Publications by authors named "J VAN LANCKER"

Maintaining and increasing soil quality and fertility in a sustainable way is an important challenge for modern agriculture. The burgeoning bioeconomy is likely to put further pressure on soil resources unless they are managed carefully. Compost has the potential to be an effective soil improver because of its multiple beneficial effects on soil quality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Immunoglobulin E-mediated allergy generally has not been considered to be important in the pathogenesis of nasal polyps, despite elevated immunoglobulin E in polyp exudates, tissue eosinophilia, and degranulated mast cells. In previous reports, patients with nasal polyps were more likely to have positive skin tests to perennial than to seasonal allergens. It is postulated that nasal polyps result from the constant nature of perennial allergen exposure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The interactions of procainamide with DNA were studied by neutral and alkaline sucrose gradient sedimentation and sequential action of 2 enzymes: a mammalian repair endonuclease and bacterial DNA polymerase I. Sucrose gradient sedimentation shows that in the absence of photosensitization, the interaction of procainamide with DNA did not modify DNA sedimentation in alkaline or neutral sucrose gradients. In contrast, when a photosensitized DNA procainamide mixture was placed on sucrose gradients, the peak appearing on alkaline sucrose gradient after treatment with endonuclease was shifted toward the lower molecular weights, indicating that strand breaks had developed in the photosensitized procainamide DNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The activity of an endonuclease(s) acting on double-stranded, ultraviolet-irradiated, and 2-acetylaminofluorene-bound DNA but not on double-stranded undamaged DNA triples within two hr after partial hepatectomy. Although the activity drops between four and six hr after operation, it remains above levels measured in livers of nonhepatectomized rats until 36 hr after operation. Between 36 and 48 hr after operation, the enzyme activity drops below the levels in liver of nonhepatectomized rats and then rises slowly to reach levels observed in nonhepatectomized animals between 48 hr and seven days after the operation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF