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Selected AbstractsSuccessful Cervical MR Scan in a Patient Several Hours after Pacemaker ImplantationPACING AND CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 10 2009DORITH GOLDSHER M.D. Recent data showed that patients with electrical implanted devices may under certain conditions be scanned safely by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The device must have been in place preferably for at least 4,8 weeks [Correction added after online publication 31-Aug-2009: number of weeks has been updated.] prior to MR imaging to allow healing and pacemaker pocket formation. We report on a patient with quadriplegia and suspected epidural hematoma referred for MR scan a day after he had a pacemaker implantation. The patient was also pacemaker-dependent. After considering the risk/benefit ratio in this patient, it was decided to perform the scan. The pacemaker was reprogrammed. MRI was performed under strict monitoring. A spinal cord contusion at the level of C1,3 was diagnosed. Based on the imaging findings no invasive procedure was done. Device interrogation found no change in sensing or pacing parameters or in the pacemaker's battery. At the end of the scan, the device was reprogrammed back to the initial settings. In this population, each scan should be discussed thoroughly and the risks to benefit ratio should be considered. Given appropriate precautions, in well-experienced imaging centers, MRI may be safely performed in patients with permanent cardiac electronic implantable devices. [source] Non-pigmenting fixed drug eruption caused by allylisopropylacetylureaCONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 4 2003Yukikazu Numata An unusual case of a non-pigmenting fixed drug eruption caused by allylisopropylacetylurea is reported. Several hours after taking an analgesic (New Kaiteki A®), a 30-year-old Japanese woman, who had experienced similar eruptions several times after taking other analgesics, developed numerous variously sized, itchy, round-to-oval erythematous eruptions on the trunk and extremities. After she discontinued taking this drug, all such eruptions resolved within 2 weeks, without leaving postinflammatory pigmentation. Patch testing with New Kaiteki A® itself and one of its active ingredients, allylisopropylacetylurea, on lesional skin, but not on uninvolved skin, showed positive erythematous reactions after 2 days. [source] The Allantoic Core Domain: New insights into development of the murine allantois and its relation to the primitive streakDEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 3 2009Karen M. Downs Abstract The whereabouts and properties of the posterior end of the primitive streak have not been identified in any species. In the mouse, the streak's posterior terminus is assumed to be confined to the embryonic compartment, and to give rise to the allantois, which links the embryo to its mother during pregnancy. In this study, we have refined our understanding of the biology of the murine posterior primitive streak and its relation to the allantois. Through a combination of immunostaining and morphology, we demonstrate that the primitive streak spans the posterior extraembryonic and embryonic regions at the onset of the neural plate stage (,7.0 days postcoitum, dpc). Several hours later, the allantoic bud emerges from the extraembryonic component of the primitive streak (XPS). Then, possibly in collaboration with overlying allantois-associated extraembryonic visceral endoderm, the XPS establishes a germinal center within the allantois, named here the Allantoic Core Domain (ACD). Microsurgical removal of the ACD beyond headfold (HF) stages resulted in the formation of allantoic regenerates that lacked the ACD and failed to elongate; nevertheless, vasculogenesis and vascular patterning proceeded. In situ and transplantation fate mapping demonstrated that, from HF stages onward, the ACD's progenitor pool contributed to the allantois exclusive of the proximal flanks. By contrast, the posterior intraembryonic primitive streak (IPS) provided the flanks. Grafting the ACD into TC/TC hosts, whose allantoises are significantly foreshortened, restored allantoic elongation. These results revealed that the ACD is essential for allantoic elongation, but the cues required for vascularization lie outside of it. On the basis of these and previous findings, we conclude that the posterior primitive streak of the mouse conceptus is far more complex than was previously believed. Our results provide new directives for addressing the origin and development of the umbilical cord, and establish a novel paradigm for investigating the fetal/placental relationship. Developmental Dynamics 238:532,553, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Coma after spinal anaesthesia in a patient with an unknown intracerebral tumourACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 9 2010T. METTERLEIN Spinal anaesthesia is contraindicated in patients with elevated intracranial pressure or space-occupying intracranial lesions. Drainage of the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) can increase the pressure gradient between the spinal, supratentorial and infratentorial compartments. This can result in rapid herniation of the brain stem or occluding hydrocephalus. We present a case of a female patient with an occult brain tumour who received a spinal anaesthesia for an orthopaedic procedure. The primary course of anaesthesia was uneventful. Several hours after surgery, the patient became increasingly disoriented and agitated. The next day, she was found comatose. A computed tomogram of the head revealed herniation of the brain stem, resulting in an occluding hydrocephalus due to a prior not known infratentorial mass. By acute relieving of the intracranial pressure by external CSF drainage, the mass was removed 2 days later. The further post-operative course was uneventful and the patient was discharged from the hospital without neurological deficit 3 weeks after the primary surgery. [source] Unusual High Exposure to Ultraviolet-C RadiationPHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2006Andrea Trevisan ABSTRACT ?1 UV radiation is known to cause acute and chronic eye and skin damage. The present case report describes a 90 min accidental exposure to UV-C radiation of 26 medical school students. Germicidal lamps were lit due to a malfunctioning of the timer system. Several hours after irradiation exposure, all subjects reported the onset of ocular symptoms, subsequently diagnosed as photokeratitis, and skin damage to the face, scalp and neck. While the ocular symptoms lasted 2,4 days, the sunburn-like condition produced significant erythema followed by deep skin exfoliation. The irradiation was calculated to be approximately 700 mJ cm,2 absorbed energy, whereas the actual radiation emitted by the lamps was 0.14 mW cm,2 (the radiometric measurements confirmed these calculi, because the effective irradiance measured from the height of the autopsy table to about 1 m under the UV-C lamp varied from 0.05 to 0.25 mW cm,2) but, more likely, the effective irradiance, according to skin phototype and symptoms, was between 50 and 100 mJ cm,2. The ocular and skin effects produced by such a high irradiation (largely higher than that accepted by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists [ACGIH] threshold limit values [TLVs]) appeared reversible in a relatively short time. [source] Adverse Event Reporting: Lessons Learned from 4 Years of Florida Office DataDERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 9 2005Brett Coldiron MD, FACP Background Patient safety regulations and medical error reporting systems have been at the forefront of current health care legislature. In 2000, Florida mandated that all physicians report, to a central collecting agency, all adverse events occurring in an office setting. Purpose To analyze the scope and incidence of adverse events and deaths resulting from office surgical procedures in Florida from 2000 to 2004. Methods We reviewed all reported adverse incidents (the death of a patient, serious injury, and subsequent hospital transfer) occurring in an office setting from March 1, 2000, through March 1, 2004, from the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration. We determined physician board certification status, hospital privileges, and office accreditation via telephone follow-up and Internet searches. Results Of 286 reported office adverse events, 77 occurred in association with an office surgical procedure (19 deaths and 58 hospital transfers). There were seven complications and five deaths associated with the use of intravenous sedation or general anesthesia. There were no adverse events associated with the use of dilute local (tumescent) anesthesia. Liposuction and/or abdominoplasty under general anesthesia or intravenous sedation were the most common surgical procedures associated with a death or complication. Fifty-three percent of offices reporting an adverse incident were accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgical Facilities, or American Association for Ambulatory Health Care. Ninety-four percent of the involved physicians were board certified, and 97% had hospital privileges. Forty-two percent of the reported deaths were delayed by several hours to weeks after uneventful discharge or after hospital transfer. Conclusions Requiring physician board certification, physician hospital privileges, or office accreditation is not likely to reduce office adverse events. Restrictions on dilute local (tumescent) anesthesia for liposuction would not reduce adverse events and could increase adverse events if patients are shifted to riskier approaches. State and/or national legislation establishing adverse event reporting systems should be supported and should require the reporting of delayed deaths. [source] Neuron-specific expression of atp6v0c2 in zebrafish CNSDEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 9 2010Ah-Young Chung Abstract Vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase) is a multi-subunit enzyme that plays an important role in the acidification of a variety of intracellular compartments. ATP6V0C is subunit c of the V0 domain that forms the proteolipid pore of the enzyme. In the present study, we investigated the neuron-specific expression of atp6v0c2, a novel isoform of the V-ATPase c-subunit, during the development of the zebrafish CNS. Zebrafish atp6v0c2 was isolated from a genome-wide analysis of the zebrafish mibta52b mutant designed to identify genes differentially regulated by Notch signaling. Whole-mount in situ hybridization revealed that atp6v0c2 is expressed in a subset of CNS neurons beginning several hours after the emergence of post-mitotic neurons. The ATP6V0C2 protein is co-localized with the presynaptic vesicle marker, SV2, suggesting that it is involved in neurotransmitter storage and/or secretion in neurons. In addition, the loss-of-function experiment suggests that ATP6V0C2 is involved in the control of neuronal excitability. Developmental Dynamics 239:2501,2508, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] In vivo dynamics of CNS sensory arbor formation: A time-lapse study in the embryonic leechDEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2003Michael W. Baker Abstract In the embryo of the leech Hirudo medicinalis, afferent projections of peripheral sensory neurons travel along common nerve tracts to the CNS, where they defasciculate, branch, and arborize into separate, modality-specific synaptic laminae. Previous studies have shown that this process requires, at least in part, the constitutive and then modality-specific glycosylations of tractin, a leech L1 homologue. We report here on the dynamics of growth of these projections as obtained by examining the morphology of single growing dye-filled sensory afferents as a function of time. Using 2-photon laser-scanning microscopy of the intact developing embryo, we obtained images of individual sensory projections at 3 to 30 min intervals, over several hours of growth, and at different stages of development. The time-lapse series of images revealed a highly dynamic and maturation-state-dependent pattern of growth. Upon