Publications by authors named "Lagneaux D"

Seventy-five embryos were collected 6 days after ovulation. Sixty embryos were frozen in straws using glycerol as the cryoprotectant in an automatic freezer. In Experiment 1 the freezing and thawing media were supplemented with 1.

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Equine embryos recovered on Day 6 after ovulation were cooled to +4 degrees C, or frozen with AFP alone or together with glycerol. Twenty embryos (140-200 microm in diameter) were randomly assigned to 6 treatment groups. In the first 3 groups, the embryos were cooled from room temperature to +4 degrees C at a rate of 3 degrees C/min and warmed again at a rate of 32 degrees C/min in a programmable freezer.

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Paternity analysis was performed on the DNA of 21 equine embryos collected nonsurgically 10 days after ovulation from known mares, but involving 3 possible sires. After extraction, the DNA of each embryo was typed by radioactive PCR amplification using 10 characterised microsatellites; HMS 1, 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 (Guérin et al. 1994) and HTG 3, 4, 6 and 10 (Marklund et al.

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Triple-helix-forming oligodeoxynucleotides are receiving considerable attention due to their potential applications for the inhibition of specific genes in vivo. However, their development is impaired by the lack of triple helix formation under physiological conditions. It is thus crucial to be able to quantitatively assay triple helix formation of various oligodeoxynucleotides on different target sequences.

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Plasmid DNA used for nonviral therapeutic gene transfer or nucleic acid vaccination has to be highly purified devoid of contaminating components such as bacterial proteins, endotoxins, or bacterial chromosomal DNA. We have developed a new affinity chromatography technique for plasmid DNA purification: triple-helix affinity chromatography (THAC). This technique is based on the sequence-specific interaction of an oligonucleotide forming a triple-helix with plasmid DNA.

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In Streptomyces pristinaespiralis, two enzymes are necessary for conversion of pristinamycin IIB (PIIB) to pristinamycin IIA (PIIA), the major component of pristinamycin (D. Thibaut, N. Ratet, D.

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Small doses of NaCN (250 micrograms.kg-1) intravenously injected into normal anesthetized Wistar rats, provoked immediate hyperventilation, bradycardia and systemic hypotension. These effects resulted mostly from peripheral chemoreceptor (PCR) stimulation.

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A 4.6 kb Staphylococcus aureus DNA fragment containing DNA gyrase-like genes (grlA and grlB) was cloned and sequenced. The proteins GrlA and GrlB exhibit more than 30% identity with E.

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A blunted ventilatory response to acute hypoxia is described in altitude acclimatized small mammals. The peripheral or central origin of this blunting remains controversial. As the O2 sensitivity is always tested by steady-state steps of progressive hypoxia, an enhanced central inhibiting mechanism similar to those created by sustained hypoxia is suspected to be involved in the blunting.

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Bilateral carotid occlusion (BCO) was performed in pentobarbital anesthetized adult rats neonatally treated with capsaicin (50 mg/kg, sc, CNT rats). Pressor and ventilatory responses to BCO in CNT rats were compared with those of littermate controls injected with a same volume of solvent (olive oil, 0.1 ml).

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Sixteen embryos were recovered nonsurgically at day 6.5 after induced ovulation from Welsh pony mares and were evaluated for cellular changes that occur because of exposure to the cryoprotectant with or without the freeze and thaw process. Day 6.

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1. Zymosan, an activator of the alternative complement pathway, (2 to 16 mg kg-1) injected intravenously via the tail vein of anaesthetized rats, dose-dependently increased the vascular permeability of lung parenchyma, as measured by the accumulation of 125I-labelled albumin in lungs. 2.

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Experiments were performed to examine the role of the stimulation of pulmonary stretch receptors in cardiovascular response to peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation in spontaneously breathing anaesthetized rats. The effects of continuous positive tracheal pressure (0.1 to 0.

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Unanaesthetized rats whose arterial chemoreceptors were stimulated by an one hour acute exposition to hypoxic gaseous mixtures with various carbon dioxide concentrations, presented depletion of the catecholamines content of their adrenal glands only when hypocapnia or increased pH was present (non compensated hypoxia). Moreover, exposition to simultaneous hypoxia and hypercapnia increased the epinephrine stock of the adrenal glands. No changes were found in the myocardium amine content in the same conditions.

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In normal anaesthetized rats (pentobarbital, 40 mg/kg i.p.), intravenous injection of a bolus of vasopressin (0.

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The decrease in embryo viability caused by cryopreservation may be due, in part, to metabolic disturbances. To determine the effect of cryopreservation on metabolism, Day -6.5 horse embryos were either frozen and thawed using glycerol as the cryoprotectant, given only the glycerol treatment or washed an equal number of times in phosphate buffered saline (PBS).

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In anaesthetized rats, ventilatory stimulation induced by phentolamine, an alpha sympatholytic agent, emphasizes the role of some adrenergic mechanisms in the control of the respiratory centres activity. Phentolamine (5 and 10 mg.kg-1, iv) stimulates ventilation after a 4 s latency, tidal volume and respiratory rate being both increased.

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Therapeutic activities of CO2 water bathes are explained by a synergism between many factors. The first ones are related to immersion it-self: hydrostatic pressure and Archimedes force inducing orthosympathetic inhibition and muscular relaxation. The second ones depend on the pharmacological properties of carbon dioxide acting directly on the blood vessels of the skin, causing vasodilation and heat sensation.

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