearing surface can cause a load capacity variation of up to 46.6%, and its positive effect on air film load capacity is more significant than that of taper or drum shapes. For the thrust bearing surface, a concave-shaped error can lead to a load capacity variation of up to 13.4%, and its enhancement effect is superior to those of the two taper and convex-shaped errors. The results demonstrate that the straightness errors on the radial and thrust bearing surfaces are key factors affecting the radial and axial load capacities of the spindle. Full article
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16 pages, 776 KiB  
Article
Safety and Toxicology Profile of TT-6-AmHap Heroin Conjugate Vaccine
by Essie Komla, Erwin G. Abucayon, C. Steven Godin, Agnieszka Sulima, Arthur E. Jacobson, Kenner C. Rice and Gary R. Matyas
Vaccines 2025, 13(8), 792; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines13080792 - 26 Jul 2025
Viewed by 80
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Opioid use disorder (OUD) remains a severe health problem globally, resulting in substantial social and economic challenges. While existing medications for managing OUD are proven to be effective, they also present certain challenges. A vaccine offers a promising therapeutic strategy to [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Opioid use disorder (OUD) remains a severe health problem globally, resulting in substantial social and economic challenges. While existing medications for managing OUD are proven to be effective, they also present certain challenges. A vaccine offers a promising therapeutic strategy to combat OUD and potentially reduce the risk of overdose death. The TT-6-AmHap heroin conjugate vaccine has effectively reduced heroin-induced pharmacological effects in behavioral assays as well as demonstrated the induction of high titer and high affinity antibody responses in mice and rats. In this GLP study conducted in rabbits, the potential local and systemic toxicity of the TT-6-AmHap heroin vaccine in combination with or without adjuvants ALF43 and Alhydrogel® (ALFA) was investigated. Methods: Male and female New Zealand White rabbits were administered with vaccines or a saline control intramuscularly at two-week intervals over a 57-day study period. The presence, persistence or reversibility of any toxic effects of the vaccine was determined over a four-week recovery period. Results: Administration of TT-6-AmHap with or without the adjuvants induced high antibody-specific IgG in treatment groups compared to the controls. The study found no TT-6-AmHap-related effects on mortality, physical examinations, dermal Draize observations, body weights, body weight changes, food consumption, ophthalmology, clinical pathology (hematology, coagulation, clinical chemistry, and urinalysis), macroscopic pathology, or organ weights. Conclusions: Under the conditions of this study, these results demonstrate that the TT-6-AmHap vaccine with or without adjuvants was well tolerated, immunogenic, and the effects were not considered adverse in both male and female rabbits. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Vaccines and Public Health)
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17 pages, 5739 KiB  
Article
Impact of Heat Stress on Gene Expression in the Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Ovarian Axis of Hu Sheep
by Jianwei Zou, Lili Wei, Yishan Liang, Juhong Zou, Pengfei Cheng, Zhihua Mo, Wenyue Sun, Yirong Wei, Jun Lu, Wenman Li, Yulong Shen, Xiaoyan Deng, Yanna Huang and Qinyang Jiang
Animals 2025, 15(15), 2189; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15152189 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 195
Abstract
Heat stress (HS) is a major environmental factor negatively impacting the reproductive performance of livestock. This study investigates the molecular mechanisms of heat stress on the hypothalamic–pituitary–ovarian (HPO) axis in Hu sheep. A heat-stressed animal model was established, and high-throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) [...] Read more.
Heat stress (HS) is a major environmental factor negatively impacting the reproductive performance of livestock. This study investigates the molecular mechanisms of heat stress on the hypothalamic–pituitary–ovarian (HPO) axis in Hu sheep. A heat-stressed animal model was established, and high-throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) was employed to analyze gene expression in the hypothalamus, pituitary, and ovarian tissues of both control and heat-stressed groups. The results revealed significant changes in estrus behavior, hormone secretion, and reproductive health in heat-stressed sheep, with a shortened estrus duration, prolonged estrous cycles, and decreased levels of FSH, LH, E2, and P4. A total of 520, 649, and 482 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified in the hypothalamus, pituitary, and ovary, respectively. The DEGs were enriched in pathways related to hormone secretion, neurotransmission, cell proliferation, and immune response, with significant involvement of the p53 and cAMP signaling pathways. Tissue-specific responses to heat stress were observed, with distinct regulatory roles in each organ, including GPCR activity and cytokine signaling in the hypothalamus, calcium-regulated exocytosis in the pituitary, and cilium assembly and ATP binding in the ovary. Key genes such as SYN3, RPH3A, and IGFBP2 were identified as central to the coordinated regulation of the HPO axis. These findings provide new insights into the molecular basis of heat stress-induced impairments in reproductive function—manifested by altered estrous behavior, reduced hormone secretion (FSH, LH, E2, and P4), and disrupted gene expression in the hypothalamic–pituitary–ovarian (HPO) axis—and offer potential targets for improving heat tolerance and reproductive regulation in sheep. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Effects of Heat Stress on Animal Reproduction and Production)
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16 pages, 298 KiB  
Review
Small-Molecule Drugs in Pediatric Neuro-Oncology
by Stephanie Vairy and George Michaiel
Curr. Oncol. 2025, 32(8), 417; https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32080417 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 96
Abstract
Advances in molecular diagnostics have enabled precision medicine approaches in pediatric neuro-oncology, with small-molecule drugs emerging as promising therapeutic candidates targeting specific genetic and epigenetic alterations in central nervous system (CNS) tumors. This review provides a focused overview of several small-molecule agents under [...] Read more.
