Recent studies apparently finding deleterious effects of radiation exposure on cataract formation in birds and voles living near Chernobyl represent a major challenge to current radiation protection regulations. This study conducted an integrated assessment of radiation exposure on cataractogenesis using the most advanced technologies available to assess the cataract status of lenses extracted from fish caught at both Chernobyl in Ukraine and Fukushima in Japan. It was hypothesised that these novel data would reveal positive correlations between radiation dose and early indicators of cataract formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe are just beginning to unravel the myriad of interactions in which non-coding RNAs participate. The intricate RNA interactome is the foundation of many biological processes, including bacterial virulence and human disease, and represents unexploited resources for the development of potential therapeutic interventions. However, identifying specific associations of a given RNA from the multitude of possible binding partners within the cell requires robust high-throughput systems for their rapid screening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes a method for genetic screening using single nucleotide polymorphism. Fluorescence spectra with an excitation frequency of 488 nm are recorded over a range of 550 to 660 nm of fragments of human DNA together with two fluorescent probe dyes attached to specific primers, one for each type of allele and a background dye, prepared using the Taqman reaction. The fluorescence spectra are monitored and principal components analysis used to separate spectra into three groups, which are visually identified as allele 1 (wild type), allele 2 (mutant) and mixed allele by comparison to reference samples.
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