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Mechanisms Accounting (mechanism + accounting)
Selected AbstractsMother,Child and Father,Child Mutually Responsive Orientation in the First 2 Years and Children's Outcomes at Preschool Age: Mechanisms of InfluenceCHILD DEVELOPMENT, Issue 1 2008Grazyna Kochanska Mechanisms accounting for the effects of mutually responsive orientation (MRO) at 7, 15, and 25 months in 102 mother,child and father,child dyads on child internalization and self-regulation at 52 months were examined. Two mediators at 38 months were tested: parental power assertion and child self-representation. For mother,child relationships, the causal pathway involving power assertion was supported for both outcomes. Diminished power assertion fully mediated beneficial effect of mother,child MRO on internalization and partially mediated its effect on self-regulation. For father,child relationships, MRO predicted self-regulation, but the mediational paths were unsupported. Paternal power assertion correlated negatively with both outcomes but was not a mediator. Although MRO with both parents correlated with child self-representation, and it correlated with self-regulation, this mediational path was unsupported. [source] Riluzole inhibits the persistent sodium current in mammalian CNS neuronsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 10 2000Andrea Urbani Abstract The effects of 0.1,100 ,m riluzole, a neuroprotective agent with anticonvulsant properties, were studied on neurons from rat brain cortex. Patch-clamp whole-cell recordings in voltage-clamp mode were performed on thin slices to examine the effects of the drug on a noninactivating (persistent) Na+ current (INa,p). INa,p was selected because it enhances neuronal excitability near firing threshold, which makes it a potential target for anticonvulsant drugs. When added to the external solution, riluzole dose-dependently inhibited INa,p up to a complete blocking of the current (EC50 2 ,m), showing a significant effect at therapeutic drug concentrations. A comparative dose-effect study was carried out in the same cells for the other main known action of riluzole, the inhibitory effect on the fast transient sodium current. This effect was confirmed in our experiments, but we found that it was achieved at levels much higher than putative therapeutic concentrations. Only the effect on INa,p, and not that on fast sodium current, can account for the reduction in neuronal excitability observed in cortical neurons following riluzole treatment at therapeutic concentrations, and this might represent a novel mechanism accounting for the anticonvulsant and neuroprotective properties of riluzole. [source] Improvement in hepatopulmonary syndrome after methadone withdrawal: A case report with implications for disease mechanismLIVER TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 7 2010Edmund M. T. Lau Spontaneous resolution of hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS) without liver transplantation or improvement in the underlying liver disease has rarely been reported in the literature. Increased endogenous production of nitric oxide has been implicated in the pathogenesis of HPS. We report the case of a 50-year-old man with hepatitis C cirrhosis who demonstrated dramatic improvement in HPS after withdrawal from chronic methadone therapy. We speculate on the potential role of opiate receptors in the pulmonary vasculature and their effect on nitric oxide signaling as a potential mechanism accounting for the patient's clinical improvement. Liver Transpl 16:870,873, 2010. © 2010 AASLD. [source] mtDNA perspective of chromosomal diversification and hybridization in Peters' tent-making bat (Uroderma bilobatum: Phyllostomidae)MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, Issue 11 2003Federico G. Hoffmann Abstract We compared sequence variation in the complete mitochondrial cytochrome -b gene with chromosomal and geographical variation for specimens of Peters' tent-making bat (Uroderma bilobatum). Three different chromosomal races have been described in this species: a 2n = 42 race from South America east of the Andes, a 2n = 44 from NW Central America and 2n = 38 from the rest of Central America and NW South America. The deepest nodes in the tree were found within the South American race (42 race), which is consistent with a longer history of this race. Average distance among races ranged from 2.5 to 2.9%, with the highest amount of intraracial variation found within the 2n = 42 race (1.7%), intermediate values within the 2n = 38 race (0.9%) and lowest within the 2n = 44 race (0.5%). Variation among chromosomal races accounted for over 55% of molecular variance, whereas variation among populations within races accounted for 6%. The 2n = 38 and 2n = 44 races hybridize in the coastal lowlands of Honduras, near the Gulf of Fonseca. Introgression between these two races is low (two introgressed