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Selected AbstractsLight gains and physiological capacity of understorey woody plants during phenological avoidance of canopy shadeFUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2005C. K. AUGSPURGER Summary 1Carbon gain during phenological avoidance of canopy shade by an understorey plant depends on the extent of avoidance, the leaf stage during avoidance, and whether young and old leaves can exploit greater light availability in spring and autumn. 2For Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal., Aesculus glabra Willd., Acer saccharum Marsh., Lindera benzoin (L.) Blume and Carpinus caroliniana Walt. in a deciduous forest in Illinois, USA, spring avoidance with leaves at full size ranged from 0 days for Asimina to 24 days for Aesculus, and brought 36,98% of estimated total annual irradiance. Autumn avoidance was non-existent to minimal in all species. 3Total chlorophyll reached maximum concentrations at the middle of leaf life span, and declined well before senescence. Leaf nitrogen concentrations and net photosynthetic capacity both peaked in youngest leaves during spring avoidance, and were low in old leaves during autumn avoidance. 4Aesculus had especially high photosynthetic capacity during precanopy closure, while Asimina had relatively low capacity in its later developing leaves. 5Young leaves of species with phenological avoidance can enhance C gain, while old leaves in autumn do not. Thus phenological avoidance in spring may enhance the persistence of understorey woody individuals of some species. [source] Recovery of rat submandibular salivary gland function following removal of obstruction: a sialometrical and sialochemical studyINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY, Issue 6 2006Samira M. Osailan Summary Functional recovery of the rat submandibular gland following ligation of the main excretory duct was examined. Rat submandibular glands were ligated for 1, 4 and 8 weeks using a micro-clip with a plastic tube. Micro-clips were removed and glands were allowed to recover for periods of 8, 16 and 24 weeks. Submandibular glands were stimulated with autonomimetic drugs (methacholine and isoprenaline) and salivas were collected from atrophic or de-ligated and contralateral control glands. Glands recovered almost full size (92% of control gland) following 24 weeks of de-ligation. Saliva volume secreted by ligated/de-ligated (RSM) and control (LSM) glands were similar with different doses of agonists. Protein output expressed per gram of tissue wet weight was similar from both ligated/de-ligated and control glands with all doses of agonist. Sodium and chloride levels were higher from de-ligated glands than contralateral control glands. Protein electrophoresis showed similar profiles of salivary proteins in all samples with some minor differences. Acinar cells in de-ligated glands showed a normal morphology, as indicated by light microscopy, whilst granular ductal cells were fewer and contained fewer secretory granules. Sodium potassium ATPase staining of striated ducts in de-ligated glands was similar to that of control glands. It can be concluded that rat submandibular glands can regenerate following severe atrophy and secrete normal amounts of saliva containing broadly a full profile of secretory proteins. In contrast to acinar cells, ductal cells appear not to recover full function. [source] g_membed: Efficient insertion of a membrane protein into an equilibrated lipid bilayer with minimal perturbationJOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, Issue 11 2010Maarten G. Wolf Abstract To efficiently insert a protein into an equilibrated and fully hydrated membrane with minimal membrane perturbation we present a computational tool, called g_membed, which is part of the Gromacs suite of programs. The input consists of an equilibrated membrane system, either flat or curved, and a protein structure in the right position and orientation with respect to the lipid bilayer. g_membed first decreases the width of the protein in the xy -plane and removes all molecules (generally lipids and waters) that overlap with the narrowed protein. Then the protein is grown back to its full size in a short molecular dynamics simulation (typically 1000 steps), thereby pushing the lipids away to optimally accommodate the protein in the membrane. After embedding the protein in the membrane, both the lipid properties and the hydration layer are still close to equilibrium. Thus, only a short equilibration run (less then 1 ns in the cases tested) is required to re-equilibrate the membrane. Its simplicity makes g_membed very practical for use in scripting and high-throughput molecular dynamics simulations. