Double

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Terms modified by Double

  • double aortic arch
  • double bind
  • double blind
  • double blind placebo
  • double blind study
  • double blind trial
  • double bond
  • double bond conversion
  • double c
  • double chain
  • double cone
  • double cortex
  • double dissociation
  • double dose
  • double emulsion
  • double exchange
  • double excitation
  • double exposure
  • double helice
  • double helix
  • double hydrophilic block copolymer
  • double hydroxide
  • double immunofluorescence
  • double immunofluorescence staining
  • double immunohistochemistry
  • double immunostaining
  • double infection
  • double infections
  • double injection
  • double inversion recovery
  • double knockout
  • double knockout mouse
  • double label
  • double labeling
  • double labelling
  • double layer
  • double layer structure
  • double membrane
  • double minute
  • double mutant
  • double mutant mouse
  • double mutation
  • double outlet right ventricle
  • double peak
  • double positive
  • double positivity
  • double potential
  • double quantum dot
  • double quantum well
  • double resonance
  • double stained
  • double staining
  • double standards
  • double stimulation
  • double strand
  • double strand break
  • double transfection
  • double transgenic mouse
  • double treatment
  • double wall carbon nanotube

  • Selected Abstracts


    RHEOLOGY OF DOUBLE (W/O/W) EMULSIONS PREPARED WITH SOYBEAN MILK AND FORTIFIED WITH CALCIUM

    JOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 5 2010
    ANDRÉS L. MÁRQUEZ
    ABSTRACT The objective of this work was to study the rheological behavior of water-in-oil-in-water (w/o/w) emulsions prepared with soybean milk and sunflower oil, with different calcium solutions as the internal aqueous phase, in order to evaluate them as a vegetable substitute of whipped dairy cream. The obtained systems exhibited a creamy texture, which was attributed to the swelling of w/o droplets because of the osmotic gradient generated by the inclusion of soluble salts in the internal aqueous phase. A secondary factor could be the flocculation of w/o droplets due to the interaction of released calcium with soybean proteins at the interface. Consequently, the increase of calcium chloride content produced emulsions with higher consistency. A pasteurization produced flocculation and coalescence of w/o droplets only at high calcium chloride content. These double emulsions could be a potential alternative to the whipped dairy cream, because of their texture, reduced fat content and calcium contribution. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS This article deals with the formulation of novel calcium-fortified food emulsions prepared with soybean milk and sunflower oil. Because calcium needs to be isolated from soybean milk components (proteins and phospholipids), we proposed to include calcium salts in the internal aqueous phase of a water-in-oil-in-water (w/o/w) emulsion. The practical applications of this research could include the formulation of low lipid content emulsions and the isolation of a component which is incompatible with the continuous aqueous phase. Particularly, this work leads to the understanding of how the inclusion of calcium salts in the internal aqueous phase of a w/o/w emulsion prepared with soybean milk affects the rheology and microstructure of the system. The results led to the conclusion that these emulsions can work as a whipped dairy cream substitute with vegetal components, low lipid content and important calcium contribution. [source]


    The Listening Subject of Japanese Modernity and His Auditory Double: Citing, Sighting, and Siting the Modern Japanese Woman

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 2 2003
    Miyako Inoue
    First page of article [source]


    Synaptic contacts between an identified type of ON cone bipolar cell and ganglion cells in the mouse retina

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2005
    Bin Lin
    Abstract We surveyed the potential contacts between an identified type of bipolar cell and retinal ganglion cells in the mouse. By crossing two existing mouse strains (line 357 and line GFP-M), we created a double transgenic strain in which GFP is expressed by all members of a single type of ON cone bipolar cell and a sparse, mixed population of retinal ganglion cells. The GFP-expressing bipolar cells appear to be those termed CB4a of Pignatelli & Strettoi [(2004) J. Comp. Neurol., 476, 254,266] and type 7 of Ghosh et al. [(2004) J. Comp. Neurol., 469, 70,82 and J. Comp. Neurol., 476, 202,203]. The labelled ganglion cells include examples of most or all types of ganglion cells present in the mouse. By studying the juxtaposition of their processes in three dimensions, we could learn which ganglion cell types are potential synaptic targets of the line 357 bipolar cell. Of 12 ganglion cell types observed, 10 types could be definitively ruled out as major synaptic targets of the line 357 bipolar cells. One type of monostratified ganglion cell and one bistratified cell tightly cofasciculate with axon terminals of the line 357 bipolar cells. Double labelling for kinesin II demonstrates colocalization of bipolar cell ribbons at the sites of contact between these two types of ganglion cell and the line 357 bipolar cells. [source]