Advances in molecular diagnostics have enabled precision medicine approaches in pediatric neuro-oncology, with small-molecule drugs emerging as promising therapeutic candidates targeting specific genetic and epigenetic alterations in central nervous system (CNS) tumors. This review provides a focused overview of several small-molecule agents under investigation or in early clinical use, including ONC201, tazemetostat, vorasidenib, CDK inhibitors, selinexor, and aurora kinase A inhibitors, among others. Highlighted are their mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetic properties, early efficacy data, and tolerability in pediatric populations. Despite encouraging preclinical and early-phase results, most agents face limitations due to study heterogeneity, lack of large-scale pediatric randomized trials, and challenges in drug delivery to the CNS. The review underscores the critical need for robust prospective clinical trials for the integration of these therapies into pediatric neuro-oncology care. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Clinical Outcomes and New Treatments in Pediatric Brain Tumors)
18 pages, 2205 KiB  
Article
Lupeol Attenuates Oxysterol-Induced Dendritic Cell Activation Through NRF2-Mediated Antioxidant and Anti-Inflammatory Effects
by Sarmistha Saha, Antonella Capozzi, Elisabetta Profumo, Cristiano Alessandri, Maurizio Sorice, Luciano Saso and Brigitta Buttari
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(15), 7179; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26157179 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 93
Abstract
Oxysterols such as 7-ketocholesterol (7KCh) contribute to the pathogenesis of autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases by inducing oxidative stress and promoting pro-inflammatory immune cell activation. Dendritic cells (DCs) play a central role in maintaining immune tolerance, and their dysregulation is a key driver [...] Read more.
Oxysterols such as 7-ketocholesterol (7KCh) contribute to the pathogenesis of autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases by inducing oxidative stress and promoting pro-inflammatory immune cell activation. Dendritic cells (DCs) play a central role in maintaining immune tolerance, and their dysregulation is a key driver of autoimmunity. Targeting DCs by using natural compounds offers a promising strategy to restore redox balance and suppress aberrant immune responses. This study investigated the immunomodulatory and antioxidant properties of Lupeol, a natural triterpenoid, in human monocyte-derived DCs exposed to 7KCh. Flow cytometry and cytokine profiling demonstrated that Lupeol preserved the immature, tolerogenic phenotype of DCs by promoting a dose-dependent increase in the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. Lupeol also inhibited the 7KCh-induced upregulation of maturation markers (CD83, CD86) and suppressed the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-12p70. Functionally, Lupeol-treated DCs directed T cell polarization toward an anti-inflammatory and regulatory profile while dampening the inflammatory responses triggered by 7KCh. This immunoregulatory effect was further supported by the decreased secretion of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-12p70 in DC culture supernatants. Mechanistic analyses using immunofluorescence showed that Lupeol alone significantly increased nuclear NRF2 levels and upregulated HO-1 expression. Western blot analysis further confirmed Lupeol’s ability to activate the KEAP1-NRF2 signaling pathway, as evidenced by increased expression of NRF2 and its downstream target, NQO1. The use of ML385, a selective NRF2 inhibitor, in ROS and cytokine assays supported the involvement of NRF2 in mediating the Lupeol antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects in DCs. Notably, the oxidative burden induced by 7KCh limited the full activation of NRF2 signaling triggered by Lupeol. Furthermore, docking and MM/PBSA analyses revealed the specific interactions of Lupeol with the kelch domain of KEAP1. These findings suggest that Lupeol may serve as a promising orally available immunomodulatory agent capable of promoting tolerogenic DCs, offering potential applications in autoimmune and other chronic inflammatory diseases. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Updates on Synthetic and Natural Antioxidants)
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28 pages, 4702 KiB  
Article
Clinical Failure of General-Purpose AI in Photographic Scoliosis Assessment: A Diagnostic Accuracy Study
by Cemre Aydin, Ozden Bedre Duygu, Asli Beril Karakas, Eda Er, Gokhan Gokmen, Anil Murat Ozturk and Figen Govsa
Medicina 2025, 61(8), 1342; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina61081342 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 203
Abstract