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2010 [source] Quantitative liver function tests in donors and recipients of living donor liver transplantationLIVER TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 4 2006Christoph Jochum The unique ability of the liver to regenerate quickly after resection makes living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) possible. This technique uses the unique ability of the liver to regenerate to full size after partial resection. However, the quality and course of this regeneration process in humans are still widely unexplored. In the present study we investigated the quantitative liver function tests galactose elimination capacity (GEC), indocyanine green half-life (ICG), and lidocaine half-life as markers for the quality of the liver regeneration in the first 3 months after LDLT. In this study, 22 consecutive living liver donors and their corresponding recipients were analyzed at baseline and at 10 and 90 days after LDLT. Six recipients lost their grafts during the study period. We compared donors and recipients at the different time points. After LDLT, GEC decreased (,42.6%) and ICG increased (+50.6%) significantly in donors. ICG and GEC remained significantly altered over 3 months in donors with an improvement between days 10 and 90 (GEC, +59.3%; ICG, ,9.1%). ICG and GEC improved significantly in recipients between days 10 and 90 (ICG, ,63.7%; GEC, +16.3%). The lidocaine half-life showed no significant changes. The donors had better test results and recovered faster than the recipients. In conclusion, after LDLT the parameters for liver capacity and flow remain altered in donors and recipients despite rapid volume growth. Liver Transpl 12:544,549, 2006. © 2006 AASLD. [source] Identification of a defective molecule derived from DNA-A of the bipartite begomovirus of East African cassava mosaic virusPLANT PATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2006J. Ndunguru Geminivirus defective interfering DNAs arise spontaneously in mechanically inoculated test plants, and have previously been found with DNA-B of the bipartite cassava mosaic geminiviruses, but not DNA-A. Reported here for the first time is the cloning and characterization of a naturally occurring truncated form of cassava mosaic geminivirus DNA-A, which at 1525 nt is around half the expected full size. Sequence analysis has shown it to be a defective (df) form of East African cassava mosaic virus (EACMV) DNA-A that has retained its cis elements essential for replication by the helper virus, and it has been termed df DNA-A 15. Phylogenetic comparisons placed the df DNA-A 15 molecule close to mild and severe isolates of EACMV-UG2. Biolistic inoculation of Nicotiana benthamiana with infectious df DNA-A 15 clone and East African cassava mosaic Cameroon virus (EACMCV) resulted in symptom amelioration as compared with EACMCV singly inoculated plants, and there was an accumulation of df DNA-A 15 in systemically infected leaves. In addition, the level of EACMV DNA-B accumulation was reduced in the coinoculated plants compared with those inoculated with EACMCV alone. PCR and sequence analysis confirmed the helper virus as EACMV. [source] Contribution of death receptor and mitochondrial pathways to Fas-mediated apoptosis in the prostatic carcinoma cell line PC3THE PROSTATE, Issue 4 2002Natalya V. Guseva Abstract BACKGROUND Two main pathways of apoptosis in mammalian cells have been described: the death receptor pathway and the mitochondrial pathway. Two different cell types have been identified for Fas-mediated apoptosis, each using almost exclusively one of two different signaling pathways. Human prostatic carcinoma cell line, PC3 is sensitive to Fas-mediated apoptosis, but relation of receptor and mitochondrial pathways is not clear. METHODS Cell viability was estimated by calcein assay. Apoptosis was determined by preparation of DNA ladder. Expression of Fas-associated death domain-dominant negative (FADD-DN) and Bcl-2, activation of caspases, PARP, DFF45, Bid cleavage, and cytochrome c release were assessed using Western blotting techniques. [35S] Methionine-labeled caspase-3 was transcribed in vitro and translated using the TNT kit (Promega). A vector containing caspase-3 was prepared by the ligation of EcoR I/BamHI flanked PCR fragment of full size caspase-3 cDNA into pBlusckript II SK(+/,) (Stratagen). RESULTS Overexpression of both FADD-DN and Bcl-2 genes prevent Fas-mediated apoptosis in PC3. As predicted, overexpression of FADD-DN prevented activation of caspase-8 and Bid cleavage and attenuated the release of cytochrome c and activation of caspases -2, -7, and -9. Bcl-2 overexpression did not affect caspase-8 activation and cleavage of Bid but blocked the release of cytochrome c and activation of mitochondria localized caspases -2, -7, and,9. Overexpression of FADD-DN and Bcl-2 affected the activation of caspase-3 and PARP cleavage differently: FADD-DN attenuated the activation of caspase-3 and PARP cleavage whereas Bcl-2 overexpression prevented caspase-3 activation and completely blocked cleavage of PARP. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that activation of caspase-8 is necessary but not sufficient to complete Fas-mediated apoptosis in PC3 cells without activation of the mitochondrial pathway. In addition, caspase-3 activation after Fas-receptor ligation involves two steps and is dependent on mitochondrial activation. Prostate 51: 231,240, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. 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