Resting

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Terms modified by Resting

  • resting activity
  • resting cell
  • resting condition
  • resting cyst
  • resting egg
  • resting heart rate
  • resting level
  • resting membrane potential
  • resting metabolic rate
  • resting period
  • resting phase
  • resting position
  • resting potential
  • resting pressure
  • resting stage
  • resting state
  • resting tension
  • resting value

  • Selected Abstracts


    Hypofrontality in schizophrenia: a meta-analysis of functional imaging studies

    ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 4 2004
    K. Hill
    Objective:, Hypofrontality is not a well-replicated finding in schizophrenia either at rest or under conditions of task activation. Method:, Studies comparing whole brain and frontal blood flow/metabolism in schizophrenic patients and normal controls were pooled. Voxel-based studies were also combined to examine the pattern of prefrontal activation in schizophrenia. Results:, Whole brain flow/metabolism was reduced in schizophrenia to only a small extent. Resting and activation frontal flow/metabolism were both reduced with a medium effect size. Duration of illness significantly moderated resting hypofrontality, but the moderating effects of neuroleptic treatment were consistent with an influence on global flow/metabolism only. Pooling of voxel-based studies did not suggest an abnormal pattern of activation in schizophrenia. Conclusion:, Meta-analysis supports resting hypofrontality in schizophrenia. Task-activated hypofrontality is also supported, but there is little from voxel-based studies to suggest that this is associated with an altered pattern of regional functional architecture. [source]


    Feeding ecology of Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus morio) in Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysia: a 3-year record including two mast fruitings

    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 9 2010
    Tomoko Kanamori
    Abstract We observed the diet and activity of Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus morio) in the primary lowland dipterocarp forests of Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysia, during 2005,2007, including two mast fruitings. We collected 1,785,hr of focal data on 26 orangutans. We identified 1,466 samples of their food plants and conducted a fallen fruit census to monitor fruit availability in the study area. Their activity budget was 47.2% feeding, 34.4% resting, and 16.9% traveling. Fruits accounted for the largest part (60.9%) of feeding time, especially during mast fruiting periods (64.0,100%), although the percentages of leaves (22.2%) and bark (12.3%) were higher than those reported for P. abelii and P. pygmaeus wurmbii. Although 119 genera and 160 plant species were consumed by focal animals, only 9 genera accounted for more than 3% of feeding time (total: 67.8% for 9 genera). In particular, the focal orangutans fed intensively on Ficus and Spatholobus during most of the study period, especially in periods of fruit shortage. The percentage of fruit feeding changed markedly from 11.7 to 100% across different months of the year, and was positively correlated with the amount of fallen fruit. When fruit feeding and availability decreased, orangutans fed primarily on leaves of Spatholobus and Ficus, and the bark of Spatholobus and dipterocarp. The percentage of time devoted to feeding during mast fruitings, when the orangutans foraged almost exclusively on fruits, was lower than during seasons when the orangutan diet included leaves and bark as well as fruits. Resting increased as feeding decreased in the late stage of each fruiting season, suggesting that the orangutans adopted an energy-minimizing strategy to survive the periods of fruit shortage by using energy stored during the fruit season. Am. J. Primatol. 72:820,840, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Physiological and neuropsychological correlates of approach/withdrawal tendencies in preschool: Further examination of the behavioral inhibition system/behavioral activation system scales for young children

    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
    Clancy Blair
    Abstract This study examined a parent-report version of the Behavioral Inhibition System/Behavioral Activation System (BIS/BAS) scales, a measure of approach,withdrawal motivation, in 170 children between the ages of 3 to 5 years attending Head Start programs. Physiological measures included assessments of baseline salivary cortisol and change in cortisol in response to the assessment session, and resting and suppression estimates of cardiac vagal tone. Cognitive self-regulation was assessed with a peg-tapping measure of inhibitory control and an item-selection measure of cognitive set-shifting ability. Results indicated that higher level of parent-reported withdrawal motivation was associated with cortisol increase and that parent-reported approach motivation tended to be associated with cortisol decrease across the assessment session. Higher level of parent-reported withdrawal also was positively related to cognitive self-regulation while parent-reported approach was negatively related to cognitive self-regulation. Person-oriented analysis indicated that children characterized by both high level of approach and high level of withdrawal tended to exhibit lower resting vagal tone, higher initial cortisol, and minimal cortisol and vagal change. Overall, findings suggest that the parent-report version of the BIS/BAS scales works well as an indicator of children's reactivity to appetitive and aversive motivational stimuli. Directions for future research and implications of findings for the longitudinal study of temperament and personality are discussed. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 45: 113-124, 2004. [source]


    Effect of Alcohol-Induced Septal Ablation on Left Atrial Volume and Ejection Fraction Assessed by Real Time Three-Dimensional Transthoracic Echocardiography in Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

    ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Issue 7 2008
    Fadi G. Hage M.D.
    Alcohol-induced septal ablation (AISA) is an accepted treatment for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) patients with left ventricular (LV) outflow obstruction who are unresponsive to medical therapy. As left atrial (LA) enlargement has been correlated with increased morbidity and mortality in HCM, we assessed LA volumes and ejection fraction (EF) prior to and after AISA using real time three-dimensional (3D) transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) in 12 patients (9 women; mean age 52 ± 15 years; 11 Caucasian). All patients underwent successful AISA with no complications and their resting left ventricular outflow gradients decreased from 40.5 ± 22.2 to 9.1 ± 17.6 mmHg (P < 0.001) while their gradients with provocation decreased from 126.2 ± 31.7 to 21.8 ± 28.0 mmHg (P < 0.001). All patients showed improvements in their New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class. Both the LA end-systolic (45.2 ± 12.9 to 37.2 ± 13.7 ml, P < 0.0001) and end-diastolic (79.6 ± 18.9 to 77.1 ± 18.6 ml, P = 0.001) volumes decreased after AISA. The LA EF increased from 43.1 ± 9.0 to 52.5 ± 8.8% (P = 0.001). The increase in LA EF correlated with the decrease in the resting left ventricular outflow gradient (R =,0.647, P = 0.03). In conclusion, 3D echocardiography can be utilized to follow LA function after AISA for HCM. AISA results in clinical improvement in patients with HCM and in improvement of LA EF that is correlated with the decrease in the left ventricular outflow gradient. [source]