entering the CNS, the growth cone-tipped primary axon sprouted numerous long filopodial processes, many of which appeared to undergo repeated cycles of extension and retraction. The growth cone was transformed into a sensory arbor through the formation of secondary branches that extended within the ganglionic neuropil along the anterior-posterior axis of the CNS. Numerous tertiary and quaternary processes grew from these branches and also displayed cycles of extension and retraction. The motility of these higher-order branches changed with age, with younger afferents displaying higher densities and greater motility than older, more mature sensory arbors. Finally, coincident with a reduction in higher order projections was the appearance of concavolar structures on the secondary processes. Rows of these indentations suggest the formation of presynaptic en-passant specializations accompanying the developmental onset of synapse formation. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 56: 41,53, 2003 [source] Self glucose monitoring and physical exercise in diabetesDIABETES/METABOLISM: RESEARCH AND REVIEWS, Issue S1 2009G. Pugliese Abstract Cardiorespiratory fitness, which is determined mainly by the level of physical activity, is inversely related to mortality in the general population as well as in subjects with diabetes, the incidence of which is also increased by low exercise capacity. Exercise is capable of promoting glucose utilization in normal subjects as well as in insulin-deficient or insulin-resistant diabetic individuals. In diabetic subjects treated with insulin or insulin secretagogues, exercise may also result in complications, with too much insulin causing hypoglycaemia and not enough insulin leading to hyperglycaemia and possibly ketoacidosis; both complications may also occur several hours after exercise. Therefore, self-monitoring of blood glucose before, during (for exercise duration of more than 1 h) and after physical exercise is highly recommended, and also carbohydrate supplementation may be required. In the Italian Diabetes Exercise Study (IDES), measurement of blood glucose and systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels before and after supervised sessions of combined (aerobic + resistance) exercise in type 2 diabetic subjects with the metabolic syndrome showed significant reductions of these parameters, though no major hypoglycaemic or hypotensive episode was detected. The extent of reduction of blood glucose was related to baseline values but not to energy expenditure and was higher in subjects treated with insulin than in those on diet or oral hypoglycaemic agents (OHA). Thus, supervised exercise training associated with blood glucose monitoring is an effective and safe intervention to decrease blood glucose levels in type 2 diabetic subjects. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Free fatty acids as mediators of adaptive compensatory responses to insulin resistance in dexamethasone-treated ratsDIABETES/METABOLISM: RESEARCH AND REVIEWS, Issue 2 2008Michela Novelli Abstract Background Chronic low-dose dexamethasone (DEX) treatment in rats is associated to insulin resistance with compensatory hyperinsulinaemia and reduction in food intake. We tested the hypothesis that the elevation in circulating free fatty acids (FFAs) induced by DEX is the common mediator of both insulin resistance and insulin hyperproduction. Methods For this purpose, an anti-lipolytic agent was administered during DEX treatment to lower lipacidaemia for several hours prior to glucose and insulin tolerance tests. Leptin expression in adipose tissue (by Northern blot) and plasma leptin levels (by radioimmunoassay) were also investigated to verify whether a rise in circulating leptin could be responsible for the anorectic effect of DEX. Results Our data show that a transient pharmacological reduction of elevated plasma FFA levels abates the post-loading hyperinsulinaemia and counteracts the insulin resistance induced by DEX, supporting the hypothesis that the chronic elevation in FFAs is the common mediator of DEX-induced changes. Despite enhanced leptin expression in white adipose tissue, DEX-treated rats show no significant increase in plasma leptin levels. This suggests that the anorectic effect of DEX should be mediated, at least partially, by other factors, possibly related to the influence of concomitantly elevated plasma FFA and insulin levels on the hypothalamic centers regulating feeding. Conclusions Our results sustain the idea that a prolonged increase in plasma FFA levels plays an important role in the adaptive regulation of glucose and energy homeostasis, not only by potentiating insulin secretion but also by providing a signal of ,nutrient abundance' capable of restraining food intake. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Halotaxis of cyanobacteria in an intertidal hypersaline microbial matENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2010Katharina Kohls Summary An intertidal hypersaline cyanobacterial mat from Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) exhibited a reversible change in its surface colour within several hours upon changes in salinity of the overlying water. The mat surface was orange-reddish at salinities above 15% and turned dark green at lower salinities. We investigated this phenomenon using a polyphasic approach that included denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, microscopy, high-performance liquid chromatography, hyperspectral imaging, absorption spectroscopy, oxygen microsensor measurements and modelling of salinity dynamics. Filaments of Microcoleus chthonoplastes, identified based on 16S rRNA sequencing and morphology, were found to migrate up and down when salinity was decreased below or increased above 15%, respectively, causing the colour change of the mat uppermost layer. Migration occurred in light and in the dark, and could be induced by different salts, not only NaCl. The influence of salinity-dependent and independent physico-chemical parameters, such as water activity, oxygen solubility, H2S, gravity and light, was