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Discussions regarding the planned European Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS), the missing third pillar of the European Banking Union, have been ongoing since the Commission published its initial legisla-tive proposal in 2015. A breakthrough in negotiations has yet to be achieved. The gridlock on EDIS is most commonly attributed to moral hazard concerns over insufficient risk reduction harboured on the side of northern member states, particularly Germany, due to the weak state of some other member states’ banking sectors. While moral hazard based on uneven risk reduction is helpful for explaining divergent member-state preferences on the scope of necessary risk reduction, this does not explain preferences on the institutional design of EDIS. In this paper, we argue that contrary to persistent differences on necessary risk reduction, preferences regarding the institutional design of EDIS have become more closely aligned. We analyse how preferences on EDIS developed in the key member states of Germany, France, and Italy. In all sampled countries, we find path-dependent benefits con-nected to the current design of national Deposit Guarantee Schemes (DGS) that shifted preferences of the banking sector or significant subsectors in favour of retaining national DGSs. Overall, given that a compromise on risk-reduction can be accomplished, we argue that current preferences in these key member states provide an opportunity to implement EDIS in the form of a reinsurance system that maintains national DGSs in combination with a supranational fund.
The permeability and inflammatory tissue reaction to Mucomaix® matrix (MM), a non- cross-linked collagen-based matrix was evaluated in both ex vivo and in vivo settings. Liquid platelet rich fibrin (PRF), a blood concentrate system, was used to assess its capacity to absorb human proteins and interact with blood cells ex vivo. In the in vivo aspect, 12 Wister rats had MM implanted subcutaneously, whereas another 12 rats (control) were sham-operated without biomaterial implantation. On days 3, 15 and 30, explantation was completed (four rats per time-point) to evaluate the tissue reactions to the matrix. Data collected were statistically analyzed using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Tukey multiple comparisons tests (GraphPad Prism 8). The matrix absorbed the liquid PRF in the ex vivo study. Day 3 post-implantation revealed mild tissue inflammatory reaction with presence of mononuclear cells in the implantation site and on the biomaterial surface (mostly CD68-positive macrophages). The control group at this stage had more mononuclear cells than the test group. From day 15, multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs) were seen in the implantation site and the outer third of the matrix with marked increase on day 30 and spread to the matrix core. The presence of these CD68-positive MNGCs was associated with significant matrix vascularization. The matrix degraded significantly over the study period, but its core was still visible as of day 30 post-implantation. The high permeability and fast degradation properties of MM were highlighted.
The miRNA biogenesis is tightly regulated to avoid dysfunction and consequent disease development. Here, we describe modulation of miRNA processing as a novel noncanonical function of the 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) enzyme in monocytic cells. In differentiated Mono Mac 6 (MM6) cells, we found an in situ interaction of 5-LO with Dicer, a key enzyme in miRNA biogenesis. RNA sequencing of small noncoding RNAs revealed a functional impact, knockout of 5-LO altered the expression profile of several miRNAs. Effects of 5-LO could be observed at two levels. qPCR analyses thus indicated that (a) 5-LO promotes the transcription of the evolutionarily conserved miR-99b/let-7e/miR-125a cluster and (b) the 5-LO-Dicer interaction downregulates the processing of pre-let-7e, resulting in an increase in miR-125a and miR-99b levels by 5-LO without concomitant changes in let-7e levels in differentiated MM6 cells. Our observations suggest that 5-LO regulates the miRNA profile by modulating the Dicer-mediated processing of distinct pre-miRNAs. 5-LO inhibits the formation of let-7e which is a well-known inducer of cell differentiation, but promotes the generation of miR-99b and miR-125a known to induce cell proliferation and the maintenance of leukemic stem cell functions.
The term fatigue is not only used to describe a sleepy state with a lack of drive, as observed in patients with chronic physical illnesses, but also a state with an inhibition of drive and central nervous system (CNS) hyperarousal, as frequently observed in patients with major depression. An electroencephalogram (EEG)-based algorithm has been developed to objectively assess CNS arousal and to disentangle these pathophysiologically heterogeneous forms of fatigue. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that fatigued patients with CNS hyperarousal score higher on depressive symptoms than those without this neurophysiological pattern. Methods: Subjects with fatigue (Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory sum-score > 40) in the context of cancer, neuroinflammatory, or autoimmune diseases were drawn from the 60+ cohort of the Leipzig Research Center for Civilization Diseases. CNS arousal was assessed by automatic EEG-vigilance stage classification using the Vigilance Algorithm Leipzig (VIGALL 2.1) based on 20 min EEG recordings at rest with eyes closed. Depression was assessed by the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS-SR). Results: Sixty participants (33 female; median age: 67.5 years) were included in the analysis. As hypothesized, fatigued patients with CNS hyperarousal had higher IDS-SR scores than those without hyperarousal (F1,58 = 18.34; p < 0.0001, η2 = 0.240). Conclusion: hyperaroused fatigue in patients with chronic physical illness may be a sign of comorbid depression.
