Publications by authors named "Lahiri S"

The hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) protein level is increased by hypoxia and iron chelator (ciclopirox olamine) in isolated rat carotid body (CB) and glomus cells. Reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) are performed to test whether this increase is caused, at least in part, by increased HIF-1alpha gene transcription. HIF-1alpha mRNA levels dose-dependently increased and decreased in the rat CBs incubated for 1 h in a medium saturated with O(2) levels that were varied around nominally normoxic level of 21% in the 0-95% range.

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A hospital based prospective study was carried out from 1st October 1998 to 30th September 1999 on children with clinical diagnosis of bronchiolitis in OPD and indoor patients of the Department of Paediatric Medicine, Medical College Kolkata. The objective of the study was to find out the proportional case rate and clinico epidemiological features of the disease. The effectiveness of nebulized salbutamol among bronchiolitis children was also looked into.

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A chelating resin was synthesized by incorporating thiosemicarbazide into Amberlite IRC-50, a weakly acidic polymer. Astatine radionuclides produced by alpha-irradiating bismuth oxide were separated using the newly synthesized chelating resin. The resin showed high selectivity for astatine.

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The haloacid dehalogenase (HAD) superfamily includes a variety of enzymes that catalyze the cleavage of substrate C-Cl, P-C, and P-OP bonds via nucleophilic substitution pathways. All members possess the alpha/beta core domain, and many also possess a small cap domain. The active site of the core domain is formed by four loops (corresponding to sequence motifs 1-4), which position substrate and cofactor-binding residues as well as the catalytic groups that mediate the "core" chemistry.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the presence and behavior of hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF-1alpha and HIF-1beta) in rat carotid body glomus cells under normal and low oxygen conditions.
  • Exposure to low oxygen (hypoxia) or treatment with a specific iron chelator (CPX) significantly increases HIF-1alpha, while HIF-1beta levels remain constant.
  • The research suggests that HIF-1alpha accumulates in response to hypoxia and intracellular iron depletion, as it is usually degraded under normal oxygen levels through prolyl hydroxylase, which requires iron as a cofactor.
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The hypothesis that an increase in intracellular calcium [Ca(2+)](c) in carotid body (CB) glomus cells will cause enhanced afferent carotid sinus nerve (CSN) activities was tested in the rat CB in-vitro with the use of extracellular ATP. ATP caused a dose dependent [Ca(2+)](c) increase in identified glomus cells. A major part of total [Ca(2+)](c) increase (2/3) was due to the [Ca(2+)] influx.

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The conception of tracer packet was first started with the irradiation of a thick cobalt target with 16O, 7Li and 12C beams, consecutively. This produced carrier-free radiotracers of Mn, Cu, Zn, Ga, Ge, As and Se. These elements are adjacent members in the periodic table and are of nutritional importance.

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The urea induced equilibrium denaturation behavior of glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli (GlnRS) in 0.25 m potassium l-glutamate, a naturally occurring osmolyte in E. coli, has been studied.

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H(+) is maintained constant in the internal environment at a given body temperature independent of external environment according to Bernard's principle of "milieu interieur". But CO2 relates to ventilation and H(+) to kidney. Hence, the title of the chapter.

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A synthesis of steroid-polyquinane hybrids, a new class of molecular entities, is described. [reaction: see text]

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The Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) is located in the Greater Mekong sub-region in East Asia, neighbouring with China, Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, with a land area of 236,800 square kilometres, and an average population density of 22 persons per square kilometre. The population of Lao PDR is 5.5 million with 49 ethnic groups.

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Alpha activation of Tl(2)O(3) target results in the formation of carrier-free 204,206 Bi. Two different radiochemical methods were used for the separation of bismuth radionuclides from the target matrix. A very high separation factor was achieved using liquid-liquid extraction (LLX) method with methyl isobutyl ketone (MIBK)-HCl system.