excluded, indicating that the observed migration was due to a direct response to salt stress. We propose to term this salinity-driven cyanobacterial migration as ,halotaxis', a process that might play a vital role in the survival of cyanobacteria in environments exposed to continuous salinity fluctuations such as intertidal flats. [source] Stress, the hippocampus, and epilepsyEPILEPSIA, Issue 4 2009Marian Joëls Summary Stress is among the most frequently self-reported precipitants of seizures in patients with epilepsy. This review considers how important stress mediators like corticotropin-releasing hormone, corticosteroids, and neurosteroids could contribute to this phenomenon. Cellular effects of stress mediators in the rodent hippocampus are highlighted. Overall, corticosterone,with other stress hormones,rapidly enhances CA1/CA3 hippocampal activity shortly after stress. At the same time, corticosterone starts gene-mediated events, which enhance calcium influx several hours later. This later effect serves to normalize activity but also imposes a risk for neuronal injury if and when neurons are concurrently strongly depolarized, for example, during epileptic activity. In the dentate gyrus, stress-induced elevations in corticosteroid level are less effective in changing membrane properties such as calcium influx; here, enhanced inhibitory tone mediated through neurosteroid effects on ,-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors might dominate. Under conditions of repetitive stress (e.g., caused from experiencing repetitive and unpredictable seizures) and/or early life stress, hormonal influences on the inhibitory tone, however, are diminished; instead, enhanced calcium influx and increased excitation become more important. In agreement, perinatal stress and elevated steroid levels accelerate epileptogenesis and lower seizure threshold in various animal models for epilepsy. It will be interesting to examine how curtailing the effects of stress in adults, for example, by brief treatment with antiglucocorticoids, may be beneficial to the treatment of epilepsy. [source] Prolactin Levels in Sudden Unexpected Death in EpilepsyEPILEPSIA, Issue 1 2000K. Opeskin Summary: Purpose: To assess serum prolactin levels in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) and control groups to test the hypothesis that if seizures occur routinely as a terminal event in SUDEP, then raised prolactin levels may be an indicator of terminal seizure. Methods: Blood was taken for measurement of prolactin levels from subjects with SUDEP and three control groups. The control groups were those with epilepsy dying from causes other than epilepsy (e.g., ischemic heart disease or injuries), physiologically stressed individuals without epilepsy (they were admitted to the hospital after an acute illness and died after several hours to 3 days), and nonepileptic rapid deaths (these people collapsed suddenly and died at the scene). In the SUDEP group, evidence for terminal seizure was considered to be at least one of the following: body found half on, half off the bed, or urinary incontinence at the scene, or bitten lips or tongue at autopsy. Results: There was evidence for terminal seizure at the scene or at autopsy in four of the 10 SUDEP cases. Serum prolactin levels were not significantly increased in the SUDEP group compared with the controls. None of the SUDEP subjects, including those with clinical evidence of a terminal seizure, had high prolactin levels characteristic of those observed after seizures in living subjects. Conclusions: Prolactin levels are not raised in SUDEP, even if there is evidence of terminal seizure. As prolactin takes 15,20 min to peak after a seizure in life, there may be insufficient time for a prolactin increase to occur in SUDEP. Thus prolactin levels cannot be used to determine if a deceased individual with epilepsy had a seizure or to answer the broad question whether SUDEP is always associated with a terminal seizure. [source] Field Cricket Species Differences in the Temporal Patterns of Long-Distance Mate Attraction SignalsETHOLOGY, Issue 9 2006Susan M. Bertram We quantify variation in the temporal components of long-distance mate attraction signals produced by a North American field cricket, Gryllus rubens Scudder. Total signaling time, trilling bout duration, and hourly bout number exhibit high repeatability within individuals. Extensive variation exists across individuals: some males never signal while others signal for several hours each night; of the signalers, average trilling bout duration ranges from <1 min to well over an hour; some males produce only one trilling bout in an evening while others produce three bouts every 2 h. Body size, weight, wing morphology, and condition do not appear to explain the variation. We compare the temporal signaling components of G. rubens with its sister species, G. texensis. Although G. rubens produce slightly more trills per hour with slightly shorter trilling bout durations, the temporal components of these long-distance mate attraction signals are surprisingly similar across species. [source] ADAM17 activity during human neutrophil activation and apoptosisEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 4 2006Bruce Walcheck Dr. Abstract Substrates of the metalloprotease ADAM17 (also known as TNF-, converting enzyme or TACE) undergo ectodomain shedding and include various inflammatory modulators. Though polymorphonuclear leukocytes contribute significantly to inflammation, direct analyses of ADAM17 on human neutrophils are very limited. In addition, the current understanding of the processes regulating ADAM17 activity primarily relate to its rapid activation. Therefore, to extend insights into the mechanisms of ADAM17 activity, we examined its surface expression and the shedding of its substrates during extended periods of neutrophil activation and apoptosis. Contrary to studies with immortalized hematopoietic cell lines, we report that surface expression of ADAM17 is maintained by human neutrophils activated with formyl peptides or by FcR/complement receptor-mediated phagocytosis. Interestingly, bacterial