    Variation in food availability influences prey-capture method in antlion larvae

    ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
    EFRAT ELIMELECH
    Abstract 1.,Larvae of a Myrmecaelurus sp. are unique among antlions because they have two prey-capture methods; they either ambush prey at the surface, or dig pit traps that prey fall in to. It was hypothesised that larvae will use the capture method that maximises their net rate of energy gain, which will be influenced by food availability (encounter rate) and by past energy inputs (body condition). 2.,Costs were estimated by measuring resting and activity metabolic rates and determining the duration of pit maintenance at various encounter rates with ants that served as prey. Benefits were estimated from the energy gained per ant captured at different encounter rates. 3.,Net energy gained was higher with a pit than without one, and was influenced more by the differences in prey capture rate between the two capture methods, and less by the differences in energy costs associated with each method. The proportion of larvae that constructed pits was higher when they were in intermediate body condition than when in good or in poor body condition. 4.,Thus, the use of one capture method or the other depends on a combination of the influences of past net energy gain and the antlion's most recent change in encounter rate with prey. Ambushing without a pit may serve as a default when physiological constraints limit the larvae's ability to invest in pit construction and maintenance, or when larvae are sated, and saving the energy of pit construction and maintenance is worthwhile. [source]


    The obligate aerobic actinomycete Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) survives extended periods of anaerobic stress

    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 12 2007
    Geertje Van Keulen
    Summary The actinomycete Streptomyces coelicolor is an obligate aerobe that is found in soil and aqueous habitats. The levels of oxygen in these environments can vary considerably, which raises the question of how these bacteria survive during periods of anaerobiosis. Although S. coelicolor cannot grow in the complete absence of oxygen, we demonstrate here that it is capable of microaerobic growth and maintaining viability through several weeks of strict anaerobiosis. Both resting and germinated spores are able to survive abrupt exposure to anaerobiosis, which contrasts the situation with Mycobacterium species where gradual oxygen depletion is required to establish a latent state in which the bacterium is able to survive extended periods of anaerobiosis. Growth of S. coelicolor resumes immediately upon re-introduction of oxygen. Taken together these findings indicate that survival is not restricted to spores and suggest that the bacterium has evolved a mechanism to maintain viability and a membrane potential in the hyphal state. Furthermore, although we demonstrate that several members of the genus also survive long periods of anaerobic stress, one species, Streptomyces avermitilis, does not have this capacity and might represent a naturally occurring variant that is unable to adopt this survival strategy. [source]


    Haematological and respiratory gas changes in horses and mules exercised at altitude (3800 m)

    EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue S36 2006
    H. M. GREENE
    Summary Reason for performing study: Despite the common use of equids as visitors to high altitude mountainous environments, there are a paucity of carefully orchestrated scientific approaches. Further, again as a function of a common perceived advantage of mules over horses in these similar environments there are needs for controlled comparisons between these 2 equids. Objective: To measure haematological and respiratory function in horses and mules at low altitude (225 m), at rest and post exercise. In addition the rate and magnitude of these changes were followed over a 13 day period at high altitude (3800 m) to contrast acclimatisation. Methods: Resting and exercise venous blood samples (1 min post exercise) were obtained from 6 horses and 5 mules housed at 225 m (LA) and then transported to 3800 m (HA) for 13 days. The standardised exercise tests at both LA and HA consisted of trotting (3.0 m/sec) up an incline (6%) for 2 km. Data were analysed with repeated measures ANOVA (comparison of altitude acclimatisation and species) for changes in haematological and respiratory gases. Results: At low altitude, no group differences were found with both resting (P=0.69) and exercising (P=0.74) heart rates. Resting PCV was 8% lower in the mules (P=0.02) and 20% lower during exercise (P=0.02). Horses had significantly higher 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG)/g Hb at both rest (P=0.003) and exercise (P=0.03). Exercise at HA increased PCV (P=0.03) in both groups, but the increase was attenuated in the mules compared to horses. The increase with 2,3-DPG/g Hb was expressed at HA in both groups (P=0.001) and was also attenuated in mules (P=0.03). Both groups were alkalotic compared to LA (P=0.001), and there were no group differences (P = 0.95). Conclusion: Of the variables measured, the most notable distinction between species was identified for only PCV and 2,3-DPG with both higher in horses, at both LA and HA. While the attenuated response of PCV in mules for the same exercise might argue for an improved adaptation to altitude, the lower 2,3-DPG might not. Other variables during the exercise bout were not different between species. [source]


    IP3 receptor in the hair cells of frog semicircular canal and its possible functional role