    Interferon-, synergistically enhances induction of interleukin-6 by double stranded RNA in HeLa cells

    FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 9 2000
    Jennifer L. Harcourt
    Double stranded RNA (dsRNA), an intermediate that is common during viral infection, directly induces much higher levels of expression of interleukin-6 (IL-6) mRNA than does the cytokine IL-1,. Interferon , (IFN,) by itself does not induce expression of IL-6; nonetheless, IFN, pretreatment dramatically enhances IL-6 induction by dsRNA but not by IL-1,. Mutation of either the activating transcription factor/cyclic AMP response element binding protein (ATF/CREB) or the NF-IL-6 binding element within the IL-6 promoter eliminates most responsiveness of CAT reporter constructs to either dsRNA or to IL-1,. IFN, pretreatment partially restores responsiveness to dsRNA but not to IL-1, when either the ATF/CREB site or the NF-IL-6 site is mutated, but at least one of these sites must be intact for responsiveness to be restored. Mutation of the ,B binding site in the IL-6 promoter eliminates responsiveness to either IL-1, or to dsRNA, and pretreatment with IFN, does not restore any responsiveness. Incubation with dsRNA leads to a decrease in protein translation, especially in cells that have been pretreated with IFN,. Nonetheless, IFN, pretreatment followed by dsRNA leads to very high IL-6 protein levels. These studies demonstrate that major differences exist in the induction of IL-6 at both the mRNA and protein levels by dsRNA compared to cytokines and that IFN, pretreatment selectively enhances IL-6 induction by dsRNA but not by IL-1,. The high levels of IL-6 expression that result when cells encounter class I IFN prior to dsRNA suggest a mechanism for a heightened host response to viral infection with heightened production of this pleotropic cytokine. [source]


    Carbon Nanotubes: (Thermal and Structural Characterizations of Individual Single-, Double-, and Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes) Adv.

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 24 2009
    Funct.
    Here, M. T. Pettes and L. Shi report for the first time the thermal conductance, diameter, and chiral angle for a single single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT). A scanning electron micrograph of the suspended micro-thermometer device and transmission electron microscopy images used to determine the SWCNT's (22, 12) chirality are shown in this frontispiece image, along with the rendered unit cell. [source]


    Thermal and Structural Characterizations of Individual Single-, Double-, and Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 24 2009
    Michael T. Pettes
    Abstract Thermal conductance measurements of individual single- (S), double- (D), and multi- (M) walled (W) carbon nanotubes (CNTs) grown using thermal chemical vapor deposition between two suspended microthermometers are reported. The crystal structure of the measured CNT samples is characterized in detail using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The thermal conductance, diameter, and chirality are all determined on the same individual SWCNT. The thermal contact resistance per unit length is obtained as 78,585,m,K,W,1 for three as-grown 10,14,nm diameter MWCNTs on rough Pt electrodes, and decreases by more than 2 times after the deposition of amorphous platinum,carbon composites at the contacts. The obtained intrinsic thermal conductivity of approximately 42,48, 178,336, and 269,343,W,m,1,K,1 at room-temperature for the three MWCNT samples correlates well with TEM-observed defects spaced approximately 13, 20, and 29,nm apart, respectively; whereas the effective thermal conductivity is found to be limited by the thermal contact resistance to be about 600,W,m,1,K,1 at room temperature for the as-grown DWCNT and SWCNT samples without the contact deposition. [source]


    Proteomic identification of an upregulated isoform of annexin A3 in the rat brain following reversible cerebral ischemia

    GLIA, Issue 16 2007
    Heike Junker
    Abstract We used proteomics to identify regulated proteins following cerebral ischemia in a rat model. Young rats were subjected to reversible middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion and proteins were extracted from the peri-infarcted and the corresponding contralateral area at days 3 and 14 postischemia. Proteins were analyzed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometry. We report for the first time that an isoform of annexin A3 (ANXA3) was among the upregulated proteins in the postischemic rat brain. The results were confirmed by real-time PCR and by western blotting. Double- and triple-immunostaining with neuronal and microglia/macrophagic markers demonstrated that ANXA3 is produced by resting microglia in control tissue and by activated microglial/macrophage cells in the infarcted area. 3D-images of the infarcted area suggest that ANXA3 is associated with a phagocytic phenotype. Our study identifies ANXA3 as a novel marker of brain microglia, which should be of substantial value in future studies of microglial cells and its role in the postischemic brain. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Hepatic expression of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase in the human liver of patients with alcoholic liver disease

