Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), coupled with site-directed spin labeling, has been proven to be a particularly suitable technique to extract information on the fraction of myosin heads strongly bound to actin upon muscle contraction. The approach can be used to investigate possible structural changes occurring in myosin of fiber s altered by diseases and aging. In this work, we labeled myosin at position Cys707, located in the SH1-SH2 helix in the myosin head cleft, with iodoacetamide spin label, a spin label that is sensitive to the reorientational motion of this protein during the ATPase cycle and characterized the biochemical states of the labeled myosin head by means of continuous wave EPR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cellular basis of age-related tissue deterioration remains largely obscure. The ability to activate compensatory mechanisms in response to environmental stress is an important factor for survival and maintenance of cellular functions. Autophagy is activated both under short and prolonged stress and is required to clear the cell of dysfunctional organelles and altered proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy means of multiscale molecular simulations, we show that telechelic-star polymers are a simple, robust, and tunable system, which hierarchically self-assembles into soft-patchy particles and mechanically stabilizes selected, open crystalline structures. The self-aggregating patchy behavior can be fully controlled by the number of arms per star and by the fraction of attractive monomeric units at the free ends of the arms. Such self-assembled soft-patchy particles while forming, upon augmenting density, gel-like percolating networks, preserve properties as particle size, number, and arrangement of patches per particle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhonological agraphia is a neurolinguistically specific profile of spelling impairment. It is characterized by an impairment in spelling pronounceable pseudowords ('sild') and by an impairment in spelling real words related to their familiarity, length, and often, part of speech (Shallice, 1981; Roeltgen, 1985; Bub & Chertkow, 1988). We report two cases of phonological agraphia, each with a different lesion profile.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeneralization of treatment effects remains a consistent goal of clinicians who treat aphasic adults. Specifically, various types of stimulus/response generalization designs are available, depending on the level of generalization desired. We have reviewed training matrices designed to elicit gestural subject-plus-verb targets and treatment studies designed to answer more global questions regarding treatment efficacy.
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