Marked Contrast (marked + contrast)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Our Knowledge of Numbers as Self-Subsistent Objects

DIALECTICA, Issue 2 2005
William Demopoulos
A feature of Frege's philosophy of arithmetic that has elicited a great deal of attention in the recent secondary literature is his contention that numbers are ,self-subsistent' objects. The considerable interest in this thesis among the contemporary philosophy of mathematics community stands in marked contrast to Kreisel's folk-lore observation that the central problem in the philosophy of mathematics is not the existence of mathematical objects, but the objectivity of mathematics. Although Frege was undoubtedly concerned with both questions, a goal of the present paper is to argue that his success in securing the objectivity of arithmetic depends on a less contentious commitment to numbers as objects than either he or his critics have supposed. As such, this paper is an articulation and defense of both Frege's analysis of arithmetic and Kreisel's observation. [source]


Differential role of IL-2R signaling for CD8+ T cell responses in acute and chronic viral infections

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 6 2007
Martin
Abstract IL-2 is a cytokine with multiple and even divergent functions; it has been described as a key cytokine for in vitro T cell proliferation but is also essential for down-regulating T cell responses by inducing activation-induced cell death as well as regulatory T cells. The in vivo analysis of IL-2 function in regulating specific T cell responses has been hampered by the fact that mice deficient in IL-2 or its receptors develop lymphoproliferative diseases and/or autoimmunity. Here we generated chimeric mice harboring both IL-2R-competent and IL-2R-deficient T cells and assessed CD8+ T cell induction, function and maintenance after acute or persistent viral infections. Induction and maintenance of CD8+ T cells were relatively independent of IL-2R signaling during acute/resolved viral infection. In marked contrast, IL-2 was crucial for secondary expansion of memory CD8+ T cells and for the maintenance of virus-specific CD8+ T cells during persistent viral infections. Thus, depending on the chronicity of antigen exposure, IL-2R signaling is either essential or largely dispensable for induction and maintenance of virus-specific CD8+ T cell responses. [source]


Noxious Somatic Inputs to Hypothalamic-Midbrain Projection Neurones: a Comparison of the Columnar Organisation of Somatic and Visceral Inputs to the Periaqueductal Grey in the Rat

EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
D. M. Parry
The induction of Fos protein was used to localise hypothalamic neurones activated by noxious somatic stimulation. This was combined with retrograde transport of fluorescent latex microspheres from identified ,pressor' and ,depressor' sites in the dorsolateral/lateral or ventrolateral columns of the periaqueductal grey (PAG). Fos-positive neurones were found throughout the rostral hypothalamus. Of those neurones activated by noxious somatic stimuli that projected to the PAG all but one was retrogradely labelled from sites that included the lateral column. Only one neurone was double labelled following injection of tracer at a depressor site in the ventrolateral PAG. This is in marked contrast to visceroresponsive hypothalamic neurones, a larger proportion of which project to the PAG and which, as reported previously, preferentially target depressor sites in the ventrolateral sector. These results are discussed in relation to the roles of the anterior hypothalamus and the different functional columns of the PAG in co-ordinating autonomic and sensory functions in response to nociceptive inputs originating in different peripheral domains. [source]


Genetic detoxification of an aroA Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium vaccine strain does not compromise protection against virulent Salmonella and enhances the immune responses towards a protective malarial antigen

FEMS IMMUNOLOGY & MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2008
Nicola D. McKelvie
Abstract Live Salmonella vaccines are limited in use by the inherent toxicity of the lipopolysaccharide. The waaN gene encodes a myristyl transferase required for the secondary acylation of lipid A in lipopolysaccharide. A waaN mutant exhibits reduced induction of the inflammatory cytokines associated with lipopolysaccharide toxicity. Here the characteristics of a Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium aroA waaN mutant (SK100) in vitro and in vivo compared with its parent aroA strain (SL3261) were described. Phenotypic analysis of purified lipopolysaccharide obtained from SK100 confirmed that the physical and biological activities of the lipopolysaccharide had been altered. Nevertheless both strains had similar patterns of colonization and persistence in mice and significantly the aroA waaN mutant was equally as effective as the parent at protecting against challenge with wild-type S. Typhimurium. Furthermore, a SK100 strain was constructed expressing both tetanus toxin fragment C and the circumsporozoite protein of a malaria parasite. In marked contrast to its isogenic parent, the new attenuated strain induces significantly enhanced immune responses against the circumsporozoite protein. The waaN mutation enhances the ability of this strain to elicit immune responses towards guest antigens. This study provides important insights into the development of safe and effective multivalent Salmonella vaccines. [source]


Sensing of Alkylating Agents Using Organic Field-Effect Transistors

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 1 2010
Yair Gannot
Abstract Alkylating agents are simple and reactive molecules that are commonly used in many and diverse fields, such as organic synthesis, medicine, and agriculture. Some highly reactive alkylating species are also being used as blister chemical warfare agents. The detection and identification of alkylating agent is not a trivial issue because of their high reactivity and simple structure. Here, a novel polythiophene derivative that is capable of reacting with alkylating agents is reported, along with its application in direct electrical sensing of alkylators using an organic field-effect transistor, OFET, device. Upon reacting with alkylators, the OFET containing the new polythiophene analogue as its channel becomes conductive, and the gate effect is lost; this is in marked contrast to the response of the OFET to "innocent" vapors, such as alcohols and acetone. By following the drain,source current under gate bias, one can easily follow the processes of absorption of the analyte to the polythiophene channel and their subsequent reaction. [source]


Enhanced Optical Properties and Opaline Self-Assembly of PPV Encapsulated in Mesoporous Silica Spheres

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 23 2009
Timothy L. Kelly
Abstract A new poly(p -phenylenevinylene) (PPV) composite material has been developed by the incorporation of insoluble PPV polymer chains in the pores of monodisperse mesoporous silica spheres through an ion-exchange and in situ polymerization method. The polymer distribution within the resultant colloidal particles is characterized by electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis, powder X-ray diffraction, and nitrogen adsorption. It was found that the polymer was selectively incorporated into the mesopores of the silica host and was well distributed throughout the body of the particles. This confinement of the polymer influences the optical properties of the composite; these were examined by UV,vis and fluorescence spectroscopy and time-correlated single-photon counting. The results show a material that exhibits an extremely high fluorescence quantum yield (approaching 85%), and an improved resistance to oxidative photobleaching compared to PPV. These enhanced optical properties are further complemented by the overall processability of the colloidal material. In marked contrast to the insolubility of PPV, the material can be processed as a stable colloidal dispersion, and the individual composite spheres can be self-assembled into opaline films using the vertical deposition method. The bandgap of the opal can be engineered to overlap with the emission band of the polymer, which has significant ramifications for lasing. [source]


Structural basis for distinct roles of Lys63- and Lys48-linked polyubiquitin chains

GENES TO CELLS, Issue 10 2004
Takeshi Tenno
Ubiquitination, a modification in which single or multiple ubiquitin molecules are attached to a protein, serves as a signalling function that controls a wide variety of cellular processes. To date, two major forms of polyubiquitin chain have been functionally characterized, in which the isopeptide bond linkages involve Lys48 or Lys63. Lys48-linked polyubiquitin tagging is mostly used to target proteins for degradation by the proteasome, whereas Lys63-linked polyubiquitination has been linked to numerous cellular events that do not rely on degradative signalling via the proteasome. Apparently linkage-specific conformations of polyubiquitin chains are important for these cellular functions, but the structural bases distinguishing Lys48- and Lys63-linked chains remain elusive. Here, we report NMR and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) studies on the intersubunit interfaces and conformations of Lys63- and Lys48-linked di- and tetraubiquitin chains. Our results indicate that, in marked contrast to Lys48-linked chains, Lys63-linked chains are elongated molecules with no stable non-covalent intersubunit interfaces and thus adopt a radically different conformation from that of Lys48-linked chains. [source]


Increased hepatotoxicity of tumor necrosis factor,related apoptosis-inducing ligand in diseased human liver,

HEPATOLOGY, Issue 5 2007
Xandra Volkmann
Tumor necrosis factor,related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) induces apoptosis in tumor cells but not in most normal cells and has therefore been proposed as a promising antitumor agent. Recent experiments suggested that isolated primary human hepatocytes but not monkey liver cells are susceptible to certain TRAIL agonists, raising concerns about the use of TRAIL in cancer treatment. Whether TRAIL indeed exerts hepatotoxicity in vivo and how this is influenced by chemotherapeutic drugs or liver disease are completely unknown. Employing different forms of recombinant TRAIL, we found that the cytokine can induce proapoptotic caspase activity in isolated human hepatocytes. However in marked contrast, these different TRAIL preparations induced little or no cytotoxicity when incubated with tissue explants of fresh healthy liver, an experimental model that may more faithfully mimic the in vivo situation. In healthy liver, TRAIL induced apoptosis only when combined with histone deacetylase inhibitors. Strikingly, however, TRAIL alone triggered massive apoptosis accompanied by caspase activation in tissue explants from patients with liver steatosis or hepatitis C viral infection. This enhanced sensitivity of diseased liver was associated with an increased expression of TRAIL receptors and up-regulation of proapoptotic Bcl-2 proteins. Conclusion: These results suggest that clinical trials should be performed with great caution when TRAIL is combined with chemotherapy or administered to patients with inflammatory liver diseases. (HEPATOLOGY 2007.) [source]


A carbohydrate neoepitope that is up-regulated on human mononuclear leucocytes by neuraminidase treatment or by cellular activation

IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 2 2001
Mark T. Quinn
Summary The expression of cell-surface antigens can delineate specific leucocyte developmental or functional stages. For example, certain membrane glycoproteins are expressed selectively on leucocyte subsets only after activation. Leucocyte activation can also induce changes in carbohydrate epitopes expressed on surface antigens. In the present studies, we report on a novel monoclonal immunoglobulin M antibody (mAb 13.22) that recognizes a unique carbohydrate epitope expressed on human leucocyte membrane proteins. Characterization of mAb 13.22 specificity by immunoblotting showed that it recognized proteins of MW ,95 000 and 150 000, including both CD18 and CD11b. The mAb 13.22 epitope was removed by N -glycosidase F but not by endoglycosidase H or fucosidase, demonstrating that it is an N-linked carbohydrate antigen. Interestingly, immunoblot staining was enhanced after neuraminidase treatment, suggesting that the antibody epitope might also be partially masked by sialic acid. In resting leucocytes, the mAb 13.22 antigen was expressed strongly on neutrophils, while dull staining was present on monocytes, and no lymphocyte staining was observed. In marked contrast, treatment of leucocytes with neuraminidase resulted in exposure of a mAb 13.22 neoepitope on a subset of lymphocytes (primarily T lymphocytes and natural killer cells) as well as up-regulated staining more than 18-fold on monocytes. Activation of lymphocytes in culture with phytohaemagglutinin or concanavalin A also unmasked the mAb 13.22 neoepitope on ,37% of the CD45RO+ lymphocytes. Furthermore, analysis of leucocytes collected from the synovial fluid of patients with rheumatoid arthritis showed that ,18% of the lymphocytes present expressed the mAb 13.22 neoepitope. Taken together, our results suggest that the mAb 13.22 carbohydrate neoepitope could represent a physiologically relevant marker that is up-regulated on leucocyte subsets during the inflammatory response. [source]


Co-option of endocytic functions of cellular caveolae by pathogens

IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
J.-S. Shin
Summary It is increasingly becoming clear that various immune cells are infected by the very pathogens that they are supposed to attack. Although many mechanisms for microbial entry exist, it appears that a common route of entry shared by certain bacteria, viruses and parasites involves cellular lipid-rich microdomains sometimes called caveolae. These cellular entities, which are characterized by their preferential accumulation of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored molecules, cholesterol and various glycolipids, and a distinct protein (caveolin), are present in many effector cells of the immune system including neutrophils, macrophages, mast cells and dendritic cells. These structures have an innate capacity to endocytoze various ligands and traffic them to different intracellular sites and sometimes, back to the extracellular cell surface. Because caveolae do not typically fuse with lysosomes, the ligands borne by caveolar vesicles are essentially intact, which is in marked contrast to ligands endocytozed via the classical endosome,lysosome pathway. A number of microbes or their exotoxins co-opt the unique features of caveolae to enter and traffic, without any apparent loss of viability and function, to different sites within immune and other host cells. In spite of their wide disparity in size and other structural attributes, we predict that a common feature among caveolae-utilizing pathogens and toxins is that their cognate receptor(s) are localized within plasmalemmal caveolae of the host cell. [source]


Long-term changes in distribution and chemistry of middle Miocene to Quaternary volcanism in the Chokai-Kurikoma area across the Northeast Japan Arc

ISLAND ARC, Issue 1 2004
Hirofumi Kondo
Abstract To understand the characteristics of long-term spatial and temporal variation in volcanism within a volcanic arc undergoing constant subduction since the cessation of back-arc opening, a detailed investigation of middle Miocene to Quaternary volcanism was carried out within the Chokai-Kurikoma area of the Northeast Japan Arc. This study involved a survey of available literature, with new K,Ar and fission track dating, and chemical analyses. Since 14 Ma, volcanism has occurred within the Chokai-Kurikoma area in specific areas with a ,branch-like' pattern, showing an east,west trend. This is in marked contrast to the widespread distribution of volcanism with a north,south trend in the 20,14 Ma period. The east,west- trending ,branches' are characterized by regular intervals (50,100 km) of magmatism along the arc. These branches since 14 Ma are remarkably discrepant to the general northwest,southeast or north-northeast,south-southwest direction of the crustal structures that have controlled Neogene to Quaternary tectonic movements in northeast Japan. In addition, evidence indicating clustering and focusing of volcanism into smaller regions since 14 Ma was verified. Comparison of the distribution and chemistry of volcanic rocks for three principal volcanic stages (11,8, 6,3 and 2,0 Ma) revealed that widely but sparsely distributed volcanic rocks had almost the same level of alkali and incompatible element concentrations throughout the area (with the exception of Zr) in the 11,8 Ma stage. However, through the 6,3 Ma stage to the 2,0 Ma stage, the concentration level in the back-arc cluster increased, while that in the volcanic front cluster remained almost constant. Therefore, the degree of partial melting has decreased, most likely with a simultaneous increase in the depth of magma segregation within the back-arc zone, whereas within the volcanic front zone, the conditions of magma generation have changed little over the three stages. In conclusion, the evolution of the thermal structure within the mantle wedge across the arc since 14 Ma has reduced the extent of ascending mantle diapirs into smaller fields. This has resulted in the tendency for the distribution of volcanism to become localized and concentrated into more specific areas in the form of clusters from the late Miocene to Quaternary. [source]


Different models for the polar nanodomain structure of PZN and other relaxor ferroelectrics

JOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 3 2008
T. R. Welberry
Computer simulations have been carried out to test the recently proposed model for the nanodomain structure of relaxor ferroelectrics such as lead zinc niobate (PZN). In this recent model it was supposed that the polar nanodomains are three-dimensional, that the observed diffuse rods of scattering originate from the boundaries between domains and that the Pb displacements may be directed along , or . This is in marked contrast to a previously published model, which described the polar domains as thin plates with Pb displacements confined to the directions within the essentially two-dimensional domains. The present results confirm that and types of Pb displacement are viable possibilities, but the number of domain boundaries required to produce sufficiently strong diffuse rods of scattering means that individual domains cannot be described as three-dimensional and must still be relatively thin. The current work has been carried out with no direct involvement of the B -site cation ordering, which many workers assume is necessary to understand the formation of the polar nanodomains. While it may be true that the B -site cation distribution could provide an underlying perturbation field that might ultimately limit the extent of any polar domain, it is certainly not necessary to produce the observed scattering effects. [source]


Probing the interaction forces between hydrophobic peptides and supported lipid bilayers using AFM

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR RECOGNITION, Issue 6 2007
Guillaume Andre
Abstract Despite the vast body of literature that has accumulated on tilted peptides in the past decade, direct information on the forces that drive their interaction with lipid membranes is lacking. Here, we attempted to use atomic force microscopy (AFM) to explore the interaction forces between the Simian immunodeficiency virus peptide and phase-separated supported bilayers composed of various lipids, i.e. dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, dioleoylphosphatidic acid and dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine. Histidine-tagged peptides were attached onto AFM tips terminated with nitrilotriacetate and tri(ethylene glycol) groups, an approach expected to ensure optimal exposure of the C-terminal hydrophobic domain. Force,distance curves recorded between peptide-tips and the different bilayer domains always showed a long-range repulsion upon approach and a lack of adhesion upon retraction, in marked contrast with the hydrophobic nature of the peptide. To explain this unexpected behaviour, we suggest a mechanism in which lipids are pulled out from the bilayer due to strong interactions with the peptide-tip, in agreement with the very low force needed to extract lipids from supported bilayers. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Distinct spatio-temporal expression of ABCA and ABCG transporters in the developing and adult mouse brain

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2005
Masanori Tachikawa
Abstract Using in situ hybridization for the mouse brain, we analyzed developmental changes in gene expression for the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter subfamilies ABCA1,4 and 7, and ABCG1, 2, 4, 5 and 8. In the embryonic brains, ABCA1 and A7 were highly expressed in the ventricular (or germinal) zone, whereas ABCA2, A3 and G4 were enriched in the mantle (or differentiating) zone. At the postnatal stages, ABCA1 was detected in both the gray and white matter and in the choroid plexus. On the other hand, ABCA2, A3 and A7 were distributed in the gray matter. In addition, marked up-regulation of ABCA2 occurred in the white matter at 14 days-of-age when various myelin protein genes are known to be up-regulated. In marked contrast, ABCA4 was selective to the choroid plexus throughout development. ABCG1 was expressed in both the gray and white matters, whereas ABCG4 was confined to the gray matter. ABCG2 was diffusely and weakly detected throughout the brain at all stages examined. Immunohistochemistry of ABCG2 showed its preferential expression on the luminal membrane of brain capillaries. Expression signals for ABCG5 and G8 were barely detected at any stages. The distinct spatio-temporal expressions of individual ABCA and G transporters may reflect their distinct cellular expressions in the developing and adult brains, presumably, to regulate and maintain lipid homeostasis in the brain. [source]


Only Male Mice Show Sensitization of Handling-Induced Convulsions Across Repeated Ethanol Withdrawal Cycles

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 3 2007
L.M. Veatch
Background: Alcohol abuse, especially when experienced in multiple cycles of chronic abuse and withdrawal, leads to a sensitization of central nervous system hyperexcitability that may culminate in overt expression of seizures. In spite of the growing prevalence of alcohol abuse and dependence in females shown in recent epidemiologic studies, evidence of sexual dimorphism in the expression of alcohol withdrawal-induced seizures and the development of seizure sensitization following multiple cycles of ethanol (EtOH) exposure and withdrawal has not been examined in either animal models or in clinical reports. Methods: Subjects in these experiments were male and female C3H/Hecr mice. The female mice were intact or ovariectomized, with ovariectomized mice receiving 17- , -estradiol or placebo pellets. All mice were exposed to 4 cycles of exposure to 16-hour EtOH vapor, separated by 8-hour withdrawal periods. During each 8-hour withdrawal, hourly assessment of seizure propensity was assessed as handling-induced convulsions. Additional assessments were taken up to 72 hours after the final EtOH withdrawal cycle. Results: Male and female mice showed similar seizure propensity during an initial withdrawal from chronic EtOH. Across subsequent withdrawal cycles, however, male mice exhibited a robust increase in seizure severity beginning with the third withdrawal cycle. In marked contrast, female mice failed to demonstrate sensitization of seizure severity. The lack of seizure sensitization following up to 4 cycles of alcohol exposure and withdrawal could not be explained by hormonal status (presence or absence of estrogen) or by sex differences in blood alcohol levels. Conclusions: Male and female mice exposed to the same number of cycles of EtOH withdrawal demonstrate differences in expression of seizures. Males show the typical sensitization of seizures, or kindling response, which has been reported clinically as well as in animal models, but females do not. The reason for the lack of seizure sensitization in female mice remains to be elucidated, but may be related to sex differences in alcohol effects on excitatory/inhibitory neurotransmission, rather than to hormonal or blood alcohol level differences. [source]


