Publications by authors named "Agaeva E"

Wheat-rye translocations 1RS.1BL and 1RS.1AL are used in bread wheat breeding worldwide because a short arm of rye chromosome 1 (1RS) when introgressed into the wheat genome confers resistance to diseases, pests and better performance under drought-stress conditions.

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The reduction in plant height caused by mutations in or genes in combination with day-length-independent early flowering associated with the gene were the main factors of the drastic yield increase in bread wheat in the 1960s. Increasing nitrogen use efficiency as well as maintaining high yields under conditions of global climate change are the modern goals of wheat breeding. The glutamine synthetase (GS) enzyme plays a key role in ammonium assimilation in plants.

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We studied in vivo modifying effect of autotransfusion of human bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells on ROS generation and production of cytokines (TNFα,TNFβ, IL-1α, IL-10, IFNγ, and GM-CSF) and PGE by mononuclear cells of patients (N=21) with chronic heart failure. These parameters were evaluated prior to (control) and after (immediately and on day 14) intravenous administration of stromal cells in doses of 100-200×10. Immediately after autotransfusion, significant increase of in vitro zymosan-induced chemiluminescence of blood mononuclear cells from 10 patients was observed.

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In vivo modifying effects of bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells of humans and laboratory mice on ROS production by mouse blood mononuclears are studied by luminol-dependent zymosan-induced chemiluminescence after syngeneic and xenogeneic transplantation into systemic blood flow. The chemiluminescent activity of mouse blood mononuclears has increased early (1 day) after syngeneic (mouse mesenchymal stromal cells) and xenogeneic (human mesenchymal stromal cells) transplantation. Later, 7-21 days after syngeneic and xenogeneic transplantation, the chemiluminescent activity of mouse mononuclears is suppressed.

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We studied the effect of transplantation of human stem cells from various tissues on reparative processes in the brain of rats with closed craniocerebral injury. Combined treatment with standard drugs and systemic administration of xenogeneic stem cells had a neuroprotective effect. The morphology of neurons rapidly returned to normal after administration of fetal neural stem cells.

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In vitro chemiluminescent test showed that human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells and conditioned media dose-dependently inhibit production of reactive oxygen species by macrophages: 50% inhibition of chemiluminescence (compared to biocontrol) was observed at 1:1 mesenchymal stem cell/macrophage ratio or after addition of 20-25% conditioned media to the incubation medium. The observed mechanism of inhibition of production of reactive oxygen forms can play an essential role in the formation of local immunosuppressive microenvironment in the organism after allogenic transplantation of mesenchymal stem cells.

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The effects of whole-body gamma-irradiation in different doses on the distribution of (188)Re-labeled mesenchymal stem cells obtained by culturing of the rat bone marrow cells were studied in different organs and tissues of animals after intravenous (systemic) injection. Irradiation stimulated homing of (188)Re-labeled mesenchymal stem cells in organs and tissues of animals in comparison with this process in intact non-irradiated rats. The intensity of homing increased with increasing the irradiation dose and decreased with prolongation of the period between irradiation and systemic transplantation.

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The study undertaken 3 years ago examined the effect of systemic transplantation of autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) in the complex therapy of 27 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis, including 15 patients with multidrug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis and 12 with extensive drug resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. All the patients were bacteria-discharging persons with disseminated destructive processes in lung tissue, most (n=17) of them had chronic fibrocavernous tuberculosis. In all the patients, previous long specific antituberculous treatment was ineffective or inadequately effective.

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The effects of carnitine derivatives on the fitness of pretrained animals were studied. It was found that carnitine preparations such as L-carnitine, mildronate, and acetyl-L-carnitine used for 10 days statistically significantly increased the maximum running speed and its endurance, whereas DL-carnitine failed. The effects of carnitine preparations on speed endurance were in proportion to their antioxidative activity.

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