Biochem Biophys Res Commun
February 2002
While most subtypes of glutamate receptors have been studied extensively, less is known about the delta-glutamate receptors, delta1 and delta2. Although neither forms functional channels when expressed in heterologous cells, genetic analyses have demonstrated the physiological significance of delta2. We used the cytosolic C-terminus of the delta2 glutamate receptor subunit in a yeast two-hybrid screen of a rat brain cDNA library to identify delta-glutamate receptor binding proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo evaluate the efficacy and safety of tap water iontophoresis in the treatment of severe idiopathic palmar hyperhidrosis, nine Chinese patients with severe palmar hyperhidrosis that had failed to respond to topical aluminium chloride were given 6 weeks' treatment with tap water iontophoresis at the Social Hygiene Service, Department of Health, Hong Kong. The reduction in sweat output was assessed objectively and subjectively. The mean objective reduction in sweat output was 49%, 51%, 26%, and 22% at week 3, 6, 10, and 12, respectively, since the start of treatment with tap water iontophoresis The mean subjective improvements were 43%, 59%, 30%, and 12% at week 3, 6,10, and 12, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeavy metals are increasingly being implicated as causative agents in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). Cobalt, a positively charged transition metal, has previously been shown to be in elevated levels in the brain of AD patients compared with age-matched controls. In this study, we investigate the effects of cobalt as an inducer of oxidative stress/cell cytotoxicity and the resultant metabolic implications for neural cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The aim of this study was to compare the outcome of consecutive patients with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) treated concurrently by means of open repair (OR) and endoluminal repair (ER) with second-generation prostheses by the same surgeons during a defined interval.
Methods: Between May 1995 and December 1998 second-generation (low profile, fully supported, modular) endoprostheses were implanted in 148 patients. These patients, together with 135 patients treated concurrently with OR during the same period, comprised the study group of 283 patients.
Borna disease virus (BDV) has a non-segmented, negative-strand (NNS) RNA genome. In contrast to all other known NNS RNA animal viruses, BDV replication and transcription occur in the nucleus of infected cells. Moreover, BDV uses RNA splicing for the regulation of its genome expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBorna disease virus (BDV), a nonsegmented, negative-stranded (NNS) RNA virus, causes central nervous system (CNS) disease in a broad range of vertebrate species, including felines. Both viral and host factors contribute to very diverse clinical and pathological manifestations associated with BDV infection. BDV persistence in the CNS can cause neurobehavioral and neurodevelopmental abnormalities in the absence of encephalitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSarcoglycan is a multimeric, integral membrane glycoprotein complex that associates with dystrophin. Mutations in individual sarcoglycan subunits have been identified in inherited forms of muscular dystrophy. To evaluate the contributions of sarcoglycan and dystrophin to muscle membrane stability and muscular dystrophy, we compared muscle lacking specific sarcoglycans or dystrophin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutations in dysferlin were recently described in patients with Miyoshi myopathy, a disorder that preferentially affects the distal musculature, and in patients with Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy 2B, a disorder that affects the proximal musculature. Despite the phenotypic differences, the types of mutations associated with Miyoshi myopathy and Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy 2B do not differ significantly. Thus, the etiology of the phenotypic variability associated with dysferlin mutations remains unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a highly sensitive and rapid strategy for characterizing biological toxins based on capillary electrokinetic chromatography with multiphoton-excited fluorescence. In this approach, aflatoxins B1, B2, and G1 and the cholera toxin A-subunit are fractionated in approximately 80 s in a narrow-bore electrophoretic channel using the negatively charged pseudostationary phase, carboxymethyl-beta-cyclodextrin. The aflatoxins--highly mutagenic multiple-ringed heterocycles produced by Aspergillus fungi--are excited at the capillary outlet through the simultaneous absorption of two to three 750-nm photons to yield characteristic blue fluorescence; cholera toxin A-subunit, the catalytic domain of the bacterial protein toxin from Vibrio cholera, is excited through an unidentified multiphoton pathway that apparently includes photochemical transformation of an aromatic residue in the polypeptide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Mol Genet
January 2000
Dysferlin, the gene product of the limb girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) 2B locus, encodes a membrane-associated protein with homology to Caenorhabditis elegans fer-1. Humans with mutations in dysferlin ( DYSF ) develop muscle weakness that affects both proximal and distal muscles. Strikingly, the phenotype in LGMD 2B patients is highly variable, but the type of mutation in DYSF cannot explain this phenotypic variability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrop Med Int Health
October 1999
In the province of Kracheh, in Northern Cambodia, a baseline epidemiological survey on Schistosoma mekongi was conducted along the Mekong River between December 1994 and April 1995. The results of household surveys of highly affected villages of the East and the West bank of the river and of school surveys in 20 primary schools are presented. In household surveys 1396 people were examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioorg Med Chem Lett
September 1999
Thienopyridine sulfonamide pyrrolidinones were found to be potent and selective inhibitors of the coagulation cascade enzyme factor Xa. SAR studies led to several compounds that were selected for further in vivo investigation. These novel aryl binding pocket moieties represent a structural modification to a series of fXa inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe design, synthesis and SAR of sulfonamidopyrrolidinone fXa inhibitors incorporating a new benzamidine isostere, namely aminoisoquinolines, is described. These inhibitors have higher Caco-2 cell permeability than comparable benzamidines and attain higher levels of exposure upon oral dosing. The most potent member 14b (fXa Ki=6 nM) is selective against other serine proteases of interest (>600 fold).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Sci Tech
August 1999
The authors review a number of critical issues in the structural reform of animal health services for both small and non-commercial livestock producers in Africa and highlight several problems that others concerned with the privatisation of this service area have tended to neglect. Most notably, attention is called to the following: a) the need to retain a central role for paraprofessionals in the new delivery system b) the important and problematic relationship between the veterinary and paraveterinary professions c) the importance of developing state contracting procedures for assisting the private delivery of animal health services that will avoid the problems of local monopoly d) the central role that professionalism will have to play in this area, if collective goods and the public interest are to be served.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), a purported mediator of arterial response to injury, stimulates proliferation, chemotaxis, and matrix production by activation of its membrane receptor tyrosine kinase. Because these activities underlie restenosis, inhibition of the PDGF-receptor tyrosine kinase (PDGFr-TK) is postulated to decrease restenosis.