    HEPATOLOGY RESEARCH, Issue 11 2007
    Makoto Irie
    Background:, Gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) has been recognized as an enzyme that converts glutathione into cysteine, and it is localized predominantly within the liver. Serum GGT is clinically recognized as the most useful marker for diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease (ALD). Methods:, GGT localization within the liver was examined immunohistochemically using an anti-GGT antibody and was visualized by confocal laser scanning microscopy in ALD and normal livers. Double immunostaining for GGT and dipeptidylpeptidase-IV (DPP-IV) was carried out to evaluate GGT localization in greater detail. Results:, Expression of GGT protein and mRNA was studied with immunoblot analysis and in situ hybridization, respectively. Immunohistochemically, the expression of GGT in the normal liver was faintly demonstrated in the bile canaliculi of hepatocytes and in biliary epithelial cells. In ALD livers, GGT was clearly demonstrated at the same sites. Double immunostaining demonstrated that GGT and DPP-IV were colocalized in hepatocytes in the ALD liver. In situ hybridization clearly demonstrated GGT-mRNA within the cytoplasm of hepatocytes and biliary epithelial cells. Immunoblot analysis revealed that GGT protein expression was increased in the ALD livers compared with that seen in the normal livers. Conclusion:, These findings indicate that GGT in control and alcoholic livers is synthesized in hepatocytes and biliary epithelial cells, and is localized within the bile canalicular membrane and the luminal membrane in those cells, respectively. In conclusion, GGT synthesis and protein expression are increased in ALD livers, leading to the elevation of serum levels of GGT that are commonly noted in patients with the disease. [source]


    Narrow QRS Tachycardia With Double His Potentials: What Is the Mechanism?

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 6 2010
    Ph.D., ROLAND STROOBANDT M.D.
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Distribution of Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Binding Protein-Immunoreactivity in the Rat Hypothalamus: Association With Corticotropin-Releasing Factor-, Urocortin 1- and Vimentin-Immunoreactive Fibres

    JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 3 2005
    B. A. Henry
    Abstract Corticotropin-releasing factor binding protein (CRF-BP) is a 37-kDa protein with high affinity binding sites for both corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and urocortin 1. Previous studies have examined the distribution of CRF-BP mRNA and peptide within the central nervous system. Due to the predominant cortical localisation, very little is known about CRF-BP in subcortical structures including the hypothalamus. The present study employed immunohistochemistry to characterise the distribution of CRF-BP-like-immunoreactive (-ir) cells and fibres in the rat hypothalamus. Bipolar and multipolar CRF-BP-ir neurones were scattered throughout the rostro-caudal extent of the hypothalamus. Distinct clusters of CRF-BP-ir neurones were identified in the anterior and posterior parvocellular and dorsal cap subdivisions of the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), as well as in the dorsal hypothalamic area, dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus (DMN), ventral premammillary nucleus and zona incerta. CRF-BP-ir fibres extending from the third ventricle were found in the mediobasal hypothalamus and within the arcuate nucleus-median eminence region. Double immunostaining together with confocal microscopy demonstrated that the CRF-BP-immunostained fibres within the mediobasal hypothalamus coincided with vimentin immunostaining indicating that CRF-BP-ir is present within tanycytes. To define the relationship between CRF-BP-ir cells and endogenous ligands for CRF-BP, double immunohistochemistry was performed to examine possible sites within the hypothalamus where CRF- or urocortin 1-ir fibres innervate regions that contain CRF-BP-ir cell bodies. CRF-BP-ir cell bodies typically coincided with dense CRF-ir, but not urocortin 1-ir fibre innervation. CRF-ir fibre innervation was moderate to high within the anterior and posterior parvocellular subdivisions of the PVN, the dorsal cap of the PVN, DMN and the zona incerta; all regions that contained CRF-BP-ir cell populations. These studies demonstrate that, within the hypothalamus, CRF-BP-ir cells and fibres are concentrated within a circuitry known to be involved in mediating neuroendocrine and autonomic responses to stress. [source]


    Thyroxine Modulates Corticotropin-Releasing Factor but not Arginine Vasopressin Gene Expression in the Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus of the Developing Rat

    JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 8 2000
    N. Dakine
    Neonatal rats were daily injected with 100 ,g/kg T4 and killed at 4, 8 or 15 days. Circulating corticosterone and corticosteroid binding globulin concentrations increased in 8- and 15-day-old rats after T4 treatment. Plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) concentrations, pituitary ACTH content and pro-opiomelanocortin mRNA expression were unaffected in T4 -treated rats. T4 treatment induced an increase in corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) mRNA expression in the whole population of CRF synthesizing cells of the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) that became significant at day 8 and disappeared at day 15. Double labelling in situ hybridization revealed that CRF gene expression in the CRF+/arginine vasopressin (AVP)+ subpopulation was increased at days 4 and 8 and decreased at day 15. CRF immunoreactivity in the zona externa of the median eminence increased with age but was not affected by the experimental hyperthyroidism. The degree of CRF and AVP colocalization, the concentration of AVP mRNA in the parvo and magnocellular cell bodies of the PVN and the density of immunoreactive AVP in the zona interna or zona externa of the median eminence did not change after T4 treatment. Our data demonstrate that experimental hyperthyroidism accelerates the maturation of hypothalamic CRF gene expression, including in particular in the CRF+/AVP+ subpopulation, during the stress hyporesponsive period. These observations suggest that the physiological peak of plasma thyroxine that occurs between days 8,12 may participate in the maturation of hypothalamic CRF cells. [source]


    Improved resolution in two-dimensional 1H NMR spectra of peptides by band-selective, homonuclear decoupling during both the evolution and acquisition periods: application to characterization of the binding of peptides by heparin

    MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN CHEMISTRY, Issue 8 2006
    Jing Wang
    Abstract Two-dimensional 1H NMR experiments that achieve band-selective, homonuclear decoupling in both the indirectly detected F1 and directly detected F2 dimensions were used to assign the highly overlapped 1H NMR spectrum of the peptide Ac-SRGKARVRAKVKDQTK-NH2, both free in solution and bound to heparin. Band-selective, homonuclear decoupling during the evolution period was achieved using a double pulsed field gradient spin-echo (DPFGSE) with semi-selective shaped pulses; band-selective, homonuclear decoupling during the acquisition period was achieved by time-shared semi-selective shaped pulse decoupling. Regular TOCSY, ROESY and NOESY spectra and TOCSY, ROESY and NOESY spectra measured with band-selective, homonuclear decoupling in the evolution (F1) dimension (BASHD-TOCSY, ROESY and NOESY spectra) and with band-selective, homonuclear decoupling in both the F1 and F2 dimensions (D-(or Double)-BASHD-TOCSY, ROESY and NOESY spectra) are reported and compared for the peptide and its heparin complex. Complete assignment of the 1H-NMR spectra of the free and heparin-complexed peptide was achieved with the high resolution of the D-BASHD-TOCSY, ROESY and NOESY spectra. Characterization of the heparin-complexed peptide is of interest because of the ability of the peptide to neutralize the anticoagulant activity of heparin. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Time course of 23Na signal intensity after myocardial infarction in humans

    MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, Issue 3 2004
    Joern J.W. Sandstede
    Abstract Experimental studies demonstrated persistently increased 23Na content in nonviable myocardium post-myocardial infarction (MI). We hypothesized that nonviable myocardium in humans would show elevated 23Na content at all stages of infarct development, and therefore could be imaged with 23Na MRI. Ten patients were examined on days 4, 14, and 90 after infarction, and five of these patients participated in a 12-month follow-up. Double angulated short-axis cardiac 23Na images were obtained with the use of a 23Na surface coil and an ECG-triggered, 3D gradient-echo sequence. 1H T2 -weighted imaging (N = 9) was performed on days 4, 14, and 90. Wall motion was assessed by cine MRI, and the infarct size was determined by late enhancement on day 90. The 23Na signal intensity (SI) of infarcted myocardium was expressed as the percentage increase over 23Na SI of noninfarcted myocardium. All of the patients showed an area of elevated SI on 23Na and 1H T2 -weighted images that correlated with wall motion abnormalities and late enhancement. 23Na SI was highest on day 4. It then decreased until day 90, but remained elevated (39% ± 18%, 31% ± 17%, 28% ± 13% on days 4, 14, and 90, respectively, P = 0.001). No further decrease was found 1 year after infarction (25% ± 7%, P = 0.89 vs. day 90). 1H T2 -weighted SI decreased between days 4 and 14, but on day 90 only six of nine patients had a residual elevated SI. Thus, 23Na SI is elevated in nonviable infarction at all time points following MI, and 23Na MRI may become a suitable technique for imaging nonviable myocardium in humans. Magn Reson Med 52:545,551, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Candida albicans lacking the frataxin homologue: a relevant yeast model for studying the role of frataxin

    MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2004
    Renata Santos
    Summary We cloned the CaYFH1 gene that encodes the yeast frataxin homologue in Candida albicans. CaYFH1 was expressed in ,yfh1 Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells, where it compensated for all the phenotypes tested except for the lack of cytochromes. Double ,Cayfh1/,Cayfh1 mutant had severe defective growth, accumulated iron in their mitochondria, lacked aconitase and succinate dehydrogenase activity and had defective respiration. The reductive, siderophore and haem uptake systems were constitutively induced and the cells excreted flavins, thus behaving like iron-deprived wild-type cells. Mutant cells accumulated reactive oxygen species and were hypersensitive to oxidative stress, but not to iron. Cytochromes were less abundant in mutants than in wild-type cells, but this did not result from defective haem synthesis. The low cytochrome concentration in mutant cells was comparable to that of iron-deprived wild-type cells. Mitochondrial iron was still available for haem synthesis in ,Cayfh1/,Cayfh1 cells, in contrast to S. cerevisae,yfh1 cells. CaYFH1 transcription was strongly induced by iron, which is consistent with a role of CaYfh1 in iron storage. Iron also regulated transcription of CaHEM14 (encoding protoporphyrinogen oxidase) but not that of CaHEM15 (encoding ferrochelatase). There are thus profound differences between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans in terms of haem synthesis, cytochrome turnover and the role of frataxin in these processes. [source]


    Immunohistochemical estimation of cell cycle entry and phase distribution in astrocytomas: applications in diagnostic neuropathology

    NEUROPATHOLOGY & APPLIED NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 5 2005
    Ian S. Scott
    An immunohistochemical method for assessing cell cycle phase distribution in neurosurgical biopsies would enable such data to be incorporated into diagnostic algorithms for the estimation of prognosis and response to adjuvant chemotherapy in glial neoplasms, without the requirement for flow cytometric analysis. Paraffin-embedded sections of intracerebral gliomas (n = 48), consisting of diffuse astrocytoma (n = 9), anaplastic astrocytoma (n = 8) and glioblastoma (n = 31), were analysed by immunohistochemistry using markers of cell cycle entry, Mcm-2 and Ki67, and putative markers of cell cycle phase, cyclins D1 (G1-phase), cyclin A (S-phase), cyclin B1 (G2-phase) and phosphohistone H3 (Mitosis). Double labelling confocal microscopy confirmed that the phase markers were infrequently coexpressed. Cell cycle estimations by immunohistochemistry were corroborated by flow cytometric analysis. There was a significant increase in Mcm-2 (P < 0.0001), Ki67 (P < 0.0001), cyclin A (P < 0.0001) and cyclin B1 (P = 0.002) expression with increasing grade from diffuse astrocytoma through anaplastic astrocytoma to glioblastoma, suggesting that any of these four markers has potential as a marker of tumour grade. In a subset of glioblastomas (n = 16) for which accurate clinical follow-up data were available, there was a suggestion that the cyclin A:Mcm-2 labelling fraction might predict a relatively favourable response to radical radiotherapy. These provisional findings, however, require confirmation by a larger study. We conclude that it is feasible to obtain detailed cell cycle data by immunohistochemical analysis of tissue biopsies. Such information may facilitate tumour grading and may enable information of prognostic value to be obtained in the routine diagnostic laboratory. [source]


    The clinical significance of food specific IgE/IgG4 in food specific atopic dermatitis

    PEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
    Geunwoong Noh
    Food is closely associated with the pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis. Food allergy is usually mediated by IgE antibody to specific food proteins and determination of specific IgE antibody is the basis of the common diagnostic test for food allergy. IgG4 have been reported as blocking antibody and the protective effects of blocking antibody may be clear in inhalant allergy. However, the role of IgG4 in food allergy is still a matter of debate. In this study, the clinical significance of food allergen-specific IgE/IgG4 in atopic dermatitis was investigated and compared with that of IgE. A total of 97 patients who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis participated in this study. Skin prick test and allergy patch test were performed. Specific IgE and IgG4 concentration were measured using allergy protein chip, ,AllergyChip'. Double blinded placebo controlled food challenge test (DBPCFC) was performed for the diagnosis of allergy to milk, egg white, wheat, and soybean. DBPCFCs for milk, egg white, soybean, and wheat were performed. The positive rates were 31.7% (19/60) in milk, 36.7% (18/49) in egg white, 30.4% (7/23) in soybean, and 34.8% (8/23) in wheat. Mean IgE/IgG4 levels in DBPCFC (+) subjects is higher than those in DBPCFC (,) subjects in all food items studied. Of them, there were significantly different between two groups in egg white and wheat (Egg white in DBPCFC (+) vs. (,): 0.4 ± 0.3 vs. 0.2 ± 0.2, wheat in DBPCFC (+) vs. (,): 1.2 ± 1.2 vs. 0.3 ± 0.3, p < 0.05). Allergen-specific IgE/IgG4 may provide one of the clues to understand the mechanism of food allergy in atopic dermatitis. The present study suggests that protein microarray can be one of the useful methods to assess ongoing status of allergic diseases. [source]


    Double and triple frequency oscillations observed in resonant tunneling spectroscopy through edge states around an antidot

    PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (C) - CURRENT TOPICS IN SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 8 2005
    K. Arai
    Abstract Resonant tunneling through edge states bounded around an antidot in quantum Hall (QH) regime has been investigated and we have found multiple frequency oscillations in a resonant tunneling through an antidot. We have measured resistance as a function of magnetic field and front gate voltage and found the periodic oscillation in the , = 2 to 1 transition regime. It is related that discrete energy levels are formed in the edge states around the antidot [1]. Not only single peaks but also some split peaks are seen in our data. Fourier power spectrum of the data shows double and triple frequency peak. (© 2005 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    Allatostatin immunoreactivity in the honeybee brain

    THE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, Issue 9 2010
    Sabine Kreissl
    Information transmission and processing in the brain is achieved through a small family of chemical neurotransmitters and neuromodulators and a very large family of neuropeptides. In order to understand neural networks in the brain it will be necessary, therefore, to understand the connectivity, morphology, and distribution of peptidergic neurons, and to elucidate their function in the brain. In this study we characterize the distribution of substances related to Dip-allatostatin I in the honeybee brain, which belongs to the allatostatin-A (AST) peptide family sharing the conserved c-terminal sequence -YXFGL-NH2. We found about 500 AST-immunoreactive (ASTir) neurons in the brain, scattered in 18 groups that varied in their precise location across individuals. Almost all areas of the brain were innervated by ASTir fibers. Most ASTir neurites formed networks within functionally distinct areas, e.g., the antennal lobes, the mushroom bodies, or the optic lobes, indicating local functions of the peptide. A small number of very large neurons had widespread arborizations and neurites were found in the corpora cardiaca and in the cervical connectives, suggesting that AST also has global functions. We double-stained AST and GABA and found that a subset of ASTir neurons were GABA-immunoreactive (GABAir). Double staining AST with backfills of olfactory receptor neurons or mass fills of neurons in the antennal lobes and in the mushroom bodies allowed a more fine-grained description of ASTir networks. Together, this first comprehensive description of AST in the bee brain suggests a diverse functional role of AST, including local and global computational tasks. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:1391,1417, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Allatostatin immunoreactivity in the honeybee brain

    THE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, Issue 9 2010
    Sabine Kreissl
    Abstract Information transmission and processing in the brain is achieved through a small family of chemical neurotransmitters and neuromodulators and a very large family of neuropeptides. In order to understand neural networks in the brain it will be necessary, therefore, to understand the connectivity, morphology, and distribution of peptidergic neurons, and to elucidate their function in the brain. In this study we characterize the distribution of substances related to Dip-allatostatin I in the honeybee brain, which belongs to the allatostatin-A (AST) peptide family sharing the conserved c-terminal sequence -YXFGL-NH2. We found about 500 AST-immunoreactive (ASTir) neurons in the brain, scattered in 18 groups that varied in their precise location across individuals. Almost all areas of the brain were innervated by ASTir fibers. Most ASTir neurites formed networks within functionally distinct areas, e.g., the antennal lobes, the mushroom bodies, or the optic lobes, indicating local functions of the peptide. A small number of very large neurons had widespread arborizations and neurites were found in the corpora cardiaca and in the cervical connectives, suggesting that AST also has global functions. We double-stained AST and GABA and found that a subset of ASTir neurons were GABA-immunoreactive (GABAir). Double staining AST with backfills of olfactory receptor neurons or mass fills of neurons in the antennal lobes and in the mushroom bodies allowed a more fine-grained description of ASTir networks. Together, this first comprehensive description of AST in the bee brain suggests a diverse functional role of AST, including local and global computational tasks. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:1391,1417, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    ORIGINAL RESEARCH,BASIC SCIENCE: Neuroanatomical Evidence for a Role of Central Melanocortin-4 Receptors and Oxytocin in the Efferent Control of the Rodent Clitoris and Vagina