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 7 2006
    Maria Lisa Rossi
    Abstract The presence and functional role of inositol trisphosphate receptors (IP3R) was investigated by electrophysiology and immunohistochemistry in hair cells from the frog semicircular canal. Intracellular recordings were performed from single fibres of the posterior canal in the isolated, intact frog labyrinth, at rest and during rotation, in the presence of IP3 receptor inhibitors and drugs known to produce Ca2+ release from the internal stores or to increase IP3 production. Hair cell immunolabelling for IP3 receptor was performed by standard procedures. The drug 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2APB), an IP3 receptor inhibitor, produced a marked decrease of mEPSP and spike frequency at low concentration (0.1 mm), without affecting mEPSP size or time course. At high concentration (1 mm), 2APB is reported to block the sarcoplasmic-endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ -ATPase (SERCA pump) and increase [Ca2+]i; at the labyrinthine cytoneural junction, it greatly enhanced the resting and mechanically evoked sensory discharge frequency. The selective agonist of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors (RS)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG, 0.6 mm), produced a transient increase in resting mEPSP and spike frequency at the cytoneural junction, with no effects on mEPSP shape or amplitude. Pretreatment with cyclopiazonic acid (CPA, 0.1 mm), a SERCA pump inhibitor, prevented the facilitatory effect of both 2APB and DHPG, suggesting a link between Ca2+ release from intracellular stores and quantal emission. Consistently, diffuse immunoreactivity for IP3 receptors was observed in posterior canal hair cells. Our results indicate the presence and a possibly relevant functional role of IP3-sensitive stores in controlling [Ca2+]i and modulating the vestibular discharge. [source]


    Levels of pre-kallikrein in resting and stimulated human parotid and submandibular saliva

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCES, Issue 5 2001
    Carol A. Francis
    Salivary tissue kallikrein is stored in an active form in human salivary glands. Pre-kallikrein has been demonstrated in mixed saliva, but it is not clear if the various salivary glands contribute equally. This study set out to determine if pre-kallikrein is present in human parotid and submandibular salivas at rest, whether levels change during stimulation, and to compare the pattern of pre-kallikrein and kallikrein secretion with that of total protein. Resting and citric acid-stimulated parotid and submandibular, and gum-stimulated parotid saliva samples were collected from 6 healthy subjects. Salivary flows were determined gravimetrically. Total protein concentration and kallikrein enzymic activity were assayed using standard techniques. Pre-kallikrein was assayed following trypsinisation of duplicate samples. Pre-kallikrein was present in parotid and submandibular ductal saliva. Proportions of pre-kallikrein and active kallikrein were similar in salivas secreted at rest and during stimulation, and both outputs mirrored protein output in both major glands. Gum-stimulated parotid saliva showed lower activity than resting, and no differences were seen between resting and stimulated submandibular samples. [source]


    CpG and LPS can interfere negatively with prion clearance in macrophage and microglial cells

    FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 22 2007
    Sabine Gilch
    Cells of the innate immune system play important roles in the progression of prion disease after peripheral infection. It has been found in vivo and in vitro that the expression of the cellular prion protein (PrPc) is up-regulated on stimulation of immune cells, also indicating the functional importance of PrPc in the immune system. The aim of our study was to investigate the impact of cytosine-phosphate-guanosine- and lipopolysaccharide-induced PrPc up-regulation on the uptake and processing of the pathological prion protein (PrPSc) in phagocytic innate immune cells. For this purpose, we challenged the macrophage cell line J774, the microglial cell line BV-2 and primary bone marrow-derived macrophages in a resting or stimulated state with various prion strains, and monitored the uptake and clearance of PrPSc. Interestingly, stimulation led either to a transient increase in the level of PrPSc relative to unstimulated cells or to a decelerated degradation of PrPSc. These features were dependent on cell type and prion strain. Our data indicate that the stimulation of innate immune cells may be able to support transient prion propagation, possibly explained by an increased PrPc cell surface expression in stimulated cells. We suggest that stimulation of innate immune cells can lead to an imbalance between the propagation and degradation of PrPSc. [source]


    Complementation of NADPH oxidase in p67-phox-deficient CGD patients

    FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 4 2000
    p67-phox/p40-phox interaction
    Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is due to a functional defect of the O2, generating NADPH oxidase of phagocytes. Epstein,Barr-virus-immortalized B lymphocytes express all the constituents of oxidase with activity 100 times less than that of neutrophils. As in neutrophils, oxidase activity of Epstein,Barr-virus-immortalized B lymphocytes was shown to be defective in the different forms of CGD; these cells were used as a model for the complementation studies of two p67-phox-deficient CGD patients. Reconstitution of oxidase activity was performed in vitro by using a heterologous cell-free assay consisting of membrane-suspended or solubilized and purified cytochrome b558 that was associated with cytosol or with the isolated cytosolic-activating factors (p67-phox, p47-phox, p40-phox) from healthy or CGD patients. In p67-phox-deficient CGD patients, two cytosolic factors are deficient or missing: p67-phox and p40-phox. Not more than 20% of oxidase activity was recovered by complementing the cytosol of p67-phox-deficient patients with recombinant p67-phox. On the contrary, a complete restoration of oxidase activity was observed when, instead of cytosol, the cytosolic factors were added in the cell-free assay after isolation in combination with cytochrome b558 purified from neutrophil membrane. Moreover, the simultaneous addition of recombinant p67-phox and recombinant p40-phox reversed the previous complementation in a p40-phox dose-dependent process. These results suggest that in the reconstitution of oxidase activity, p67-phox is the limiting factor; the efficiency of complementation depends on the membrane tissue and the cytosolic environment. In vitro, the transition from the resting to the activated state of oxidase, which results from assembling, requires the dissociation of p40-phox from p67-phox for efficient oxidase activity. In the process, p40-phox could function as a negative regulatory factor and stabilize the resting state. [source]


    Antiplatelet ,resistance' and ,non-responders': what do these terms really mean?

