Publications by authors named "J Bourgouin"

Cell labeling is a preliminary step in multiple biophysical approaches, including the solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study of bacteria in vivo. Deuterium solid-state NMR has been used in the past years to probe bacterial membranes and their interactions with antimicrobial peptides, following a standard labeling protocol. Recent results from our laboratory on a slow-growing bacterium has shown the need to optimize this protocol, especially the bacterial growth time before harvest and the concentration of exogenous labeled fatty acids to be used for both Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis.

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In vivo or whole-cell solid-state NMR is an emerging field which faces tremendous challenges. In most cases, cell biochemistry does not allow the labelling of specific molecules and an in vivo study is thus hindered by the inherent difficulty of identifying, among a formidable number of resonances, those arising from a given molecule. In this work we examined the possibility of studying, by solid-state NMR, the model organism Chlamydomonas reinhardtii fully and non-specifically C labelled.

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Cellular potassium extrusion is now considered a natural protective mechanism following myocardial ischemia, and newly synthetized molecules mimicking cellular extrusion of K+ (potassium channel activators) appear promising for cardioprotection, although the underlying mechanisms for their beneficial effects have not been fully characterized. Indeed, the cardioprotective efficacy of K+ channel activators at low temperature or in the presence of the high K+ content of standard cardioplegic solution has never been addressed. Therefore the cardioprotective interaction of the thioformamide K+ channel activator aprikalim (RP 52891) and high K+ content, cold cardioplegia was studied in isolated ischemic rabbit hearts.

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Consecutive patients undergoing knee arthroplasty or tibial osteotomy at four participating hospitals received either enoxaparin, 30 mg subcutaneously every 12 h (n = 66) or an identical-appearing placebo (n = 65). All study medications started the morning after the operation and were continued up to a maximum of 14 days. Patients underwent surveillance with 125I-fibrinogen leg scanning and impedance plethysmography.

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The potential benefit of magnetotherapy was investigated in 47 consecutive outpatients with periarthritis of the shoulder. Using a controlled triple-blind study design, one group of patients received hot pack applications and passive manual stretching and pulley exercises; the other group received the same therapy plus magnetotherapy. Treatment was administered three times a week.

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