    THE JOURNAL OF SEXUAL MEDICINE, Issue 6 2010
    Helene Gelez PhD
    ABSTRACT Introduction., The clitoris and the vagina are the main peripheral anatomical structures involved in physiological changes related to sexual arousal and orgasm. Their efferent control and, more particularly, the neurochemical phenotype of these descending neuronal pathways remain largely uncharacterized. Aim., To examine if brain neurons involved in the efferent control of the clitoris and the vagina possess melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4-R) and/or contain oxytocin (OT). Methods., Neurons involved in the efferent control of the vagina and clitoris were identified following visualization of pseudorabies virus (PRV) retrograde tracing. PRV was injected into the vagina and clitoris in adult rats in estrous. On the fifth day postinjection, animals were humanely sacrificed, and brains were removed and sectioned, and processed for PRV visualization. The neurochemical phenotype of PRV-positive neurons was identified using double or triple immunocytochemical labeling against PRV, MC4-R, and OT. Double and triple labeling were quantified using confocal laser scanning microscopy. Main Outcome Measure., Neuroanatomical brain distribution, number and percentage of double-labeled PRV/MC4-R and PRV-/OT-positive neurons, and triple PRV-/MC4-R-/OT-labeled neurons. Results., The majority of PRV immunopositive neurons which also expressed immunoreactivity for MC4-R were located in the paraventricular and arcuate nuclei of the hypothalamus. The majority of PRV positive neurons which were immunoreactive (IR) for OT were located in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), medial preoptic area (MPOA), and lateral hypothalamus. PRV positive neurons were more likely to be IR for MC4-R than for OT. Scattered triple-labeled PRV/MC4-R/OT neurons were detected in the MPOA and the PVN. Conclusion., These data strongly suggest that MC4-R and, to a less extent, OT are involved in the efferent neuronal control of the clitoris and vagina, and consequently facilitate our understanding of how the melanocortinergic pathway regulates female sexual function. Gelez H, Poirier S, Facchinetti P, Allers KA, Wayman C, Alexandre L, and Giuliano F. Neuroanatomical evidence for a role of central melanocortin-4 receptors and oxytocin in the efferent control of the rodent clitoris and vagina. J Sex Med 2010;7:2056,2067. [source]


    Metaethical Subjectivism , Richard Double

    THE PHILOSOPHICAL QUARTERLY, Issue 229 2007
    Caj Strandberg
    First page of article [source]


    Self-Assembled ABC Triblock Copolymer Double and Triple Helices,

    ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE, Issue 33 2009
    John Dupont
    Ein neuer Dreh: Bei der Selbstorganisation eines achiralen linearen ABC-Triblockcopolymers in Lösungsmitteln, in denen der mittlere Block B mäßig, der Block C gut und der Block A nur unmerklich löslich ist, entstanden biomimetische Doppelhelices (siehe Bild) neben wenigen Tripelhelices. Dieser Befund ließ sich mit drei Lösungsmittelpaaren reproduzieren, was dafür spricht, dass die Mehrfachhelices das thermodynamische Produkt sind. [source]


    14.6 mT ELF magnetic field exposure yields no DNA breaks in model system Salmonella, but provides evidence of heat stress protection