    FUNDAMENTAL & CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
    Victor L. Serebruany
    Abstract The term ,resistance' should be restricted to very specialized physiologic circumstances, if not abandoned altogether. The term ,non-responder' needs to be placed in the context of the question: ,Non-responder to what?' Even if we would somehow magically know what an optimal response to antiplatelet therapy was, it will still be challenging to demonstrate an ,inadequate' response to antiplatelet therapy. At present there are two alternatives , give more drug or give additional drugs. Both strategies may work in further inhibiting platelet function, but both strategies can also be associated with an increased risk of bleeding. The trick, for the future, much as with our antihypertensive and lipid-lowering armamentaria, will be to know in whom to do what with which drug, and why. Single isolated measurements are not useful , if you don't know where you started, how we would know that antiplatelet drug is producing an ,adequate' clinical effect? There is no evidence of any sort of absolute ,threshold' that must be exceeded for treatment to be effective, and in the absence of this, if we are to evaluate the effect of a given drug, we have to have baseline values (off drug), therapeutic values (on drug), and some sort of assessment of both resting (unstimulated) and agonist-provoked (stimulated) platelet function. Moreover, given all of the different things that platelets do, the ideal assessment of platelet function and drug responsiveness will need to incorporate more than one agonist and some sort of assessment of both platelet activation and platelet aggregation. No one man (or test) tells us everything; it is the totality of the information that gives us the most complete picture. And, ultimately, we need to more firmly establish how the variability in platelet function and drug-associated changes in that function correlates with long-term, hard-endpoint clinical events. [source]


    Enhanced hippocampal neurogenesis in the absence of microglia T cell interaction and microglia activation in the murine running wheel model

    GLIA, Issue 10 2009
    Marta Olah
    Abstract Recently, activated microglia have been shown to be involved in the regulation of several aspects of neurogenesis under certain experimental conditions both in vitro and in vivo. A neurogenesis supportive microglia phenotype has been suggested to arise from the interaction of microglia with homing encephalitogenic T cells. However, a unified hypothesis regarding the exact nature of microglia activity that is supportive of neurogenesis is yet missing from the field. Our aim was to investigate the connection between microglia activity and adult hippocampal neurogenesis under physiological conditions. To address this question we compared the level of microglia activation in the hippocampus of mice, which had access to a running wheel for 10 days and that of sedentary controls. Suprisingly, despite elevated levels of proliferation of neural precursors and survival of newborn neurons in the dentate gyrus microglia remained in a "resting" state morphologically, antigenically, and at the transcriptional level. Moreover, neither T cells nor MHCII expressing microglia were present in the hippocampal brain parenchyma. Though microglia in the dentate gyrus of the runners proliferated at a higher level than in the sedentary controls, this difference was also present in non-neurogenic sites. Therefore, our findings suggest that classical signs of microglia activation and microglia activation arising from interaction with T cells in particular are not a prerequisite for the activity-induced increase in adult hippocampal neurogenesis in C57Bl/6 mice. Thus, our results draw attention on the species and model differences that might exist regarding the regulation of adult hippocampal neurogenesis. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Microglial expression of ,v,3 and ,v,5 integrins is regulated by cytokines and the extracellular matrix: ,5 Integrin null microglia show no defects in adhesion or MMP-9 expression on vitronectin

    GLIA, Issue 7 2009
    Richard Milner
    Abstract As the primary immune effector cells in the CNS, microglia play a central role in regulating inflammation. The extracellular matrix (ECM) protein vitronectin is a strong inducer of microglial activation, switching microglia from a resting into an activated potentially destructive phenotype. As the activating effect of vitronectin is mediated by ,v integrins, the aim of the current study was to evaluate the requirement of the ,v,5 integrin in mediating microglial adhesion and activation to vitronectin, by studying these events in ,5 integrin-null murine microglia. Surprisingly, ,5 integrin null microglia were not defective in adhesion to vitronectin. Further analysis showed that microglia express the ,v,3 integrin, in addition to ,v,5. Flow cytometry revealed that microglial ,v integrin expression is regulated by cytokines and ECM proteins. ,v,3 integrin expression was downregulated by IFN-,, TNF, LPS, and TGF-,1. ,v,5 expression was also reduced by IFN-,, TNF, and LPS, but strongly increased by the antiactivating factors TGF-,1 and laminin. Gel zymography revealed that ,5 integrin null microglia showed no deficiency in their expression of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 in response to vitronectin. Taken together, these data show that microglia express two different ,v integrins, ,v,3 and ,v,5, and that expression of these integrins is independently regulated by cytokines and ECM proteins. Furthermore, it reveals that the ,v,5 integrin is not essential for mediating microglial adhesion and MMP-9 expression in response to vitronectin. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Rolandic alpha and beta EEG rhythms' strengths are inversely related to fMRI-BOLD signal in primary somatosensory and motor cortex

    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 4 2009
    Petra Ritter
    Abstract Similar to the posterior alpha rhythm, pericentral (Rolandic) EEG rhythms in the alpha and beta frequency range are referred to as "idle rhythms" indicating a "resting state" of the respective system. The precise function of these rhythms is not clear. We used simultaneous EEG-fMRI during a bimanual motor task to localize brain areas involved in Rolandic alpha and beta EEG rhythms. The identification of these rhythms in the MR environment was achieved by a blind source separation algorithm. Rhythm "strength", i.e. spectral power determined by wavelet analysis, inversely correlated most strongly with the fMRI-BOLD signal in the postcentral cortex for the Rolandic alpha (mu) rhythm and in the precentral cortex for the Rolandic beta rhythm. FMRI correlates of Rolandic alpha and beta rhythms were distinct from those associated with the posterior "classical" alpha rhythm, which correlated inversely with the BOLD signal in the occipital cortex. An inverse correlation with the BOLD signal in the respective sensory area seems to be a general feature of "idle rhythms". Hum Brain Mapp 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Modulation of temporally coherent brain networks estimated using ICA at rest and during cognitive tasks

