Objective: To determine what is known about neurobehavioral outcomes in patients with the obstructive sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome following treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP).
Data Sources: Medline was searched. Abstracts presented at international meetings were searched and authors were contacted for additional trials.
Little is known about cell-substrate adhesion and how motile and adhesive forces work together in moving cells. The ability to rapidly screen a large number of insertional mutants prompted us to perform a genetic screen in Dictyostelium to isolate adhesion-deficient mutants. The resulting substrate adhesion-deficient (sad) mutants grew in plastic dishes without attaching to the substrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The role of frozen section (FS) in thyroid disease is controversial. The goal of this study was to identify a cohort of patients who may or may not benefit from FS.
Methods: Two hundred thirty-one patients who underwent thyroidectomy were evaluated in regard to fine-needle aspiration (FNA), FS, and the extent of surgery.
The myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) of Dictyostelium discoideum is phosphorylated at a single serine site in response to chemoattractant. To investigate the role of the phosphorylation of RLC in both motility and chemotaxis, mutants were generated in which the single phosphorylatable serine was replaced with a nonphosphorylatable alanine. Several independent clones expressing the mutant RLC in the RLC null mutant, mlcR(-), were obtained.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntracellular organelle transport is driven by motors that act upon microtubules or microfilaments. The microtubulebased motors, cytoplasmic dynein and kinesin, are believed to be responsible for retrograde and anterograde transport of intracellular cargo along microtubules. Many vesicles display bidirectional movement; however, the mechanism regulating directionality is unresolved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFApproaches with high spatial and temporal resolution are required to understand the regulation of nonmuscle myosin II in vivo. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer we have produced a novel biosensor allowing simultaneous determination of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) localization and its [Ca2+]4/calmodulin-binding state in living cells. We observe transient recruitment of diffuse MLCK to stress fibers and its in situ activation before contraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhagocytosis and membrane traffic in general are largely dependent on the cytoskeleton and their associated molecular motors. The myosin family of motors, especially the unconventional myosins, interact with the actin cortex to facilitate the internalization of external materials during the early steps of phagocytosis. Members of the kinesin and dynein motor families, which mediate transport along microtubules (MTs), facilitate the intracellular processing of the internalized materials and the movement of membrane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have shown previously that cells lacking myosin II are impaired in multicellular motility. We now extend these results by determining whether myosin contractile function is necessary for normal multicellular motility and shape control. Myosin from mutants lacking the essential (mlcE(-)) myosin light chain retains the ability to form bipolar filaments that bind actin, but shows no measurable in vitro or in vivo contractile function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Restenosis complicates 30% to 40% of angioplasty procedures and may be unrelated to traditional coronary risk factors. Homocysteine, lipoprotein(a), and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR 677T) (a genetic determinant of plasma homocysteine concentrations) are novel risk factors for coronary artery disease. Their roles in restenosis are unclear, and the potential synergism between homocysteine and lipoprotein(a) has not previously been studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring cell sorting in Dictyostelium, we observed that GFP-tagged prestalk cells (ecmAO-expressing cells) moved independently and directionally to form a cluster. This is consistent with a chemotaxis model for cell sorting (and not differential adhesion) in which a long-range signal attracts many of the prestalk cells to the site of cluster formation. Surprisingly, the ecmAO prestalk cluster that we observed was initially found at a random location within the mound of this Ax3 strain, defining an intermediate sorting stage not widely reported in Dictyostelium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: To determine the frequency, risk factors and clinical significance of gallstones in a New Zealand population.
Methods: One thousand names were randomly selected from the Christchurch electoral rolls to recruit controls for a study on the prevalence of gallstones in diabetics. Three hundred and eighteen subjects (169 females, 149 males) were recruited and in this study we analyse this control group for gallstone disease.
Recent research in arterial aneurysm formation has focused on animal model development. Mice are an ideal experimental organism due to their short life cycle, prolific progeny, and extensively studied genome. Most experiments require the sacrifice of the mice to observe and assess any morphological changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytoplasmic dynein intermediate chain (IC) mediates dynein-dynactin interaction in vitro (Karki, S., and E.L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The fibrinolytic system is intimately involved in several processes that contribute to restenosis, including clot dissolution, cell migration, and tissue remodeling. However, the role of the individual activators (urokinase [uPA] and tissue plasminogen [tPA] activators) and inhibitors (plasminogen activator inhibitor [PAI-1]) of the fibrinolytic system in maintaining patency after coronary artery angioplasty and stenting is unclear.
Methods And Results: We prospectively studied 159 patients with stable angina who underwent successful elective angioplasty (n=110) or stenting (n=49) of de novo native coronary artery lesions.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv
October 1999
We developed the Multi-Track System for percutaneous mitral valvotomy and described the preliminary results in 1995. Here we report the first 100 consecutive cases after the original publication. Two separate balloon catheters are positioned on a single guidewire.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Muscle Res Cell Motil
February 1999
Dictyostelium RLC null cells have defects in cytokinesis and development that can be rescued by expression of either the wild type Dictyostelium RLC or an RLC mutant that cannot be phosphorylated by MLCK (S13A) (Ostrow et al., 1994). The wild type and S13A mutant LCs rescued the cells equally well, despite the fact that RLC phosphorylation increases purified Dictyostelium myosin's activity 5-fold.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytoplasmic dynein is a multisubunit microtubule-based motor protein that is involved in several eukaryotic cell motilities. Two dynein heavy chains each form a motor domain that connects to a common cargo-binding tail. Although this tail domain is composed of multiple polypeptides, subunit organization within this region is poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe actin-based motor protein myosin II plays a critical role in many cellular processes in both muscle and non-muscle cells. Targeted disruption of the Dictyostelium regulatory light chain (RLC) caused defects in cytokinesis and multicellular morphogenesis. In contrast, a myosin heavy chain mutant lacking the RLC binding site, and therefore bound RLC, showed normal cytokinesis and development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAt the end of mitosis, daughter cells are separated from each other by cytokinesis. This process involves equal partitioning and segregation of cytoplasm between the two cells. Despite years of study, the mechanism driving cytokinesis in animal cells is not fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn autumn 1996, shortly after the platelet glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa inhibitor abciximab was approved for clinical use by the Health Protection Branch of Health Canada, seven interventional cardiologists met in a roundtable forum to review the use of abciximab in percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). While a compelling body of data was presented that argued strongly for adjunctive abciximab in conventional balloon angioplasty, the participants found in difficult to extrapolate the findings to contemporary interventional practice dominated by stent implantation. This uncertainty stemmed from the lack of clinical trials of abciximab during the stent era.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutant Dictyostelium cells lacking any of the component polypeptides of myosin II exhibit developmental defects. To define myosin's role in establishing Dictyostelium's developmental pattern, we have rescued myosin function in a myosin regulatory light chain null mutant (mlcR-) using cell-type-specific promoters. While mlcR- cells fail to progress beyond the mound stage, expression of RLC from the prestalk promoter, ecmA, produces culminants with normal stalks but with defects in spore cell localization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to describe the natural history of gallbladder polyps. Thirty-eight subjects who had been previously identified as having gallbladder polyps in an epidemiologic study of gallstone prevalence in 627 diabetic subjects and matched controls were followed longitudinally. Follow-up sonograms were obtained on 33 and 22 of the 38 subjects at 2 and 5 years, respectively.
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