individuals in 45 examined). Clinal variation across the hybrid zone for the cytochrome -b of U. bilobatum, is similar to clinal variation reported for chromosomes and isozymes of this species. Mismatch distribution analyses suggests that geographical isolation and karyological changes have interplayed in a synergistic fashion. Fixation of the alternative chromosomal rearrangements in geographical isolation and secondary contact is the most likely mechanism accounting for the hybrid zone between the 2n = 38 and 2n = 44 races. If a molecular clock is assumed, with rates ranging from 2.3 to 5.0% per million years, then isolation between these races occurred within the last million years, implying a relatively recent origin of the extant diversity in Uroderma bilobatum. None the less, the three chromosomal races probably represent three different biological species. [source] Rhinovirus enhances various bacterial adhesions to nasal epithelial cells simultaneouslyTHE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 7 2009Jong Hwan Wang MD Abstract Objectives/Hypothesis: Viral upper respiratory tract infections are often followed by secondary bacterial infections in the form of acute rhinosinusitis. We investigate the effect of rhinovirus infection on the expression of cell adhesion molecules and bacterial adherence to primary human nasal epithelial cells. Methods: Cells were infected with rhinovirus serotype 16 (RV-16), and then Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, or Hemophilus influenzae were added to the culture. Rhinovirus-induced expression of fibronectin, platelet-activating factor receptor, and carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule, was assayed by confocal microscopy, real-time polymerase chain reaction, and Western blot analysis. Bacterial adhesion to cells was assessed by confocal microscopy and the fluorescence intensity of adherent bacteria was analyzed using Image-Pro Plus 5.1 (Media Cybernetics, Inc., Bethesda, MD). Results: RV-16 infection significantly increased the gene and protein expression of fibronectin, platelet-activating factor receptor, and carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule in nasal epithelial cells. Compared with rhinovirus-uninfected control cells, the adhesion of S. aureus, S. pneumoniae, and H. influenzae increased significantly to 2.53-fold, 1.51-fold, and 2.74-fold of control levels, respectively, in rhinovirus-infected nasal epithelial cells. Conclusions: These findings suggest that increased expression of host cell adhesion molecules may be the mechanism accounting for the increase in susceptibility to bacterial rhinosinusitis associated with rhinovirus-induced upper respiratory infections. Laryngoscope, 2009 [source] Behavioural Syndromes in Urban and Rural Populations of Song SparrowsETHOLOGY, Issue 7 2010Jackson Evans Animals in urban habitats are often noticeably bold in the presence of humans. Such boldness may arise due to habituation, as urban animals learn, through repeated exposure, that passing humans do not represent a threat. However, there is growing research suggesting that: (1) inherent traits, as opposed to learned behaviour, influence which species invade urban habitats, and (2) individuals exhibit individual personality traits that limit behavioural flexibility, with the possible result that not all individuals would be able to demonstrate an appropriate level of boldness in urban environments. As a result, perhaps only birds with inherently bold personalities could successfully settle in an area of high human disturbance, and further, we might also expect to see the existence of behavioural syndromes, where boldness is correlated with variation in other behavioural traits such as aggression. In this study, we examined boldness and territorial aggression in urban and rural populations of song sparrows. We found that urban birds were bolder towards humans and that urban birds also showed higher levels of territorial aggression. We also found an overall correlation between boldness and territorial aggression, suggesting that urban boldness may be part of a behavioural syndrome. However, we see no correlation between boldness and aggression in the urban population, and thus, more work is needed to determine the mechanisms accounting for high levels of boldness and aggression urban song sparrows. [source] Glucagon induces the plasma membrane insertion of functional aquaporin-8 water channels in isolated rat hepatocytesHEPATOLOGY, Issue 6 2003Sergio A. Gradilone Although glucagon is known to stimulate the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-mediated hepatocyte bile secretion, the precise mechanisms accounting for this choleretic effect are unknown. We recently reported that hepatocytes express the water channel aquaporin-8 (AQP8), which is located primarily in intracellular vesicles, and its relocalization to plasma membranes can be induced with dibutyryl cAMP. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that glucagon induces the trafficking of AQP8 to the hepatocyte plasma membrane and thus increases membrane water permeability. Immunoblotting analysis in subcellular fractions from isolated rat hepatocytes indicated that glucagon caused a significant, dose-dependent increase in the amount of AQP8 in plasma membranes (e.g., 102% with 1 ,mol/L glucagon) and a simultaneous decrease in intracellular membranes (e.g., 38% with 1 ,mol/L glucagon). Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy in cultured hepatocytes confirmed the glucagon-induced redistribution of AQP8 from intracellular vesicles to plasma membrane. Polarized hepatocyte couplets showed that this redistribution was specifically to the canalicular domain. Glucagon also significantly increased hepatocyte membrane water permeability by about 70%, which was inhibited by the water channel blocker dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The inhibitors of protein kinase A, H-89, and PKI, as well as the microtubule blocker colchicine, prevented the glucagon effect on both AQP8 redistribution to hepatocyte surface and cell membrane water permeability. In conclusion, our data suggest that glucagon induces the protein kinase A and microtubule-dependent translocation of AQP8 water channels to the hepatocyte canalicular plasma membrane, which in turn leads to an increase in membrane water permeability. These findings provide evidence supporting the molecular mechanisms of glucagon-induced hepatocyte bile secretion. [source] Molecular mechanisms of portal vein toleranceHEPATOLOGY RESEARCH, Issue 5 2008Tomohiro Watanabe The liver has been considered as a tolerogenic organ in the sense that favors the induction of peripheral tolerance. The administration of antigens (Ags) via the portal vein causes tolerance, which is termed portal vein tolerance and can explain the occurrence of tolerogenic responses in the liver. Here we discuss the fundamental mechanisms accounting for portal vein tolerance. Antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in the liver, especially dendritic cells and sinusoidal endothelial cells, have limited the ability to produce pro-inflammatory cytokines upon stimulation with endotoxin, an effect that could be due to the continuous exposure to bacterial Ags derived from intestinal microflora. Ag presentation by liver APCs results in T cell tolerance through clonal deletion and selection of regulatory T cells. Thus, APCs with immunosuppressive functions are associated with the achievement of portal vein tolerance via the induction of clonal deletion and generation of regulatory T cells. [source] Strong expression of IGF1R in pediatric gastrointestinal stromal tumors without IGF1R genomic amplification,INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 11 2010Katherine A. Janeway Abstract Wildtype (WT) gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs), lacking mutations in KIT or PDGFRA, represent 85% of GISTs in pediatric patients. Treatment options for pediatric WT GIST are limited. Recently, expression profiling of a limited number of pediatric and adult WT GISTs and more in depth study of a single pediatric WT GIST implicated the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R) as a potential therapeutic target in pediatric WT GIST. We performed immunoblotting, SNP and FISH studies to determine the extent of expression, biochemical activation and genomic amplification of IGF1R in a larger number of pediatric WT GISTs. Pediatric WT GISTs expressed IGF1R strongly, whereas typical adult KIT mutant GISTs did not. IGF1R gene amplification was not detected in pediatric WT GISTs, and some KIT -mutant GISTs had IGF1R gene deletion due to monosomy 15. Despite the absence of apparent genomic activation mechanisms accounting for overexpression, clinical study of IGF1R-directed therapies in pediatric WT GIST is warranted. [source] Spontaneous splenic haematoma in a multiple myeloma patient receiving pegfilgrastim supportINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LABORATORY HEMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2006E. HATZIMICHAEL Summary Growth factors are a significant advance in the supportive care of patients with cancer with a wide range of indications. Frequent side effects of G-CSF include bone pain, headache, fatigue and nausea. We report a case of subcapsular splenic haematoma following pegfilgrastim administration in a 65-year old patient with multiple myeloma. Proposed mechanisms accounting for splenic enlargement include extramedullary haemopoiesis, intrasplenic infiltration by mature and immature myeloid cells and intrasplenic stem cell homing and proliferation. The risk of spontaneous splenic rupture is difficult to quantify. Physicians should be aware of this life-threatening condition and early diagnosis can be difficult since anemia and splenomegaly are common findings