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      Preparation of salt microparticles via the anti-solvent recrystallization process

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          Abstract

          The anti-solvent recrystallization process for the preparation of salt microparticles is introduced. The micron size of salt particles was confirmed by scanning electron microscopy. The preparation conditions such as the antisolvent types, dripping acceleration, stirring time, the volume ratio of antisolvent and solvent, and adding sequence of solvent were optimized. The experimental results indicated that these preparation conditions were as follows: The saturated salt solution was added into absolute alcohol at a dripping acceleration of 10 mL · min −1, a stirring time duration of 30 min, and an antisolvent and solvent volume ratio of 4 : 1. Salt microparticles with an average diameter of about 6.3 μm, uniform size distribution and better crystallization were obtained under the above optimization conditions.

          Most cited references26

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          Trends in international asthma mortality: analysis of data from the WHO Mortality Database from 46 countries (1993-2012).

          International time trends in asthma mortality have been strongly affected by changes in management and in particular drug treatments. However, little is known about how asthma mortality has changed over the past decade. In this study, we assessed these international trends.
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            Pollution and children's health

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              Glucocorticoid-driven transcriptomes in human airway epithelial cells: commonalities, differences and functional insight from cell lines and primary cells

              Background Glucocorticoids act on the glucocorticoid receptor (GR; NR3C1) to resolve inflammation and, as inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), are the cornerstone of treatment for asthma. However, reduced efficacy in severe disease or exacerbations indicates a need to improve ICS actions. Methods Glucocorticoid-driven transcriptomes were compared using PrimeView microarrays between primary human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells and the model cell lines, pulmonary type II A549 and bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells. Results In BEAS-2B cells, budesonide induced (≥2-fold, P ≤ 0.05) or, in a more delayed fashion, repressed (≤0.5-fold, P ≤ 0.05) the expression of 63, 133, 240, and 257 or 15, 56, 236, and 344 mRNAs at 1, 2, 6, and 18 h, respectively. Within the early-induced mRNAs were multiple transcriptional activators and repressors, thereby providing mechanisms for the subsequent modulation of gene expression. Using the above criteria, 17 (BCL6, BIRC3, CEBPD, ERRFI1, FBXL16, FKBP5, GADD45B, IRS2, KLF9, PDK4, PER1, RGCC, RGS2, SEC14L2, SLC16A12, TFCP2L1, TSC22D3) induced and 8 (ARL4C, FLRT2, IER3, IL11, PLAUR, SEMA3A, SLC4A7, SOX9) repressed mRNAs were common between A549, BEAS-2B and HBE cells at 6 h. As absolute gene expression change showed greater commonality, lowering the cut-off (≥1.25 or ≤ 0.8-fold) within these groups produced 93 induced and 82 repressed genes in common. Since large changes in few mRNAs and/or small changes in many mRNAs may drive function, gene ontology (GO)/pathway analyses were performed using both stringency criteria. Budesonide-induced genes showed GO term enrichment for positive and negative regulation of transcription, signaling, proliferation, apoptosis, and movement, as well as FOXO and PI3K-Akt signaling pathways. Repressed genes were enriched for inflammatory signaling pathways (TNF, NF-κB) and GO terms for cytokine activity, chemotaxis and cell signaling. Reduced growth factor expression and effects on proliferation and apoptosis were highlighted. Conclusions While glucocorticoids repress mRNAs associated with inflammation, prior induction of transcriptional activators and repressors may explain longer-term responses to these agents. Furthermore, positive and negative effects on signaling, proliferation, migration and apoptosis were revealed. Since many such gene expression changes occurred in human airways post-ICS inhalation, the effects observed in cell lines and primary HBE cells in vitro may be relevant to ICS in vivo. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12920-018-0467-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ijmr
                International Journal of Materials Research
                Carl Hanser Verlag
                1862-5282
                2195-8556
                12 February 2020
                : 111
                : 2
                : 183-187
                Affiliations
                1 School of Pharmacy, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang, P.R. China
                Author notes
                [] Correspondence address, Prof. Ruijiang Liu, Jiangsu University, School of Pharmacy, Zhenjiang 212013, P.R. China. Fax: +86-511-85038201, E-mail: luckystar_lrj@ 123456ujs.edu.cn
                Article
                MK111862
                10.3139/146.111862
                7c4496eb-bcff-4b0b-9262-798da3b23ee6
                © 2020, Carl Hanser Verlag, München
                History
                : 15 April 2019
                : 13 August 2019
                : 7 January 2020
                Page count
                References: 27, Pages: 5
                Categories
                Original Contributions

                Materials technology,Materials characterization,Materials science
                Salt microparticles,Anti-solvent recrystallization,Optimization

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