    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 7 2008
    Vince D. Calhoun
    Abstract Brain regions which exhibit temporally coherent fluctuations, have been increasingly studied using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Such networks are often identified in the context of an fMRI scan collected during rest (and thus are called "resting state networks"); however, they are also present during (and modulated by) the performance of a cognitive task. In this article, we will refer to such networks as temporally coherent networks (TCNs). Although there is still some debate over the physiological source of these fluctuations, TCNs are being studied in a variety of ways. Recent studies have examined ways TCNs can be used to identify patterns associated with various brain disorders (e.g. schizophrenia, autism or Alzheimer's disease). Independent component analysis (ICA) is one method being used to identify TCNs. ICA is a data driven approach which is especially useful for decomposing activation during complex cognitive tasks where multiple operations occur simultaneously. In this article we review recent TCN studies with emphasis on those that use ICA. We also present new results showing that TCNs are robust, and can be consistently identified at rest and during performance of a cognitive task in healthy individuals and in patients with schizophrenia. In addition, multiple TCNs show temporal and spatial modulation during the cognitive task versus rest. In summary, TCNs show considerable promise as potential imaging biological markers of brain diseases, though each network needs to be studied in more detail. Hum Brain Mapp, 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Elevated metabolic costs while resting on water in a surface feeder: the Black-legged Kittiwake Rissa tridactyla

    IBIS, Issue 1 2007
    ELIZABETH M. HUMPHREYS
    Measurements of the energy costs of individual behaviours provide insights into how animals trade-off resource allocation and energy acquisition decisions. The energetic costs while resting on water are poorly known for seabirds but could comprise a substantial proportion of their daily energy expenditure. We measured the cost of resting on water in Black-legged Kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla, a species which does not fly during the night and for which estimating energy expenditure while resting on the water is therefore important. Their resting metabolic rate on water at 12.5 °C was at least 40% higher compared with resting at the same temperature in air. This indicates that, at comparable temperatures, metabolic costs are elevated for birds resting at sea compared with on land. We argue that Kittiwakes meet much of this extra thermoregulatory demand by dedicated metabolic activity. During the winter months, their costs are likely to be even higher owing to lower sea temperatures. Accordingly, we suggest that migration to milder latitudes, following breeding, will provide enhanced benefits, particularly to seabirds such as Kittiwakes which rest on the sea surface during darkness. [source]


    T-cell seeding: neonatal transfer of anti-myelin basic protein T-cell lines renders Fischer rats susceptible later in life to the active induction of experimental autoimmune encephalitis

    IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
    Ilan Volovitz
    Summary Fischer strain rats resist active induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) following immunization with guinea-pig myelin basic protein (MBP) in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA). Nevertheless, we now report that an encephalitogenic CD4+ anti-MBP T-cell line could be developed from actively immunized Fischer rats. Adoptive transfer of the activated line mediated acute EAE in adult Fischer rats, but not in 1-day-old rats. Moreover, we found that both resting and activated anti-MBP T cells injected 1 day post-natally rendered these rats susceptible later in life to the active induction of EAE by immunization with MBP/CFA. The actively induced EAE manifested the accelerated onset of a secondary, memory-type response. Resting anti-MBP T cells injected even up to 2 weeks post-natally produced no clinical signs but seeded 50,100% of the recipients for an active encephalitogenic immune response to MBP. An earlier T-cell injection (1,2 days) produced a higher incidence and stronger response. The transferred resting T cells entered the neonatal spleen and thymus and proliferated there but did not change the total anti-MBP precursor number in adults. Splenocytes harvested from rats that were injected neonatally but not exposed to MBP in vivo proliferated strongly and produced significant amounts of interferon-, to MBP in vitro. Similar results were observed in rats injected with resting T-cell lines reactive to ovalbumin, suggesting that the neonatal injection of resting T cells specific for a self or for a foreign antigen can seed the immune system with the potential for an enhanced effector response to that antigen later in life. [source]


    Natural killer T-cell characterization through gene expression profiling: an account of versatility bridging T helper type 1 (Th1), Th2 and Th17 immune responses

    IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 1 2008
    Marcus Niemeyer
    Summary Natural killer T (NKT) cells constitute a distinct lymphocyte lineage at the interface between innate and adaptive immunity, yet their role in the immune response remains elusive. Whilst NKT cells share features with other conventional T lymphocytes, they are unique in their rapid, concomitant production of T helper type 1 (Th1) and Th2 cytokines upon T-cell receptor (TCR) ligation. In order to characterize the gene expression of NKT cells, we performed comparative microarray analyses of murine resting NKT cells, natural killer (NK) cells and naïve conventional CD4+ T helper (Th) and regulatory T cells (Treg). We then compared the gene expression profiles of resting and alpha-galactosylceramide (,GalCer)-activated NKT cells to elucidate the gene expression signature upon activation. We describe here profound differences in gene expression among the various cell types and the identification of a unique NKT cell gene expression profile. In addition to known NKT cell-specific markers, many genes were expressed in NKT cells that had not been attributed to this population before. NKT cells share features not only with Th1 and Th2 cells but also with Th17 cells. Our data provide new insights into the functional competence of NKT cells which will facilitate a better understanding of their versatile role during immune responses. [source]


    Bacterial dormancy in Campylobacter: abstract theory or cause for concern?