Development of treatment strategies of chronic inflammatory disorders relies on on-going progress in drug discovery approaches and related molecular biologics. This study presents a gene reporter-based approach of phenotypic screening for anti-inflammatory compounds in the context of rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
CEBPD gene, used as the target gene for the screening readout, encodes CCAAT/enhancer binding protein delta (C/EBPδ) transcription factor (TF). Structural and regulatory characteristics of CEBPD gene as well as function of C/EBPδ TF in the context of inflammation satisfied assay requirements. C/EBPδ TF acts as a key regula-tor of inflammatory gene transcription in macrophages (Mϕ) and is observed to con-tribute to disease development in both a rodent model of RA and RA patient biopsies.
Despite well-described pro-inflammatory effects of C/EBPδ TF, it functions as a cell context-specific signal integrator showing also an anti-inflammatory activity. Conse-quently, both activation and inhibition of CEBPD alike may display a desired anti-inflammatory effect. The aim of this study was to develop a high-throughput screening assay for
CEBPD-modulating compounds and confirm hit compounds’ anti-inflammatory effects via gene expression analysis.
Generation and characterization of a multi-gene-reporter cassette 1.0 encoding enzy-matic secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) gene reporter was a priority during the assay development. Chemiluminescent SEAP assay demonstrating high assay sensitivi-ty, broad linear range, high reproducibility and repeatability was chosen to monitor activity of the defined CEBPD promoter (CEBPD::SEAP). PMA-differentiated and M1-polarized THP-1-derived Mϕ stably expressing multi-gene-reporter cassette 1.0 were used as the assay’s cellular system. mRNA expression of both reporter CEBPD::SEAP and endogenous CEBPD mirrored each other in response to a LPS and IFN-g-triggered inflammatory stimulus (M1 treatment), even though the defined CEBPD promoter re-gion, utilized in the assay, contained only the most proximal and known regulatory se-quences. SEAP chemiluminescence in the reporter cells´ supernatant reliably correlat-ed with the M1 treatment-induced CEBPD::SEAP gene expression. The final screening protocol was developed for semi-automatic screening in the 384-well format.
In total, 2054 compounds from LOPAC®1280 and ENZO®774 libraries were screened twice
using the enzymatic SEAP readout with subsequent analysis of 18 selected compounds: nine with the highest and nine with the lowest signals, further characterized by qPCR. Gene expression levels of endogenous CEBPD, CEBPD::SEAP reporter as well as, IL-6,
IL-1β, and CCL2 as inflammatory markers were quantified. qPCR assays failed to corre-late to SEAP readout in 15 compounds within three standard deviations (SDs) from sol-vent control: nine low signal and six high signal compounds. Demonstrating both assay sensitivity and specificity, a correlation between qPCR gene expression and SEAP readout was observed for three hit compounds with signals above three SDs: BET inhib-itors (BETi) GSK 1210151A and Ro 11-1464 as well as an HDAC inhibitor (HDACi) vori-nostat. The control compound trichostatin A (TSA) that reproducibly upregulated SEAP readout is also an HDAC inhibitor with a similar structure to vorinostat and was there-fore included in the anti-inflammatory phenotype analysis.
The observed suppression of IL-6, IL-1ß, and CCL2 gene expression by hit compounds suggested their anti-inflammatory effect in THP-1 reporter Mϕ. mRNA expression of
IL-6 and CCL2 was suppressed by HDACi and BETi at both 4 and 24 hours, while BETi reduced IL-1β mRNA expression 24 hour time point. BETi significantly upregulated gene expression of both reporter CEBPD::SEAP and endogenous CEBPD, 4 hours after M1 treatment. At the same time point, HDACi completely abolished the mRNA expres-sion of the endogenous CEBPD, while simultaneously upregulating mRNA expression of the reporter CEBPD::SEAP. The use of the most proximal 300 base pairs region of en-dogenous CEBPD promoter, making the upstream regulatory elements unavailable in the assay, may account for differential expression levels of SEAP and C/EBPδ TF. This observation corroborated the need to include a longer and more extensive CEBPD´s gene regulatory area. Thus, an improved multi-gene-reporter cassette 2.0 was gener-ated to be used on the basis of a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) covering CE-BPD´s genomic area of about 200,000 base pairs.
The generated screening assay is flexible, reliable, and sensitive displaying potential for drug discovery and drug repurposing. The pharmacological modulation of CEBPD gene expression, first reported for GSK 1210151A, Ro 11-1464, and vorinostat, contrib-utes to the understanding of inflammatory responses in Mϕ and may have RA thera-peutic applications.
In the context of data science, data projection and clustering are common procedures. The chosen analysis method is crucial to avoid faulty pattern recognition. It is therefore necessary to know the properties and especially the limitations of projection and clustering algorithms. This report describes a collection of datasets that are grouped together in the Fundamental Clustering and Projection Suite (FCPS). The FCPS contains 10 datasets with the names "Atom", "Chainlink", "EngyTime", "Golfball", "Hepta", "Lsun", "Target", "Tetra", "TwoDiamonds", and "WingNut". Common clustering methods occasionally identified non-existent clusters or assigned data points to the wrong clusters in the FCPS suite. Likewise, common data projection methods could only partially reproduce the data structure correctly on a two-dimensional plane. In conclusion, the FCPS dataset collection addresses general challenges for clustering and projection algorithms such as lack of linear separability, different or small inner class spacing, classes defined by data density rather than data spacing, no cluster structure at all, outliers, or classes that are in contact. This report describes a collection of datasets that are grouped together in the Fundamental Clustering and Projection Suite (FCPS). It is designed to address specific problems of structure discovery in high-dimensional spaces.