Background and Objectives: General-purpose multimodal large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used for medical image interpretation despite lacking clinical validation. This study evaluates the diagnostic reliability of ChatGPT-4o and Claude 2 in photographic assessment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) against radiological standards. This [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: General-purpose multimodal large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used for medical image interpretation despite lacking clinical validation. This study evaluates the diagnostic reliability of ChatGPT-4o and Claude 2 in photographic assessment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) against radiological standards. This study examines two critical questions: whether families can derive reliable preliminary assessments from LLMs through analysis of clinical photographs and whether LLMs exhibit cognitive fidelity in their visuospatial reasoning capabilities for AIS assessment. Materials and Methods: A prospective diagnostic accuracy study (STARD-compliant) analyzed 97 adolescents (74 with AIS and 23 with postural asymmetry). Standardized clinical photographs (nine views/patient) were assessed by two LLMs and two orthopedic residents against reference radiological measurements. Primary outcomes included diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity/specificity), Cobb angle concordance (Lin’s CCC), inter-rater reliability (Cohen’s κ), and measurement agreement (Bland–Altman LoA). Results: The LLMs exhibited hazardous diagnostic inaccuracy: ChatGPT misclassified all non-AIS cases (specificity 0% [95% CI: 0.0–14.8]), while Claude 2 generated 78.3% false positives. Systematic measurement errors exceeded clinical tolerance: ChatGPT overestimated thoracic curves by +10.74° (LoA: −21.45° to +42.92°), exceeding tolerance by >800%. Both LLMs showed inverse biomechanical concordance in thoracolumbar curves (CCC ≤ −0.106). Inter-rater reliability fell below random chance (ChatGPT κ = −0.039). Universal proportional bias (slopes ≈ −1.0) caused severe curve underestimation (e.g., 10–15° error for 50° deformities). Human evaluators demonstrated superior bias control (0.3–2.8° vs. 2.6–10.7°) but suboptimal specificity (21.7–26.1%) and hazardous lumbar concordance (CCC: −0.123). Conclusions: General-purpose LLMs demonstrate clinically unacceptable inaccuracy in photographic AIS assessment, contraindicating clinical deployment. Catastrophic false positives, systematic measurement errors exceeding tolerance by 480–1074%, and inverse diagnostic concordance necessitate urgent regulatory safeguards under frameworks like the EU AI Act. Neither LLMs nor photographic human assessment achieve reliability thresholds for standalone screening, mandating domain-specific algorithm development and integration of 3D modalities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Diagnosis and Treatment of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis)
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24 pages, 9486 KiB  
Article
StMAPKK1 Enhances Thermotolerance in Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) by Enhancing Antioxidant Defense and Photosynthetic Efficiency Under Heat Stress
by Xi Zhu, Yasir Majeed, Kaitong Wang, Xiaoqin Duan, Nengkang Guan, Junfu Luo, Haifei Zheng, Huafen Zou, Hui Jin, Zhuo Chen and Yu Zhang
Plants 2025, 14(15), 2289; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14152289 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 184
Abstract
The functional role of MAPKK genes in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) under high-temperature stress remains unexplored, despite their critical importance in stress signaling and yield protection. We characterized StMAPKK1, a novel group D MAPKK localized to plasma membrane/cytoplasm. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain [...] Read more.
The functional role of MAPKK genes in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) under high-temperature stress remains unexplored, despite their critical importance in stress signaling and yield protection. We characterized StMAPKK1, a novel group D MAPKK localized to plasma membrane/cytoplasm. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) revealed cultivar-specific upregulation in potato (‘Atlantic’ and ‘Desiree’) leaves under heat stress (25 °C, 30 °C, and 35 °C). Transgenic lines overexpressing (OE) StMAPKK1 exhibited elevated antioxidant enzyme activity, including ascorbate peroxidase (APX), catalase (CAT), superoxide dismutase (SOD), and peroxidase (POD), mitigating oxidative damage. Increased proline and chlorophyll accumulation and reduced oxidative stress markers, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and malondialdehyde (MDA), indicate improved cellular redox homeostasis. The upregulation of key antioxidant and heat stress-responsive genes (StAPX, StCAT1/2, StPOD12/47, StFeSOD2/3, StMnSOD, StCuZnSOD1/2, StHSFA3 and StHSP20/70/90) strengthened the enzymatic defense system, enhanced thermotolerance, and improved photosynthetic efficiency, with significant improvements in net photosynthetic rate (Pn), transpiration rate (E), and stomatal conductance (Gs) under heat stress (35 °C) in StMAPKK1-OE plants. Superior growth and biomass (plant height, plant and its root fresh and dry weights, and tuber yield) accumulation, confirming the positive role of StMAPKK1 in thermotolerance. Conversely, RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated suppression of StMAPKK1 led to a reduction in enzymatic activity, proline content, and chlorophyll levels, exacerbating oxidative stress. Downregulation of antioxidant-related genes impaired ROS scavenging capacity and declines in photosynthetic efficiency, growth, and biomass, accompanied by elevated H2O2 and MDA accumulation, highlighting the essential role of StMAPKK1 in heat stress adaptation. These findings highlight StMAPKK1’s potential as a key genetic target for breeding heat-tolerant potato varieties, offering a foundation for improving crop resilience in warming climates. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cell Physiology and Stress Adaptation of Crops)
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