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, Issue 6 2001
    John E. Moore
    For the past 100 years, since the birth of modern microbiology, this discipline has predominantly relied on the ability to culture micro-organisms in vitro on artificial synthetic culture media under controlled conditions in the laboratory. However, sometimes it is not possible to detect foodborne pathogens using such conventional techniques. Employment of these techniques can also lead to a delay in detection of pathogens. The ,viable but non-culturable' (VNC) cellular form has been demonstrated in Campylobacter jejuni, representing a resting or dormant stage, which is induced through cell stress including starvation. This form is extremely difficult to detect and generally requires complex and sophisticated technology which is usually not available in most routine food microbiology laboratories. This review aims at examining the role of this cell form in Campylobacter, including their historical evolution, formation, physiology, detection and to discuss the challenges that this form presents to food safety. [source]


    Singing Our World into Existence: International Relations Theory and September 11

    INTERNATIONAL STUDIES QUARTERLY, Issue 3 2004
    February 2, Portland, Presidential Address to the International Studies Association
    This paper focuses on the relationship between International Relations theory and ethics. It poses the question of the complicity of the discipline in the events of September 11, 2001. The paper begins with a discussion of Weber's notion of science as a vocation, and links this to the commitment in the discipline to a value-free conception of social science, one that sharply separates facts from values. The paper then examines the role of ten core assumptions in International Relations theory in helping to construct a discipline that has a culturally and historically very specific notion of violence, one resting on distinctions between economics and politics, between the outside and the inside of states, and between the public and the private realms. Using the United Nations Human Development report, the paper summarizes a number of forms of violence in world politics, and questions why the discipline of International Relations only focuses on a small subset of these. The paper then refers to the art of Magritte, and specifically Velazquez's painting Las Meninas, to argue for a notion of representation relevant to the social world that stresses negotiation, perspective, and understanding rather than notions of an underlying Archimedean foundation to truth claims. In concluding, the paper asserts that the discipline helped to sing into existence the world of September 11 by reflecting the interests of the dominant in what were presented as being neutral, and universal theories. [source]


    Effects of construction noise on behaviour of and exhibit use by Snow leopards Uncia uncia at Basel zoo

    INTERNATIONAL ZOO YEARBOOK, Issue 1 2008
    C. E. SULSER
    Noise caused by human activities can cause stress in animals. We examined whether noise from construction sites affects the behaviour of and exhibit use by three Snow leopards Uncia uncia at Basel zoo. The behaviour and location of the animals were recorded at 1 minute intervals, using the instantaneous scan sampling method over a period of 216 hours (104 hours on noisy days and 112 hours on quiet days). The animals differed individually in their responses to the construction noise. On noisy days, the Snow leopards generally spent less time in locomotion and more time resting, but even on quiet days, resting was the predominant behaviour performed. Under noisy conditions, they increased social resting and decreased resting alone. Walking and social walking were also reduced on noisy days. Furthermore, the Snow leopards spent considerably more time in the remote off-exhibit enclosure under noisy conditions. Independent of background noise, they stayed more than half of the time in the caves and the forecourts of the outdoor enclosure. On quiet days, the Snow leopards used more sectors of their exhibit than on noisy days. The results indicate that the Snow leopards responded to construction noise by increasing the amount of time spent resting and by withdrawing to the remote parts of their exhibit. [source]


    Population status, structure and activity patterns of the Bohor reedbuck Redunca redunca in the north of the Bale Mountains National Park, Ethiopia

    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2010
    Bezawork Afework
    Abstract The Bohor reedbucks Redunca redunca (Pallas, 1767) were studied in the Bale Mountains National Park (BMNP), Ethiopia to assess their population ecology and activity patterns. The total count method was used to assess population size. Activity patterns of a herd were studied with five minutes recording intervals. There were 406 Bohor reedbucks in the study area of which 96.8% (n = 393) was confined to the Gaysay-Adelay area. The population was female-biased. Excluding juveniles, 57.1% (n = 232) was females and 33.5% (n = 136) was males. More adults (71.7%, n = 291) were observed than sub-adults (18.9%, n = 77) and juveniles (9.4%, n = 38). The herd size of Bohor reedbucks varied from 3 to 5. Herds were seen in aggregations of up to 59 individuals during the dry season in swamp grassland habitat. The maximum number observed in such aggregations during the wet season was 38. The diurnal activity pattern showed feeding peaks early in the morning and late in the afternoon, with resting during the mid-day. Two feeding peaks were observed in the nocturnal activity phase: one during dusk and the other around midnight. In contradiction to the general concept of occurrence of smaller herds during the dry season, the Bohor reedbucks aggregate in swamps during the dry season. They were also active during night and day time. Résumé On a étudié les reduncas Redunca redunca (Pallas, 1767) dans le Parc National des Bale Mountains (BMNP), en Ethiopie, pour connaître l'écologie et le schéma des activités de leur population. On a utilisé la méthode des comptages totaux pour évaluer la taille de la population. On a étudié le schéma des activités d'une harde en rapportant les observations à intervalles de cinq minutes. Il y avait 406 reduncas dans l'aire étudiée; 96,8% (n = 393) d'entre eux étaient confinés dans la région Gaysay-Adalay. La population était biaisée en faveur des femelles. Si l'on exclut les juvéniles, 57,1% (n = 232) étaient des femelles et de 33,5% (n = 136) étaient des mâles. On a observé plus d'adultes (71,7%, n = 291) que de subadultes (18,9%, n = 77) et de juvéniles (9,4%, n = 38). La taille d'une harde de reduncas variait de 3 à 5 individus. On a observé des agrégats de hardes allant jusqu'à 59 individus en saison sèche, dans la prairie marécageuse. Le plus grand agrégat de ce genre observé en saison des pluies comptait 38 individus. Le schéma d'activité diurne présentait des pics de nourrissage tôt le matin et en fin d'après-midi, et du repos pendant la mi-journée. On a observé deux pics de nourrissage pendant la phase d'activité nocturne : une au crépuscule et l'autre autour de minuit. Contrairement à l'idée générale selon laquelle les plus petites hardes s'observent pendant la saison sèche, les reduncas se rassemblent dans les marais pendant cette saison. Ils sont aussi actifs le jour et la nuit. [source]