phagocytosis resulted in a significant increase in ADAM17 expression several hours after pathogen engulfment. We provide novel evidence that ADAM17 surface expression is also maintained during spontaneous and anti-Fas-induced neutrophil apoptosis. The well-validated ADAM17 substrates L-selectin and proTNF-, were shed efficiently by neutrophils under each of the conditions tested. Our data thus indicate prolonged ADAM17 expression during neutrophil effector functions. The implications of this may be a role by ADAM17 in both the induction and down-regulation of neutrophil activity. [source] Binding partners L1 cell adhesion molecule and the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) proteins are involved in development and the regenerative response to injury of hippocampal and cortical neuronsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 6 2004Matilda A. Haas Abstract Regeneration of the adult central nervous system may require recapitulation of developmental events and therefore involve the re-expression of developmentally significant proteins. We have investigated whether the L1 cell adhesion molecule, and its binding partner, the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) proteins are involved in the neuronal regenerative response to injury. Hippocampal and cortical neurons were cultured in vitro on either an L1 substrate or poly-L-lysine, and ERM and other neuronal proteins were localized immunocytochemically both developmentally and following neurite transection of neurons maintained in long-term culture. Activated ERM was localized to growth cones up to 7 days in vitro but relatively mature cultures (21 days in vitro) were devoid of active ERM proteins. However, ERM proteins were localized to the growth cones of sprouting neuronal processes that formed several hours after neurite transection. In addition, the L1 substrate, relative to poly-L-lysine, resulted in significantly longer regenerative neurites, as well as larger growth cones with more filopodia. Furthermore, neurons derived from the cortex formed significantly longer post-injury neurite sprouts at 6 h post-injury than hippocampal derived neurons grown on both substrates. We have demonstrated that L1 and the ERM proteins are involved in the neuronal response to injury, and that neurons derived from the hippocampus and cortex may have different post-injury regenerative neurite sprouting abilities. [source] Long-term potentiation of mGluR1 activity by depolarization-induced Homer1a in mouse cerebellar Purkinje neuronsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2003Itsunari Minami Abstract Metabotropic glutamate receptor 1 (mGluR1) plays a crucial role in synaptic plasticity and motor learning in the cerebellum. We have studied activity-dependent changes in mGluR1 function in mouse cultured Purkinje neurons. Depolarizing stimulation potentiated Ca2+ and current responses to an mGluR1 agonist for several hours in the cultured Purkinje neurons. It also blocked internalization of mGluR1 and increased the number of mGluR1s on the cell membrane. We found that depolarization simultaneously increased transcription of Homer1a in Purkinje neurons. Homer1a inhibited internalization and increased cell-surface expression of mGluR1 when coexpressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells. Depolarization-induced Homer1a expression in Purkinje neurons was blocked by a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) inhibitor. Changes in internalization and mGluR1-mediated Ca2+ response were also blocked by inhibition of MAPK activity, suggesting that localization and activity of mGluR1 were regulated in the same signalling pathway as Homer1a expression. It is thus suggested that depolarization of the Purkinje neuron leads to the increment in mGluR1 responsiveness through MAPK activity and induction of Homer1a expression, which increases active mGluR1 on the cell surface by blocking internalization of mGluR1. [source] Salt-inducible kinase-1 represses cAMP response element-binding protein activity both in the nucleus and in the cytoplasmFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 21 2004Yoshiko Katoh Salt-inducible kinase-1 (SIK1) is phosphorylated at Ser577 by protein kinase A in adrenocorticotropic hormone-stimulated Y1 cells, and the phospho-SIK1 translocates from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. The phospho-SIK1 is dephosphorylated in the cytoplasm and re-enters the nucleus several hours later. By using green-fluorescent protein-tagged SIK1 fragments, we found that a peptide region (586,612) was responsible for the nuclear localization of SIK1. The region was named the ,RK-rich region' because of its Arg- and Lys-rich nature. SIK1s mutated in the RK-rich region were localized mainly in the cytoplasm. Because SIK1 represses cAMP-response element (CRE)-mediated transcription of steroidogenic genes, the mutants were examined for their effect on transcription. To our surprise, the cytoplasmic mutants strongly repressed the CRE-binding protein (CREB) activity, the extent of repression being similar to that of SIK1(S577A), a mutant localized exclusively in the nucleus. Several chimeras were constructed from SIK1 and from its isoform SIK2, which was localized mainly in the cytoplasm, and they were examined for intracellular localization as well as CREB-repression activity. A SIK1-derived chimera, where the RK-rich region had been replaced with the corresponding region of SIK2, was found in the cytoplasm, its CREB-modulating activity being similar to that of wild-type SIK1. On the other hand, a SIK2-derived chimera with the RK-rich region of SIK1 was localized in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm, and had a CREB-repressing activity similar to that of the wild-type SIK2. Green fluorescent protein-fused transducer of regulated CREB activity 2 (TORC2), a CREB-specific co-activator, was localized in the cytoplasm and nucleus of Y1 cells, and, after treatment with adrenocorticotropic hormone, cytoplasmic TORC2 entered the nucleus, activating CREB. The SIK1 mutants, having a strong CRE-repressing