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Background: Both inhibin A and inhibin pro-alpha C are detectable in the circulation in increasing amounts during establishment of pregnancy. However, their origins and functions remain to be elucidated. We have studied levels of inhibin A and inhibin pro-alpha C in serum samples collected at various stages during medical termination of pregnancy with consecutive use of mifepristone and misoprostol.

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Bed management is one of the important activities for efficient hospital management. The present study on evaluation of bed management in a rural hospital revealed that the total bed capacity could not be utilised. The turnover rate, turnover interval, bed occupancy rate and average length of stay were closely corroborating.

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Enzymes provide enormous rate enhancements, unmatched by any other type of catalyst. The stabilization of high-energy states along the reaction coordinate is the crux of the catalytic power of enzymes. We report the atomic-resolution structure of a high-energy reaction intermediate stabilized in the active site of an enzyme.

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Background: Over 6 million people live in areas of West Bengal, India, where groundwater sources are contaminated with naturally occurring arsenic. The key objective of this nested case-control study was to characterize the dose-response relation between low arsenic concentrations in drinking water and arsenic-induced skin keratoses and hyperpigmentation.

Methods: We selected cases (persons with arsenic-induced skin lesions) and age- and sex-matched controls from participants in a 1995-1996 cross-sectional survey in West Bengal.

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Carotid body chemosensory activities were measured before and after 0.2, 5,6 and 7 h of sustained isocapnic (PaCO(2) approximately equal to 30 Torr) hypoxia (PaO(2) approximately equal to 43 Torr) in the cats (n=7). The activity increased from 5.

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Both steady state and time resolved spectroscopic measurements reveal that the prime process involved in quenching mechanism of the lowest excited singlet (S1) and triplet (T1) states of the well known electron acceptor 9-Cyanoanthracene (9CNA) in presence of 5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-1-naphthol (TH1N) or 5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-2-naphthol (TH2N) is H-bonding interaction. It has been confirmed that the fluorescence of 9CNA is not at all affected in presence of 5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-2-methoxy naphthalene (TH2MN) both in non-polar n-heptane (NH) and highly polar acetonitrile (ACN) media. This indicates that the H-bonding interaction is crucial for the occurrence of the quenching phenomenon observed in the present investigations with TH1N (or TH2N) donors and 9CNA acceptor.

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It is known that atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is released from cardiac myocyte and other stores during hypoxia and is involved in pulmonary-cardiovascular reflexes and in natriuresis and diuresis. Since the carotid body initiates hypoxic chemoreflexes, we hypothesized that ANP could potentiate the hypoxic stimulation of the carotid body chemoreceptor in vivo. We studied the effect of close intra-arterial injection of ANP on carotid chemoreceptor activity in anesthetized male cats which were paralyzed and artificially ventilated.

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Creatine kinase (CK) catalyzes the reversible conversion of creatine and ATP to phosphocreatine and ADP, thereby helping maintain energy homeostasis in the cell. Here we report the first X-ray structure of CK bound to a transition-state analogue complex (CK-TSAC). Cocrystallization of the enzyme from Torpedo californica (TcCK) with ADP-Mg(2+), nitrate, and creatine yielded a homodimer, one monomer of which was liganded to a TSAC complex while the second monomer was bound to ADP-Mg(2+) alone.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study reinvestigated the role of glomus cell plasma and mitochondrial membrane potentials (E(m) and psi(m)) in response to acute hypoxia using noninvasive fluorescence imaging techniques.
  • Findings showed varied responses in glomus cells to hypoxia: 20% depolarized, 45% showed no change, and 35% hyperpolarized, while PC-12 cells consistently depolarized.
  • Mitochondrial depolarization in glomus cells was confirmed with the JC-1 probe during hypoxia, supporting the "metabomembrane hypothesis" of chemoreception.
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The hypothesis that chelation of free iron, by decreasing reactive oxygen species (ROS), might mimic hypoxia and stimulate the carotid body was tested. We used the iron chelators, desferrioxamine (DFO, 200-400 microM) initially, and later ciclopirox olamine (CPX, 2.5-5.

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