Methods And Results: RPR101511A is a novel compound which selectively and potently inhibits the cell-free and in situ PDGFr-TK and PDGFr-dependent proliferation and chemotaxis in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC).
The glutamate receptor subunit delta2 has a unique distribution at the parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapse of the cerebellum, which is developmentally regulated such that delta2 occurs at both parallel fiber synapses and climbing fiber synapses early in development but is restricted to parallel fiber synapses in adult animals. To identify proteins that might be involved in the trafficking or docking of delta2 receptors, we screened a yeast two-hybrid library with the cytosolic C terminus of delta2 and isolated a member of the postsynaptic density (PSD)-95 family of proteins, which are known to interact with the extreme C termini of NMDA receptors. We find that delta2 binds specifically to PSD-93, which is enriched in Purkinje cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA realistic estimation of the cost of government campaigns to control rinderpest and contagious bovine pleuropneumonia is essential in order to determine profitable fees for private veterinarians with a health mandate in Senegal. A cost analysis of a vaccination campaign, organised by the Veterinary Services in Senegal between 1995 and 1996, involving 547,735 cattle, was conducted. Revenue and total costs were 50 CFA francs and 110 +/- 37 CFA francs per head, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFgamma-Sarcoglycan is a transmembrane, dystrophin-associated protein expressed in skeletal and cardiac muscle. The murine gamma-sarcoglycan gene was disrupted using homologous recombination. Mice lacking gamma-sarcoglycan showed pronounced dystrophic muscle changes in early life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The aim of this study was to compare the outcome of consecutive patients with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) treated concurrently by open operation and endoluminal intervention by the same surgeons during a defined interval.
Methods: Between May 1992 and May 1996, 362 consecutive patients with AAA underwent repair. Fifty-three patients who underwent open operations for ruptured AAA plus two patients who underwent endoluminal repair of false AAA and four patients who underwent secondary endoluminal repair of AAA were excluded, leaving 303 patients who underwent elective repair of true AAA in the study.
The dystrophin-glycoprotein complex (DGC) is critical for muscle membrane stability. The sarcoglycans are transmembrane proteins within the DGC, and the function of the sarcoglycans is unknown. Mutations in sarcoglycan genes cause autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytotoxic T cells (CTL) play a critical role in controlling viral infections. Infection of neonatal NFSIN mice with a high dose of Cas-Br-M murine leukemia virus, a neuropathogenic type C retrovirus, results in virus-induced neurologic disease and in their failure to generate a protective CTL response. Cas-Br-M-specific CTL are necessary in the protection of neonatal mice from Cas-Br-M-induced neurologic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of supplementation on growth was tested by means of four similar controlled randomized trials in the Congo (n = 120), Senegal (n = 110), Bolivia (n = 127), and New Caledonia (n = 90). Four-month-old infants were randomly allocated to supplement or control groups. A cereal-based precooked porridge was offered twice daily for 3 mo and consumption was monitored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeveloping countries frequently see their currency depreciated to varying degrees. The consequences of such monetary disturbances on the nutrition of young children are not well known, though children are the most vulnerable in nutritional terms. One year after the 50% devaluation of the CFA Franc (communauté financière africaine, "African Financial Community"), which took place on 12 January 1994 simultaneously in fourteen countries, nine of which are on the UNDP list of least developed countries, we wanted to find out the long-term effects of the devaluation, and the strategies that families had adopted to cope with it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present studies, ligand competition experiments were conducted to examine the ability of angiotensin II peptide agonists and nonpeptide AT1- and AT2-selective receptor antagonists to inhibit the binding of [125I]angiotensin II to bovine adrenal cortical membranes. Angiotensin II, angiotensin III, the All-(3-8) hexapeptide fragment of angiotensin II, and the AT1-selective receptor antagonist L-158,809, inhibited [125I]angiotensin II binding in a biphasic fashion indicative of a ligand interaction at more than one recognition site. Approximately 20% of low affinity [125I]angiotensin II binding was inhibited only by high micromolar concentrations of L-158,809.
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