activity, completely inhibited the adrenocorticotropic hormone-induced nuclear entry of green fluorescent protein-fused TORC2. This suggests that SIK1 may regulate the intracellular movement of TORC2, and as a result modulates the CREB-dependent transcription activity. Together, these results indicate that the RK-rich region of SIK1 is important for determining the nuclear localization and attenuating CREB-repressing activity, but the degree of the nuclear localization of SIK1 itself does not necessarily reflect the degree of SIK1-mediated CREB repression. [source] RpoS involvement and requirement for exogenous nutrient for osmotically induced cross protection in Vibrio vulnificusFEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2005Thomas M. Rosche Abstract Vibrio vulnificus is an opportunistic human pathogen which is the causative agent of food-borne disease and wound infections. V. vulnificus is able to adapt to a variety of potentially stressful environmental changes, such as osmotic, nutrient, and temperature variations in estuarine environments, as well as oxidative, osmotic, and acidity differences following infection of a human host. After exposure to sub-lethal levels of a particular environmental stress, many bacteria become resistant to unrelated stresses, a phenomenon termed cross protection. In this study, we examined the ability of osmotic shock to cross protect V. vulnificus to high temperature as well as oxidative stress. Log phase cells of V. vulnificus strain C7184o were cross protected by prior osmotic shock to both heat and oxidative challenge, but only when exogenous nutrient was present during the osmotic upshift. Further, and unlike other bacteria, nutrient starvation alone did not result in cross protection against either stress. When small amounts of nutrient were present during osmotic shock, cross protection to an otherwise lethal heat challenge developed extremely rapidly, with significant protection seen within 10 min. Cross protection to oxidative stress was slower to develop, requiring several hours. Although stationary phase alone conferred some cross protection to heat and oxidative stress, the alternate sigma factor RpoS was required for complete cross protection of log phase cells to oxidative stress but not for resistance to heat challenge. Together these findings suggest that the cross protective response in V. vulnificus is complex and appears to involve multiple mechanisms. [source] Sex in a cyclical parthenogen: mating behaviour of Chydorus sphaericus (Crustacea; Branchiopoda; Anomopoda)FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 12 2006KAY VAN DAMME Summary 1. We describe the interactions during mating in Chydorus sphaericus, a cyclical parthenogenetic anomopod. Mating behaviour is more complex than previously assumed, with evidence for a diffusible chemical to which males react at the onset of mating, for reproductive isolation, and for postcopulatory mate guarding. 2. During mating, the male and female form a ,mating cross' that may be maintained for several hours, while copulation itself typically lasts less than a minute. Furthermore, males invariably attach to the right valve of females. Copulation involves intromission of the postabdomen between the valves, so that the gonopores approach the left ovarium. 3. This behaviour is reflected in the morphology of both sexes: males have a specialised anterior valve margin, postabdomen, first limb and rostrum, under selective pressure for successful mate guarding and copulation, while gamogenetic females have asymmetric ovaries, and a species-specific setulation of the valves. Males of the structurally related Chydorus ovalis react to the presence of C. sphaericus, but fail to dock to females, suggesting a lock-antilock element in the reproductive isolation of both species. 4. The morphological and ethological adaptations in C. sphaericus suggest that there is a strong selective pressure on mating behaviour in this cyclical parthenogen and specifically towards the formation of the ,mating cross'. [source] Testing a Vapour-fed PBI-based Direct Ethanol Fuel CellFUEL CELLS, Issue 5 2009J. Lobato Abstract This work is focused on the application and performance of a high temperature PBI-based direct ethanol fuel cell, studying the influence of some operating variables such as the temperature, ethanol concentration and oxygen partial pressure. An increase in the temperature resulted in an improvement of the cell performance due to the enhanced electrodic kinetic and electrolyte conductivity. An ethanol/water weight ratio between 0.25 and 0.5 was found to be suitable for providing both enough water and fuel availability to make the ethanol oxidation possible. Measurements of the ethanol crossover at different temperatures and concentrations were carried out. An intermittent lifetime test showed that the cell, after several hours, was able to reach stability. Moreover, its performance was completely reversible with no perceptible losses for 7,days. Finally, tests using bio-ethanol as fuel were performed, with no significant power losses. This final feature is of special interest from a practical ,green' point of view. [source] Long-term modulation of glucose utilization by IL-1, and TNF-, in astrocytes: Na+ pump activity as a potential target via distinct signaling mechanismsGLIA, Issue 1 2002Céline Véga Abstract Interleukin-1, (IL-1,) and tumor necrosis factor-, (TNF-,) markedly stimulate glucose utilization in primary cultures of mouse cortical astrocytes. The mechanism that gives rise to this effect, which takes place several hours after application of cytokine, has remained unclear. Experiments were conducted to identify the major signaling cascades involved in the metabolic action of cytokine. First, the selective IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) prevents the effect of IL-1, on glucose utilization in a concentration-dependent manner, whereas it has no effect on the action of TNF-,. Then, using inhibitors of three classical signaling cascades known to be activated by cytokines, it appears that the PI3 kinase is essential for the