    Energetic cost of calling: general constraints and species-specific differences

    JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 7 2010
    A. G. OPHIR
    Abstract The energetic cost of acoustic signalling varies tremendously among species. Understanding factors responsible for this heterogeneity is important for understanding the costs and benefits of signalling. Here, we present a general model, based on well-established principles of bioenergetics, which predicts the energetic cost of call production across species. We test model predictions using an extensive database of resting and calling metabolic rates of insects, amphibians and birds. Results are largely supportive of model predictions. Calling metabolic rates scale predictably with body mass and temperature such that calling and resting metabolic rates are directly proportional to each other. The cost of acoustic signalling is ,8 times higher than resting metabolic rate in ectotherms, and ,2 times higher in birds. Differences in the increase in metabolic rate during calling are explained by the relative size of species' sound-producing muscles. Combined with published work, we quantify call efficiency and discuss model implications. [source]


    Uncoupled and surviving: individual mice with high metabolism have greater mitochondrial uncoupling and live longer

    AGING CELL, Issue 3 2004
    John R. Speakman
    Summary Two theories of how energy metabolism should be associated with longevity, both mediated via free-radical production, make completely contrary predictions. The ,rate of living-free-radical theory' (Pearl, 1928; Harman, 1956; Sohal, 2002) suggests a negative association, the ,uncoupling to survive' hypothesis (Brand, 2000) suggests the correlation should be positive. Existing empirical data on this issue is contradictory and extremely confused (Rubner, 1908; Yan & Sohal, 2000; Ragland & Sohal, 1975; Daan et al., 1996; Wolf & Schmid-Hempel, 1989]. We sought associations between longevity and individual variations in energy metabolism in a cohort of outbred mice. We found a positive association between metabolic intensity (kJ daily food assimilation expressed as g/body mass) and lifespan, but no relationships of lifespan to body mass, fat mass or lean body mass. Mice in the upper quartile of metabolic intensities had greater resting oxygen consumption by 17% and lived 36% longer than mice in the lowest intensity quartile. Mitochondria isolated from the skeletal muscle of mice in the upper quartile had higher proton conductance than mitochondria from mice from the lowest quartile. The higher conductance was caused by higher levels of endogenous activators of proton leak through the adenine nucleotide translocase and uncoupling protein-3. Individuals with high metabolism were therefore more uncoupled, had greater resting and total daily energy expenditures and survived longest , supporting the ,uncoupling to survive' hypothesis. [source]


    Age and gender differences in body composition, energy expenditure, and glucoregulation of adult rhesus monkeys

    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 1 2000
    Jon J. Ramsey
    The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship of age to body composition, glucoregulation, activity, and energy expenditure in male and female rhesus monkeys. The animals were studied in three groups, young adults (YA, 7,9 years), middle-aged adults (MA, 13,17 years), and older adults (OA,>23 years) adults. OA had a lower ( P<0.05) lean body mass than the YA and MA. OA also had the lowest values (P<0.06) for energy expenditure (kJ/minute). Age-related differences (P<0.05) were observed in time spent resting and moving. The OA spent the most time resting and the least time in vertical movement. There was a trend towards an age-related decrease in acute insulin response to glucose, while other glucoregulatory parameters were not changed with age. These results are similar to findings in humans, providing further evidence that the rhesus monkey is an appropriate model of human aging. [source]


    Differential and Age-Dependent Effects of Maternal Deprivation on the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis of Brown Norway Rats from Youth to Senescence

    JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 7 2001
    J. O. Workel
    Abstract In this study, the hypothesis was tested that infants deprived from maternal care show persistent changes in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity. For this purpose, we studied the effect of maternal deprivation in one cohort of the healthy ageing Brown Norway rat strain showing still more than 80% survival rate at 32 months of age. Three-day-old male Brown Norway rats were either maternally deprived for 24 h or remained with the dam. In 3, 12 and 30,32 months (young, adult, senescent) deprived rats and their nondeprived littermates (controls), we determined basal resting and stress-induced plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and corticosterone as well as corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) mRNA expression in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus. Mineralocorticoid (MR) and glucocorticoid receptors (GR) in hippocampus and PVN were also assessed using in vitro cytosol binding and in situ hybridization. The effect of ageing per se showed that in the control nondeprived Brown Norway rats, basal corticosterone and ACTH concentrations did not change during life. However, with age, the corticosterone response to novelty stress became progressively attenuated, but prolonged, while there was an age-related increase in the ACTH response. CRH mRNA expression in PVN decreased with age. Hippocampal MR binding and MR mRNA expression in the dentate gyrus were reduced at senescence, as were the GR binding capacities in hippocampus and hypothalamus. Maternal deprivation did not affect survival rate, body weight, nor adrenal weight of the ageing Brown Norway rats. Basal corticosterone and ACTH levels were not affected by deprivation, except for a rise in basal corticosterone concentrations at 3 months. At this age, the corticosterone output in response to novelty was attenuated in the deprived rats. In contrast, a striking surge in novelty stress-induced corticosterone output occurred at midlife while, at senescence, the corticosterone and ACTH responses were attenuated again in the deprived animals, particularly after the more severe restraint stressor. CRH mRNA expression was reduced only during adulthood in the deprived animals. After maternal deprivation, the MR mRNA in dentate gyrus showed a transient midlife rise. GR binding in hypothalamus and hippocampus GR binding was reduced in young rats while, in the senescent deprived animals, a reduced GRmRNA expression was observed in PVN and hippocampal CA1. In conclusion, in the Brown Norway rat, ageing causes a progressive decline in corticosterone output after stress, which is paralleled at senescence by decreased MR and GR mRNA expression in hippocampus and hypothalamus. The long-term effects of maternal deprivation become manifest differently at different ages and depend on test conditions. The deprivation effect culminates in a midlife corticosterone surge and results at senescence in a strongly reduced corticosterone output. [source]