in haematologic patients. [source] Investigation of the ultradrawing properties of gel spun fibers of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene/carbon nanotube blendsJOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE, Issue 5 2008Jen-Taut Yeh Abstract The carbon nanotubes (CNTs) contents, ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) concentrations and temperatures of UHMWPE, and CNTs added gel solutions exhibited significant influence on their rheological and spinning properties and the drawability of the corresponding UHMWPE/CNTs as-prepared fibers. Tremendously high shear viscosities (,s) of UHMWPE gel solutions were found as the temperatures reached 140°C, at which their ,s values approached the maximum. After adding CNTs, the ,s values of UHMWPE/CNTs gel solutions increase significantly and reach a maximum value as the CNTs contents increase up to a specific value. At each spinning temperature, the achievable draw ratios obtained for UHMWPE as-prepared fibers prepared near the optimum concentration are significantly higher than those of UHMWPE as-prepared fibers prepared at other concentrations. After addition of CNTs, the achievable draw ratios of UHMWPE/CNTs as-prepared fibers prepared near the optimum concentration improve consistently and reach a maximum value as their CNTs contents increase up to an optimum value. To understand these interesting drawing properties of the UHMWPE and UHMWPE/CNTs as-prepared fibers, the birefringence, thermal, morphological, and tensile properties of the as-prepared and drawn fibers were investigated. Possible mechanisms accounting for these interesting properties are proposed. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci, 2008 [source] Understanding the pathology and mechanisms of type I diabetic bone lossJOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2007*Article first published online: 1 NOV 200, Laura R. McCabe Abstract Type I (T1) diabetes, also called insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), is characterized by little or no insulin production and hyperglycemia. One of the less well known complications of T1-diabetes is bone loss which occurs in humans and animal models. This complication is receiving increased attention because T1-diabetics are living longer due to better therapeutics, and are faced with their existing health concerns being compounded by complications associated with aging, such as osteoporosis. Both male and female, endochondrial and intra-membranous, and axial and appendicular bones are susceptible to T1-diabetic bone loss. Exact mechanisms accounting for T1-diabetic bone loss are not known. Existing data indicate that the bone defect in T1-diabetes is anabolic rather than catabolic, suggesting that anabolic therapeutics may be more effective in preventing bone loss. Potential contributors to T1-diabetic suppression of bone formation are discussed in this review and include: increased marrow adiposity, hyperlipidemia, reduced insulin signaling, hyperglycemia, inflammation, altered adipokine and endocrine factors, increased cell death, and altered metabolism. Differences between T1-diabetic- and age-associated bone loss underlie the importance of condition specific, individualized treatments for osteoporosis. Optimizing therapies that prevent bone loss or restore bone density will allow T1-diabetic patients to live longer with strong healthy bones. J. Cell. Biochem. 102: 1343,1357, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] The association between harmful alcohol use and Internet addiction among college students: Comparison of personalityPSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCES, Issue 2 2009Ju-Yu Yen md Aims:, This study aimed to (i) evaluate the association between Internet addiction and harmful alcohol use, and (ii) evaluate the associated personality characteristics of Internet addiction as well as harmful alcohol use. Methods:, A total of 2453 college students were invited to complete the Chen Internet Addiction Scale, Behavior Inhibition System and Behavior Approach System Scale(BIS/BAS scale), and the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test from May 2005 to May 2006. Results:, The results demonstrated Internet addiction was associated with harmful alcohol use among college students. College students with Internet addiction had higher scores on the BIS and BAS fun-seeking subscales. However, college students with harmful alcohol use had higher scores on the BAS drive and fun-seeking subscales, and lower scores on the BIS subscale. Conclusions:, Internet addiction is associated with harmful alcohol use. Furthermore, fun seeking was the shared characteristic of these two problem behaviors and might contribute to the association. However, further studies are necessary to evaluate the underlying mechanisms accounting for the association between Internet addiction and harmful alcohol use. [source] |