effect of both IL-1, and TNF-,, whereas the action of IL-1, also requires activation of the MAP kinase pathway. Participation of a phospholipase C-dependent pathway does not appear critical for both IL-1, and TNF-,. Inhibition of NO synthase by L-NAME did not prevent the metabolic response to both IL-1, and TNF-,, indicating that nitric oxide is probably not involved. In contrast, the Na+/K+ ATPase inhibitor ouabain prevents the IL-1,- and TNF-,-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose (2DG) uptake. When treatment of astrocytes with a cytokine was followed 24 h later by an acute application of glutamate, a synergistic enhancement in glucose utilization was observed. This effect was greatly reduced by ouabain. These data suggest that Na+ pump activity is a common target for both the long-term metabolic action of cytokines promoted by the activation of distinct signaling pathways and the enhanced metabolic response to glutamate. GLIA 39:10,18, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Photogeneration of High Pretilt Angles of Nematic Liquid Crystals by Non-Polarized Light Irradiation of Azobenzene-Containing Polymer Films,ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 3 2004S. Furumi Abstract A vertical-alignment (VA) cell of nematic liquid crystals (LCs) was prepared using photoirradiated thin films of a poly(methacrylate) with mesogenic moieties of 4-trifluoromethoxyazobenzene as the side chains. Optical anisotropy was generated by oblique irradiation of the azobenzene-containing polymer films with non-polarized UV light, followed by annealing treatment to enhance the photodichroism, which displayed thermal stability. The combination of oblique exposure to non-polarized UV light and subsequent annealing treatment brought about high pretilt angles of nematic LCs so that a photoaligned VA LC cell was fabricated. The photopatterned LC cell exhibited electro-optical properties with excellent optical quality when a voltage was applied even after heating at 100,°C for several hours. [source] Scorpion stings in Australia: five definite stings and a reviewINTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL, Issue 7 2004G. K. Isbister Abstract Despite scorpions being locally abundant in many parts of Australia, scorpion sting is a poorly defined clinical condition in Australia. Many health-care workers are unaware of the effects of their stings and scorpions are often feared based on their international reputation. Five scorpion stings that occurred in different parts of Australia where the scorpion was caught at the time of the sting and identified by a professional arachnologist are reported in the present paper. The spectrum of clinical effects of scorpion stings in Australia and the potential for significant effects are discussed. These cases and recent prospective case series demonstrate that in Australia scorpion stings cause only minor effects. The main effect is localized pain lasting for several hours, associated less commonly with systemic effects, local numbness and paraesthesia. Most stings are from smaller scorpions from the family Buthidae and often occur indoors at night. The stings from Australian buthid scorpions cause more severe effects than from the larger species in the families Urodacidae (genus Urodacus) and Liochelidae (genus Liocheles). (Intern Med J 2004; 34: 427,430) [source] Kinetic Resolution of 1-Biaryl- and 1-(Pyridylphenyl)alkan-1-ols Catalysed by the Lipase B from Candida antarcticaADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 5 2005Robert Kourist Abstract Lipase B from Candida antarctica (CAL-B) catalyses the highly enantioselective (E>200) transesterification of some 1-biaryl-2-yl-, -3-yl-, and -4-ylethanols and -propan-1-ols, as well as 1-(o -, m -, and p -pyridylphenyl)ethanols, 6, with vinyl acetate, Kazlauskas' rule being obeyed in all cases. meta and para -Substituted substrates were transformed within several hours (conversion degree ranging from 23,50%), reaction rates for propan-1-ol derivatives being slower than those for ethanol derivatives. Transesterifications of ortho -substituted alcohols took several days and were accompanied by a chemoenzymatic side reaction: the formation of another acetate derived from the hemiacetal between 6 and acetaldehyde coming from vinyl acetate. This side reaction was suppressed in the presence of isopropenyl acetate as acyl donor, conversion degrees for transesterification ranging from 20,40% after ten days (E>200). The usefulness of (R)- 6p as ligand in the asymmetric addition of diethylzinc to benzaldehyde was also demonstrated. [source] Preparation and microstructure characterization of ball-milled ZrO2 powder by the Rietveld method: monoclinic to cubic phase transformation without any additiveJOURNAL OF APPLIED CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, Issue 5 2002S. Bid The phase transformation kinetics of high-energy ball-milled monoclinic ZrO2 have been studied in detail by Rietveld powder structure refinement analysis. In the present study, no stabilizing compound was required to obtain the cubic phase. The fine-grain powder was milled in a planetary ball mill for up to several hours at different BPMRs (ball to powder mass ratios): 10:1, 20:1, 35:1 and 40:1. During the process of ball milling, the monoclinic phase is gradually transformed to the cubic phase. The relative phase abundances of the respective phases, the particle sizes, the r.m.s. strains, the lattice parameter changes, etc., have been estimated from Rietveld analysis of X-ray powder diffraction data. It has been found that a higher BPMR exerts more influence on rapid phase transformation. In the m - to c -ZrO2 phase transformation, no formation of an intermediate tetragonal ZrO2 phase has been found. The small change in the lattice volume of m -ZrO2, which is very close to the lattice volume of c -ZrO2, caused by ball milling may be attributed to this phase change. The formation of the c phase is noticed, in general, after just 1,h of ball milling, and the particle size of the m phase is reduced to a large extent at the first stage of milling and remains