Levels of ,-Aminobutyric Acid-Benzodiazepine Receptors in Abstinent, Alcohol-Dependent Women: Preliminary Findings From an 123I-Iomazenil Single Photon Emission Tomography Study

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 9 2000
A. R. Lingford-Hughes
Background: Although alcohol dependence in women is an increasing problem, little is known about the effects of alcohol on the female brain. Evidence from a few structural and functional neuroimaging studies suggests that the female brain may be more susceptible than the male brain to the harmful effects of alcohol. However, no in vivo studies of the neuropharmacology of alcohol dependence in women have been carried out. The aim of this preliminary study was to test the hypothesis that alcohol dependence in women is associated with greater reduction in ,-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-benzodiazepine receptor levels than in men with an equivalent drinking history. Methods: We used single photon emission tomography and 123I-iomazenil to label the central GABA-benzodiazepine receptor and to compare semiquantified levels in 9 abstinent alcohol-dependent and 13 control women. These groups were further compared with equivalent male groups from a previous study. Results: There was a trend toward a reduction in GABA-benzodiazepine receptor levels in alcohol-dependent women, but this did not reach significance. These lower levels were seen primarily in the cerebellum, occipital lobes, and parietal cortex (left > right). This was in marked contrast with the pattern of reduction seen in the previous study of male dependence, where significant reductions were seen primarily in the frontal cortex. Conclusions: Due to the semiquantitative analysis performed and the relatively small number of subjects in this study, which resulted in a nonsignificant trend, we can only comment on the differences in the pattern of lower levels of GABA-benzodiazepine receptors seen in alcohol dependence in men and women. Although we are not able to ascertain whether the female brain is more susceptible to the effects of alcohol, it appears that alcohol has a differential effect on the central GABA-benzodiazepine receptors in men and women. Recent animal evidence supports this hypothesis. Future studies should explore whether other neuropharmacological differences exist between men and women in alcohol dependence that could have implications for pharmacotherapy. [source]


Finding a (pine) needle in a haystack: chloroplast genome sequence divergence in rare and widespread pines

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, Issue 2010
J. B. WHITTALL
Abstract Critical to conservation efforts and other investigations at low taxonomic levels, DNA sequence data offer important insights into the distinctiveness, biogeographic partitioning and evolutionary histories of species. The resolving power of DNA sequences is often limited by insufficient variability at the intraspecific level. This is particularly true of studies involving plant organelles, as the conservative mutation rate of chloroplasts and mitochondria makes it difficult to detect polymorphisms necessary to track genealogical relationships among individuals, populations and closely related taxa, through space and time. Massively parallel sequencing (MPS) makes it possible to acquire entire organelle genome sequences to identify cryptic variation that would be difficult to detect otherwise. We are using MPS to evaluate intraspecific chloroplast-level divergence across biogeographic boundaries in narrowly endemic and widespread species of Pinus. We focus on one of the world's rarest pines , Torrey pine (Pinus torreyana) , due to its conservation interest and because it provides a marked contrast to more widespread pine species. Detailed analysis of nearly 90% (,105 000 bp each) of these chloroplast genomes shows that mainland and island populations of Torrey pine differ at five sites in their plastome, with the differences fixed between populations. This is an exceptionally low level of divergence (1 polymorphism/,21 kb), yet it is comparable to intraspecific divergence present in widespread pine species and species complexes. Population-level organelle genome sequencing offers new vistas into the timing and magnitude of divergence within species, and is certain to provide greater insight into pollen dispersal, migration patterns and evolutionary dynamics in plants. [source]


A bacterium that has three pathways to regulate membrane lipid fluidity

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2006
John E. Cronan
Summary Well-studied bacteria such as Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli each have only a single pathway for synthesis of the unsaturated fatty acids required to make functional membrane lipids. In marked contrast, unsaturated fatty acid synthesis in Pseudomonas aeruginosa proceeds by three distinct pathways. [source]


Fine structure of emission lines from charged CdSe/ZnSe/ZnMnSe quantum dots

PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (B) BASIC SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 6 2010
E. A. Chekhovich
Abstract Photoluminescence spectroscopy has been employed to study CdSe/ZnSe/ZnMnSe quantum dots. For most of the dots studied here luminescence comes in three spectrally separated features: neutral exciton (X), biexciton (XX), and charged exciton (XC) states. Spectral properties of X and XX emission are well understood, however, in a marked contrast with previous studies, the observed fine structure of XC can not be explained within a commonly accepted model of a ground state trion luminescence. We find that at zero magnetic field luminescence from the charged state exhibits fine structure that varies gradually between different dots from a single unpolarized line to a quartet with the maximum splitting of 2,meV. Several models including magnetic polaron formation and double charging have been considered, but a plausible explanation can be given only if one considers the influence of a charge trapped in a nearby dot. [source]


Functional significance of the dark central floret of Daucus carota (Apiaceae) L.; is it an insect mimic?