    Differential platelet-activating factor synthesis by monocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes from subjects with localized aggressive periodontitis

    JOURNAL OF PERIODONTAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2007
    C. R. Shin
    Background and Objective:, Platelet-activating factor is elevated in localized aggressive periodontitis. We previously demonstrated that the elevated level of platelet-activating factor in localized aggressive periodontitis is at least partially attributable to low levels of platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase, the enzyme that catabolizes platelet-activating factor. The objective of this study was to determine if platelet-activating factor synthesis was also elevated in localized aggressive periodontitis. To test this, platelet-activating factor synthesis was quantified in the monocytes and polymorphonuclear neutrophils of periodontally healthy patients and of subjects with localized aggressive periodontitis. Material and Methods:, Cells were labeled with [3H]acetate and treated with vehicle or stimulated with calcium ionophore A23187. Platelet-activating factor was extracted and quantified by scintillation counting. Results:, For both subject groups, resting monocytes and polymorphonuclear neutrophils produced platelet-activating factor, and calcium ionophore A23187 stimulated platelet-activating factor production in both cell types. However, calcium ionophore A23187-activated monocytes from subjects with localized aggressive periodontitis produced less platelet-activating factor than did activated periodontally healthy monocytes (p < 0.0001), suggesting an aberrant calcium ionophore A23187 response in monocytes from subjects with localized aggressive periodontitis. Indeed, when the data were expressed as fold induction of platelet-activating factor synthesis in response to calcium ionophore A23187, monocytes from subjects with localized aggressive periodontitis exhibited only a fourfold increase in platelet-activating factor synthesis, whereas calcium ionophore A23187-stimulated monocytes from periodontally healthy, chronic periodontitis and generalized aggressive periodontitis subjects produced ,,12 times more platelet-activating factor than did resting monocytes. In contrast, both resting and activated localized aggressive periodontitis polymorphonuclear neutrophils synthesized more platelet-activating factor than did periodontally healthy polymorphonuclear neutrophils. Conclusion:, These data suggest that high levels of platelet-activating factor in subjects with localized aggressive periodontitis result from both increased synthesis and reduced catabolism. While localized aggressive periodontitis polymorphonuclear neutrophils contribute to increased platelet-activating factor mass through synthesis, the contribution of monocytes is probably the result of reduced catabolism by platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase. [source]


    Cytotoxic activity and effect on nitric oxide production of tirucallane-type triterpenes

    JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 9 2005
    Ibeth Oviedo Chávez
    Hexane extract from the bark of Amphipterygium adstringens, as well as its principal constituents, masticadienonic acid (1) and 3,-hydroxymasticadienolic acid (2), inhibited the growth of five human cancer cell lines. Derivatives of 1, namely 24,25S -dihydromasticadienonic acid (3) and masticadienolic acid (4), were also evaluated. The results showed that both 3 and 4 had greater activity than 1 on colon cancer cell lines. The effects of 1,4 on the production of nitric oxide (NO) from both resting and lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophages were determined. It was found that 1, 2 and 4 caused an increase in NO release from resting macrophages; in lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophages, only 2 and 4 caused an increase in NO production. [source]


    Melatonin ameliorates hippocampal nitric oxide production and large conductance calcium-activated potassium channel activity in chronic intermittent hypoxia

    JOURNAL OF PINEAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2008
    Y. W. Tjong
    Abstract:, Melatonin protects against hippocampal injury induced by intermittent hypoxia (IH). IH-induced oxidative stress is associated with decreases in constitutive production of nitric oxide (NO) and in the activity of large conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels in hippocampal neurons. We tested the hypothesis that administration of melatonin alleviates the NO deficit and impaired BK channel activity in the hippocampus of IH rats. Sprague,Dawley rats were injected with melatonin (10 mg/kg, i.p.) or vehicle before daily IH exposure for 8 hr for 7 days. The NO and intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) levels in the CA1 region of hippocampal slices were measured by electrochemical microsenor and spectrofluorometry, respectively. The activity of BK channels was recorded by patch-clamping electrophysiology in dissociated CA1 neurons. Malondialdehyde levels were increased in the hippocampus of hypoxic rats and were lowered by the melatonin treatment. Levels of NO under resting and hypoxic conditions, and the protein expression of neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) were significantly reduced in the CA1 neurons of hypoxic animals compared with the normoxic controls. These deficits were mitigated in the melatonin-treated hypoxic rats with an improved [Ca2+]i response to acute hypoxia. The open probability of BK channels was decreased in the hypoxic rats and was partially restored in the melatonin-treated animals, without alterations in the expression of channel subunits and unitary conductance. Acute treatment of melatonin had no significant effects on the BK channel activity or on the [Ca2+]i response to hypoxia. Collectively, these results suggest that melatonin ameliorates the constitutive NO production and BK channel activity via an antioxidant mechanism against an IH-induced down-regulation of nNOS expression in hippocampal neurons. [source]