almost unchanged with increasing milling time. However, the particle size of the c phase increases with increasing milling time for the samples milled with higher BPMRs (35:1 and 40:1), suggesting that quenching caused by a high impact energy followed by an annealing effect may play a vital role, which is further manifested in the agglomeration of small particles. [source] Graft copolymers of methyl methacrylate and poly([R]-3-hydroxybutyrate) macromonomers as candidates for inclusion in acrylic bone cement formulations: Compression testingJOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH, Issue 1 2006Sophie Nguyen Abstract Graft copolymers of methyl methacrylate and biodegradable, biocompatible bacterial poly([R]-3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) blocks were synthesized and evaluated as possible constituents in acrylic bone cements for use in orthopaedic applications. The copolymers were produced by conventional free radical copolymerization and incorporated in one commercially available acrylic bone cement brand, Antibiotic Simplex® (AKZ). Cements with formulations containing 6.7 and 13.5 wt % of PMMA- graft -PHB were prepared. The morphology of the graft copolymer particles was suggested to influence the ability of the modified cement to be processed. Formulations containing more than about 20 wt % of the graft copolymer resulted in cement doughs that, both after first preparation and several hours later, were either sandy or soft spongy in texture and, thus, would be unacceptable for use in orthopaedic applications. The morphologies of the powders and the volumetric porosity (p) and ultimate compressive strength (UCS) of the cured cements were determined. Micro computed tomography showed that the cements presented average porosities of 13.5,16.9%. It was found that, while the powder particle shape and size for the experimental cements were markedly different from those of AKZ, there was no significant difference in either p or UCS for these cements. The latter was determined to be about 85 MPa for the modified cements and 84 MPa for Antibiotic Simplex. Furthermore, the UCS of all the cements exceeded the minimum level for acrylic bone cements, as stipulated by ASTM F-451. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2006 [source] The Green Oat Story: Possible Mechanisms of Green Color Formation in Oat Products during CookingJOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 6 2009D.C. Doehlert ABSTRACT:, Consumers occasionally report greenish colors generated in their oat products when cooking in tap water. Here we have investigated pH and ferrous (Fe2+) ion as possible mechanisms for this color change. Steel-cut oat groats can turn brown-green color when cooked in alkaline conditions (pHs 9 to 12). Extraction of this color with methanol, and high-pressure liquid chromatography indicated a direct association of this color with the phenolic acid or avenanthramide content of the oat. The presence of 50 mM NaHCO3 in water will cause oat/water mixtures to turn alkaline when cooked as CO2 is driven off, generating OH, ion. Although tap water rarely, if ever, contains so much bicarbonate, bicarbonate is used as a leavening agent in baking applications. Industrial interests using baking soda or alkaline conditions during oat processing should be aware of possible off color generation. We have also found that as little as 10 ppm Fe2+ will turn oat products gray-green when cooked. The aleurone stained darker than the starchy endosperm. Other divalent cations, such as Ca2+ or Mg2+ had no effect on cooked oat color. As much as 50 ppm Fe2+ may be found in freshly pumped well water, but Fe2+ reacts quickly with oxygen and precipitates as Fe(OH)3. Thus, some freshly pumped well water may turn oats green when cooked, but if the water is left under atmospheric conditions for several hours, no discoloration will appear in the cooked oats. [source] Rhubarb Juice as a Natural Antibrowning AgentJOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 8 2000S.M. Son ABSTRACT: To search for natural antibrowning agents, rhubarb juice was tested on fresh-cut apple slices and found to have a potent effect. Liberty apple slices were treated in various concentrations of rhubarb juice (5%,100%), and the rate of discoloration at room temperature was measured by a Hunter Colorimeter. Apple slices treated in the 5%, 10% solution showed browning activity with dL values of 2.3 , 2.5 at two hours. However, the concentrations of rhubarb juice above 20% inhibited apple browning effectively with no change in the L value for several hours. Analysis of oxalic acid in rhubarb juice showed that the 20% solution contained about 67 mg/100g. [source] Atomic force microscopy study of living diatoms in ambient conditionsJOURNAL OF MICROSCOPY, Issue 3 2003I. C. Gebeshuber Summary We present the first in vivo study of diatoms using atomic force microscopy (AFM). Three chain-forming, benthic freshwater species ,Eunotia sudetica, Navicula seminulum and a yet unidentified species , are directly imaged while growing on glass slides. Using the AFM, we imaged the topography of the diatom frustules at the nanometre range scale and we determined the thickness of the organic case enveloping the siliceous skeleton of the cell (10 nm). Imaging proved to be stable for several hours, thereby offering the possibility to study long-term dynamic changes, such as biomineralization or cell movement, as they occur. We also focused on the natural adhesives produced by these unicellular organisms to adhere to other cells or the substratum. Most man-made adhesives fail in wet conditions, owing to chemical modification of the adhesive or its substrate. Diatoms produce adhesives that are extremely strong and robust both in fresh- and in seawater environments. Our phase-imaging and force-pulling experiments reveal the characteristics of these natural adhesives that might be of use in designing man-made analogues that function in wet environments. Engineering stable underwater adhesives currently poses a major technical challenge. 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