PLANT SPECIES BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
DAVID GOULSON
Abstract In Daucus carota L. (Apiaceae) the florets comprising the central umbellet of inflorescences are usually pink or dark purple, presenting a marked contrast to the surrounding umbellets, which are generally white. The number of dark florets varies, and some inflorescences have no dark florets. It has been proposed that the dark florets function as an insect mimic, and in so doing serve to attract insects to the flower. In contrast, other authors, Darwin included, suggest that they are functionally redundant. The present study examined whether the dark florets attract insects, and also whether this effect can be replicated by replacing these florets with an insect. At the study site in Portugal the predominant insect visitor was the beetle Anthrenus verbasci L. (Dermestidae), which is similar in size and shape to the dark florets. Large inflorescences and those with more dark florets attracted more beetles than small inflorescences and those with fewer or no dark florets. Inflorescences with the dark florets removed attracted fewer beetles visitors compared with intact inflorescences. Inflorescences in which the dark florets were replaced with one or a cluster of five dead, freeze-killed A. verbasci attracted more beetles than inflorescences from which the dark florets had been removed. Replacement of the dark florets with a relatively large Meloid beetle resulted in the attraction of markedly fewer A. verbasci. We conclude that the dark florets can act as an insect attractant for some insect groups by acting as an insect mimic, and that they are adaptive, in contrast to the speculations of Darwin. [source]


New Evidence on the Urbanization of Global Poverty

POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, Issue 4 2007
Martin Ravallion
One-quarter of the world's consumption poor live in urban areas, and that proportion has been rising over time. Over 1993,2002, the count of the "$1 a day" poor fell by 150 million in rural areas but rose by 50 million in urban areas. The poor have been urbanizing even more rapidly than the population as a whole. By fostering economic growth, urbanization helped reduce absolute poverty in the aggregate. There are marked regional differences: Latin America has the most urbanized poverty problem, East Asia has the least; there has been a "ruralization" of poverty in Eastern Europe and Central Asia; in marked contrast to other regions, Africa's urbanization process has not been associated with falling overall poverty. [source]


Temperature-sensitive TREK currents contribute to setting the resting membrane potential in embryonic atrial myocytes

THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 15 2008
Hengtao Zhang
TREK channels belong to the superfamily of two-pore-domain K+ channels and are activated by membrane stretch, arachidonic acid, volatile anaesthetics and heat. TREK-1 is highly expressed in the atrium of the adult heart. In this study, we investigated the role of TREK-1 and TREK-2 channels in regulating the resting membrane potential (RMP) of isolated chicken embryonic cardiac myocytes. At room temperature, the average RMP of embryonic day (ED) 11 atrial myocytes was ,22 ± 2 mV. Raising the temperature to 35°C hyperpolarized the membrane to ,69 ± 2 mV and activated a large outwardly rectifying K+ current that was relatively insensitive to conventional K+ channel inhibitors (TEA, 4-AP and Ba2+) but completely inhibited by tetracaine (200 ,m), an inhibitor of TREK channels. The heat-induced hyperpolarization was mimicked by 10 ,m arachidonic acid, an agonist of TREK channels. There was little or no inwardly rectifying K+ current (IK1) in the ED11 atrial cells. In marked contrast, ED11 ventricular myocytes exhibited a normal RMP (,86.1 ± 3.4 mV) and substantial IK1, but no temperature- or tetracaine-sensitive K+ currents. Both RT-PCR and real-time PCR further demonstrated that TREK-1 and TREK-2 are highly and almost equally expressed in ED11 atrium but much less expressed in ED11 ventricle. In addition, immunofluorescence demonstrated TREK-1 protein in the membrane of atrial myocytes. These data indicate the presence and function of TREK-1 and TREK-2 in the embryonic atrium. Moreover, we demonstrate that TREK-like currents have an essential role in determining membrane potential in embryonic atrial myocytes, where IK1 is absent. [source]


Hypothalamic input is required for development of normal numbers of thyrotrophs and gonadotrophs, but not other anterior pituitary cells in late gestation sheep

THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2008
Eva Szarek
To evaluate the hypothalamic contribution to the development of anterior pituitary (AP) cells we surgically disconnected the hypothalamus from the pituitary (hypothalamo-pituitary disconnection, HPD) in fetal sheep and collected pituitaries 31 days later. Pituitaries (n= 6 per group) were obtained from fetal sheep (term = 147 ± 3 days) at 110 days (unoperated group) of gestation and at 141 days from animals that had undergone HPD or sham surgery at 110 days. Cells were identified by labelling pituitary sections with antisera against the six AP hormones. Additionally, we investigated the colocalization of glycoprotein hormones. The proportions of somatotrophs and corticotrophs were unchanged by age or HPD. Lactotrophs increased 80% over time, but the proportion was unaffected by HPD. Thyrotrophs, which were unaffected by age, increased 70% following HPD. Gonadotrophs increased with gestational age (LH+ cells 55%; FSH+ cells 19-fold), but this was severely attenuated by HPD. We investigated the possible existence of a reciprocal effect of HPD on multipotential glycoprotein-expressing cells. Co-expression of LH and TSH was extremely rare (< 1%) and unchanged over the last month of gestation or HPD. The increase of gonadotrophs expressing FSH only or LH and FSH was attenuated by HPD. Therefore, the proportions of somatotrophs, lactotrophs and corticotrophs are regulated independently of hypothalamic input in the late gestation fetal pituitary. In marked contrast, the determination of the thyrotroph and gonadotroph lineages over the same time period is subject to complex mechanisms involving hypothalamic factors, which inhibit differentiation and/or proliferation of thyrotrophs, but stimulate gonadotrophs down the FSH lineage. Development of a distinct population of gonadotrophs, expressing only LH, appears to be subject to alternative mechanisms. [source]


ORIGINAL ARTICLE: An Interleukin-23 Binding Protein in Mid-Trimester Amniotic Fluid

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 5 2009
Catherine Herway
Problem, The binding of mid-trimester amniotic fluid to cytokines was evaluated. Method of study, Purified tumor necrosis factor-, (TNF-,), interleukin (IL)-10, IL-12, and IL-23 were incubated with amniotic fluid from 25 women undergoing a mid-trimester amniocentesis, or with bovine serum albumin or saline, and cytokine binding to monoclonal antibodies was quantitated by ELISA. Aliquots of amniotic fluid were heated to 95°C for 15 min and then retested for IL-23 binding. The effect of amniotic fluid dilution on IL-23 quantitation was evaluated. Results, All amniotic fluids had a negligible effect on TNF-,, IL-10, and IL-12 detection. In marked contrast, pre-incubation with amniotic fluid from each subject reduced the subsequent ability to detect IL-23 by >50%. The extent of inhibition was directly proportional to the amniotic fluid dilution and was markedly reduced following heating at 95°C for 15 min. Amniotic fluids from White, Black, Asian, East Indian, and Hispanic women were equally effective. Conclusion, Interleukin-23 and IL-12 share a common p40 subunit and no inhibition of IL-12 was apparent. It appeared that a component of mid-trimester amniotic fluid specifically interacts with the p19 subunit unique to IL-23. Mid-trimester amniotic fluid reactivity with IL-23 may be a mechanism to limit intra-amniotic neutrophil-derived inflammation. [source]


Model error and sequential data assimilation: A deterministic formulation

THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, Issue 634 2008
A. Carrassi
Abstract Data assimilation schemes are confronted with the presence of model errors arising from the imperfect description of atmospheric dynamics. These errors are usually modelled on the basis of simple assumptions such as bias, white noise, and first-order Markov process. In the present work, a formulation of the sequential extended Kalman filter is proposed, based on recent findings on the universal deterministic behaviour of model errors in marked contrast with previous approaches. This new scheme is applied in the context of a spatially distributed system proposed by Lorenz. First, it is found that, for short times, the estimation error is accurately approximated by an evolution law in which the variance of the model error (assumed to be a deterministic process) evolves according to a quadratic law, in agreement with the theory. Moreover, the correlation with the initial condition error appears to play a secondary role in the short-time dynamics of the estimation error covariance. Second, the deterministic description of the model error evolution, incorporated into the classical extended Kalman filter equations, reveals that substantial improvements of the filter accuracy can be gained compared with the classical white-noise assumption. The universal short-time quadratic law for the evolution of the model error covariance matrix seems very promising for modelling estimation error dynamics in sequential data assimilation. Copyright © 2008 Royal Meteorological Society [source]


One-step RNA pathogen detection with reverse transcriptase activity of a mutated thermostable Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase

BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL, Issue 2 2010
Ramon Kranaster
Abstract We describe the cloning and characterization of a mutated thermostable DNA polymerase from Thermus aquaticus (Taq) that exhibits an increased reverse transcriptase activity and is therefore designated for one-step PCR pathogen detection using established real-time detection methods. We demonstrate that this Taq polymerase mutant (Taq M1) has similar PCR sensitivity and nuclease activity as the respective Taq wild-type DNA polymerase. In addition, and in marked contrast to the wild-type, Taq M1 exhibits a significantly increased reverse transcriptase activity especially at high temperatures (>60°C). RNA generally hosts highly stable secondary structure motifs, such as hairpins and G-quadruplexes, which complicate, or in the worst case obviate, reverse transcription (RT). Thus, RT at high temperatures is desired to weaken or melt secondary structure motifs. To demonstrate the ability of Taq M1 for RNA detection of pathogens, we performed TaqMan probe-based diagnostics of Dobrava viruses by one-step RT-PCR. We found similar detection sensitivities compared to commercially available RT-PCR systems without further optimization of reaction parameters, thus making this enzyme highly suitable for any PCR probe-based RNA detection method. [source]