    BIOELECTROMAGNETICS, Issue 6 2006
    Parley A. Williams
    Abstract In this study, we demonstrate that common extremely low frequency magnetic field (MF) exposure does not cause DNA breaks in this Salmonella test system. The data does, however, provide evidence that MF exposure induces protection from heat stress. Bacterial cultures were exposed to MF (14.6 mT 60 Hz field, cycled 5 min on, 10 min off for 4 h) and a temperature-matched control. Double- and single-stranded DNA breaks were assayed using a recombination event counter. After MF or control exposure they were grown on indicator plates from which recombination events can be quantified and the frequency of DNA strand breaks deduced. The effect of MF was also monitored using a recombination-deficient mutant (recA). The results showed no significant increase in recombination events and strand breaks due to MF. Evidence of heat stress protection was determined using a cell viability assay that compared the survival rates of MF exposed and control cells after the administration of a 10 min 53 °C heat stress. The control cells exhibited nine times more cell mortality than the MF exposed cells. This Salmonella system provides many mutants and genetic tools for further investigation of this phenomenon. Bioelectromagnetics 27:445,450, 2006.© 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Addressing an Idiosyncrasy in Estimating Survival Curves Using Double Sampling in the Presence of Self-Selected Right Censoring

    BIOMETRICS, Issue 2 2001
    Constantine E. Frangakis
    Summary. We investigate the use of follow-up samples of individuals to estimate survival curves from studies that are subject to right censoring from two sources: (i) early termination of the study, namely, administrative censoring, or (ii) censoring due to lost data prior to administrative censoring, so-called dropout. We assume that, for the full cohort of individuals, administrative censoring times are independent of the subjects' inherent characteristics, including survival time. To address the loss to censoring due to dropout, which we allow to be possibly selective, we consider an intensive second phase of the study where a representative sample of the originally lost subjects is subsequently followed and their data recorded. As with double-sampling designs in survey methodology, the objective is to provide data on a representative subset of the dropouts. Despite assumed full response from the follow-up sample, we show that, in general in our setting, administrative censoring times are not independent of survival times within the two subgroups, nondropouts and sampled dropouts. As a result, the stratified Kaplan,Meier estimator is not appropriate for the cohort survival curve. Moreover, using the concept of potential outcomes, as opposed to observed outcomes, and thereby explicitly formulating the problem as a missing data problem, reveals and addresses these complications. We present an estimation method based on the likelihood of an easily observed subset of the data and study its properties analytically for large samples. We evaluate our method in a realistic situation by simulating data that match published margins on survival and dropout from an actual hip-replacement study. Limitations and extensions of our design and analytic method are discussed. [source]


    Enantioselective Synthesis of Tetra-ortho-Substituted Axially Chiral Biaryls Through Rhodium-Catalyzed Double [2 + 2 + 2] Cycloaddition.

    CHEMINFORM, Issue 48 2006
    Goushi Nishida
    Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF. [source]


    Double ,-Ketol Rearrangement of (1S,2R,4R)-2-Acetyl-1-vinyl-2-hydroxy-7,7-dimethylbicyclo [2.2.1]heptane.

    CHEMINFORM, Issue 37 2006
    Nikolay S. Vostrikov
    Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF. [source]


    Ab initio Double-, (D95) Valence Bond Calculations for the Ground States of S2N2 and S42+.

    CHEMINFORM, Issue 41 2004
    Thomas M. Klapoetke
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    ChemInform Abstract: Synthesis and Study of Double (EPR Active and Fluorescent) Chemosensors in the Presence of Fe3+ Ion.

    CHEMINFORM, Issue 43 2001
    Olga H. Hankovsky
    Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 100 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract of an article which was published elsewhere, please select a "Full Text" option. The original article is trackable via the "References" option. [source]


    Doubles and Desire: Anatomies of masculinity in the later nineteenth century

    ART HISTORY, Issue 5 2003
    Anthea Callen
    This article explores duality and splitting in representations of the male body, stressing as a crucial factor the issue of social class. Focusing on the ,golden age' of doubles in the 1880s and 1890s, my study crosses the boundaries between France and Britain, art and medicine, visual images and literature, to analyse François Sallé's monumental painting of male homosociality, The Anatomy Class at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts (1888); I suggest parallels with the male doubling identified in R.L. Stevenson's novella The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886). Addressing representations of medical professionals, I position my material within nineteenth-century clinical discourse (Foucault), and propose readings that develop the medical gaze as an alternative visual economy to that of the modern Parisian flâneur. Linking anatomy and dissection to the performance of striptease, I argue that Sallé's painting represents a scene in which unsuppressed homoerotic pleasure allows the visibility of homosexual desire, and permeability of sexual categories. [source]


    ChemInform Abstract: Pr10(C2)2Br16: A New Structure with Discrete Octahedra Doubles.

    CHEMINFORM, Issue 1 2009
    Manuel Christian Schaloske
    Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract of an article which was published elsewhere, please select a "Full Text" option. The original article is trackable via the "References" option. [source]