Publications by authors named "Yasemin-Xiomara Zurke"

Article Synopsis
  • The immune system plays a crucial role in cardiovascular health, particularly in relation to inflammation and its impact on heart disease.
  • Atherosclerosis is characterized by lipid-driven inflammation, where macrophages are key players; however, recent research indicates that there are different macrophage states associated with lipids and inflammation.
  • This study identifies a specific type of macrophage linked to cerebrovascular events and suggests that targeting these inflammatory lipid-associated macrophages could be a new treatment approach for cardiovascular disease.
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Single cell spatial interrogation of the immune-structural interactions in COVID -19 lungs is challenging, mainly because of the marked cellular infiltrate and architecturally distorted microstructure. To address this, we develop a suite of mathematical tools to search for statistically significant co-locations amongst immune and structural cells identified using 37-plex imaging mass cytometry. This unbiased method reveals a cellular map interleaved with an inflammatory network of immature neutrophils, cytotoxic CD8 T cells, megakaryocytes and monocytes co-located with regenerating alveolar progenitors and endothelium.

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Sepsis arises from diverse and incompletely understood dysregulated host response processes following infection that leads to life-threatening organ dysfunction. Here we showed that neutrophils and emergency granulopoiesis drove a maladaptive response during sepsis. We generated a whole-blood single-cell multiomic atlas (272,993 cells, n = 39 individuals) of the sepsis immune response that identified populations of immunosuppressive mature and immature neutrophils.

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Invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells act at the interface between lipid metabolism and immunity because of their restriction to lipid antigens presented on CD1d by antigen-presenting cells (APCs). How foreign lipid antigens are delivered to APCs remains elusive. Since lipoproteins routinely bind glycosylceramides structurally similar to lipid antigens, we hypothesized that circulating lipoproteins form complexes with foreign lipid antigens.

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Succinate is released by skeletal muscle during exercise and activates /GPR91. Signaling of SUCNR1 is involved in metabolite-sensing paracrine communication in skeletal muscle during exercise. However, the specific cell types responding to succinate and the directionality of communication are unclear.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The text is a correction relating to a previously published article.
  • - It specifically addresses issues found in the original article identified by the DOI 10.1038/s44161-023-00295-x.
  • - This correction is essential for ensuring the accuracy and integrity of the published research.
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Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease of the arterial wall, characterized by the formation of plaques containing lipid, connective tissue and immune cells in the intima of large and medium-sized arteries. Over the past three decades, a substantial reduction in cardiovascular mortality has been achieved largely through LDL-cholesterol-lowering regimes and therapies targeting other traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus and obesity. However, the overall benefits of targeting these risk factors have stagnated, and a huge global burden of cardiovascular disease remains.

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