Revisiting Fayol: Anticipating Contemporary Management

BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2005
Lee D. Parker
This study argues that in classifying Fayol as a founding father of the Classical Management School, we have to some extent misrepresented this still important management theorist. The received Fayol portrayed in contemporary texts invariably emerges as a caricature of a much more insightful, complex, visionary and rounded management thinker. This study re-examines Fayol's personal and career history, as well as the arguments presented in his original work, General and Industrial Management. It finds that he was a much more complex and multidimensional figure than his conventional stereotype today, and that his management theories embraced a wider spectrum of approaches and concepts than traditionally identified with the classical management school of thought. In marked contrast to his traditional portrayal, this study uncovers traces of ideas and concepts that anticipated aspects of the human relations movement, systems-based contingency theory, the movement towards greater employee involvement in decision-making and elements of knowledge management. [source]


Induction of bone formation by transforming growth factor-,2 in the non-human primate Papio ursinus and its modulation by skeletal muscle responding stem cells

CELL PROLIFERATION, Issue 3 2010
U. Ripamonti
Objectives:, Four adult non-human primates Papio ursinus were used to study induction of bone formation by recombinant human transforming growth factor-,2 (hTGF-,2) together with muscle-derived stem cells. Materials and methods:, The hTGF-,2 was implanted in rectus abdominis muscles and in calvarial defects with and without addition of morcellized fragments of striated muscle, harvested from the rectus abdominis or temporalis muscles. Expression of osteogenic markers including osteogenic protein-1, bone morphogenetic protein-3 and type IV collagen mRNAs from generated specimens was examined by Northern blot analysis. Results:, Heterotopic intramuscular implantation of 5 and 25 ,g hTGF-,2 combined with 100 mg of insoluble collagenous bone matrix yielded large corticalized mineralized ossicles by day 30 with remodelling and induction of haematopoietic marrow by day 90. Addition of morcellized rectus abdominis muscle to calvarial implants enhanced induction of bone formation significantly by day 90. Conclusions:, In Papio ursinus, in marked contrast to rodents and lagomorphs, hTGF-,2 induced large corticalized and vascularized ossicles by day 30 after implantation into the rectus abdominis muscle. This striated muscle contains responding stem cells that enhance the bone induction cascade of hTGF-,2. Induction of bone formation by hTGF-,2 in the non-human primate Papio ursinus may occur as a result of expression of bone morphogenetic proteins on heterotopic implantation of hTGF-,2; the bone induction cascade initiated by mammalian TGF-, proteins in Papio ursinus needs to be re-evaluated for novel molecular therapeutics for induction of bone formation in clinical contexts. [source]


Myopia profile in Copenhagen medical students 1996,98.

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 5 2000
Refractive stability over a century is suggested
ABSTRACT. Purpose: To assess the myopia prevalence and profile in today's Danish medical students and to compare the pattern with previous and contemporary investigations. Methods: As part of the tutoring in ophthalmology 1996,98 Copenhagen medical students of five successive terms (in their 10th semester, n=294) were interviewed and spot-checked about their refraction. Myopia from ,0.5 D was recorded and myopia onset age stated. Results: The age range was 22,41 years, median age 26. Myopia ranging from ,0.5 to ,8 D was encountered in 147 students (50% of all; females 53.9%, males 45%). In seven the myopia was unilateral. Median values for myopia degree and onset age were ,2.5 D and 16 years in female myopes (n=89) which differed significantly from the male values (n=58) of ,1.5 D and 18 years. Including the age of 18 as lower cut-off for adult-onset myopia 44.9% of the myopes belonged to this category. Conclusions: The results are in close agreement with recent Norwegian student investigations, and there is no obvious trend of a worsening of the academic myopia issue in our part of the world. This is in marked contrast to student myopia profiles as reported in Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong where myopia is booming, by number and degree. [source]


Microsolvated and Chelated Butylzinc Cations: Formation, Relative Stability, and Unimolecular Gas-Phase Chemistry

CHEMISTRY - A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, Issue 46 2009
Julia
Abstract Solutions of butylzinc iodide in tetrahydrofuran, acetonitrile, and N,N -dimethylformamide were analyzed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. In all cases, microsolvated butylzinc cations [ZnBu(solvent)n]+, n=1,3, were detected. The parallel observation of the butylzincate anion [ZnBuI2], suggests that these ions result from disproportionation of neutral butylzinc iodide in solution. In the presence of simple bidentate ligands (1,2-dimethoxyethane, N,N -dimethyl-2-methoxyethylamine, and N,N,N,,N, -tetramethylethylenediamine), chelate complexes of the type [ZnBu(ligand)]+ form quite readily. The relative stabilities of these complexes were probed by competition experiments and analysis of their unimolecular gas-phase reactivity. Fragmentation of mass-selected [ZnBu(ligand)]+ leads to the elimination of butene and formation of [ZnH(ligand)]+. In marked contrast, the microsolvated cations [ZnBu(solvent)n]+ lose the attached solvent molecules upon gas-phase fragmentation to produce bare [ZnBu]+, which subsequently dissociates into [C4H9]+ and Zn. This difference in reactivity resembles the situation in organozinc solution chemistry, in which chelating ligands are needed to activate dialkylzinc compounds for the nucleophilic addition to aldehydes. [source]