Publications by authors named "Martin Tichy"

Biogenesis of the photosynthetic apparatus requires complicated molecular machinery, individual components of which are either poorly characterized or unknown. The BtpA protein has been described as a factor required for the stability of photosystem I (PSI) in cyanobacteria; however, how the BtpA stabilized PSI remains unexplained. To clarify the role of BtpA, we constructed and characterized the btpA-null mutant (ΔbtpA) in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Membrane-bound FtsH proteases are universally present in prokaryotes and in mitochondria and chloroplasts of eukaryotic cells. These metalloproteases are often critical for viability and play both protease and chaperone roles to maintain cellular homeostasis. In contrast to most bacteria bearing a single ftsH gene, cyanobacteria typically possess four FtsH proteases (FtsH1-4) forming heteromeric (FtsH1/3 and FtsH2/3) and homomeric (FtsH4) complexes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The IL-17 cytokine family encompasses six different homodimers and heterodimers referred to as IL-17A-F. Due to some differences in the mechanism of IL-17 inhibition, aninsufficient effect of one IL-17 inhibitor does not necessarily imply lack of efficacy of the other agent of the same class. Aim of study was analysis of the success rate of switches among IL-17 inhibitors (secukinumab, ixekizumab, and brodalumab) in patients treated in the Czech Republic.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This research is aimed at evaluating the effect of low-cycle fatigue on a newly designed hybrid sandwich ski structure to determine the changes that may occur due to cyclic loading and thus affect its use. This is primarily concerned with the fatigue behavior of the tested ski over different time intervals simulating its seasonal use and its effect on the mechanical properties of the ski, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Real-world data on the use of interleukin-17 (IL-17) inhibitors for the treatment of psoriasis are limited.

Objective: To evaluate and compare the efficacy, safety, and drug survival of IL-17 inhibitors.

Methods: This retrospective study analyzed the BIOREP registry data of patients treated with at least one IL-17 inhibitor (secukinumab, ixekizumab, and brodalumab).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

L-17 inhibitors belong to the group of the most effective and highly safe biological preparations intended for the treatment of psoriasis, and in the case of secukinumab and ixekizumab, also for the treatment of some immune-mediated inflammatory diseases of the joints. Despite initial expectations, they did not prove to be effective for the treatment of non-specific bowel inflammations (IBD). On the contrary, IBD worsening was reported in some cases where IL-17 inhibitors were used, and registration studies were terminated for this indication.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Type IV pili are made of pilin proteins, which are processed from longer precursors by the PilD protease; without PilD, cyanobacterium sp. PCC 6803 cannot grow photoautotrophically.
  • Researchers isolated phototrophic suppressor strains from a PilD mutant and found mutations in key genetic components, including the SigF sigma factor and major pilin PilA1.
  • They suggest that non-glycosylated PilA1 prepilin is particularly harmful due to its restricted mobility, leading to accumulation in membrane areas that disrupt the synthesis of essential membrane proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The research is focused on the design and development of woven textile-based structural hollow composites. E-Glass and high tenacity polyester multifilament yarns were used to produce various woven constructions. Yarn produced from cotton shoddy (fibers extracted from waste textiles) was used to develop hybrid preforms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study is focused on the mechanical properties and service life (safety) evaluation of hybrid adhesive bonds with shaped overlapping geometry (wavy-lap) and 100% natural cotton fabric used as reinforcement under cyclic loading using various intensities. Cyclic loading were implemented between 5-50% (267-2674 N) and 5-70% (267-3743 N) from the maximum strength (5347 N) measured by static tensile test. The adhesive bonds were loaded by 1000 cycles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This research deals with the development of knitted hollow composites from recycled cotton fibers (RCF) and glass fibers (GF). These knitted hollow composites can be used for packaging of heavy weight products and components in aircrafts, marine crafts, automobiles, civil infrastructure, etc. They can also be used in medical prosthesis or in sports equipment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the present work, hybrid composites were developed by using polyester waste fibers along with natural origin materials: olive root fibers and coir pitch filler. Such composite panels can be used as a potential alternative for fiber glass sunshade panels and room dividers in buildings. Hybrid composites were fabricated by mixing polyester waste fibers and olive root fibers in different ratios (0:100, 33:67, 67:33 and 100:0).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chlorophylls (Chls) are essential cofactors for photosynthesis. One of the least understood steps of Chl biosynthesis is formation of the fifth (E) ring, where the red substrate, magnesium protoporphyrin IX monomethyl ester, is converted to the green product, 3,8-divinyl protochlorophyllide In oxygenic phototrophs, this reaction is catalyzed by an oxygen-dependent cyclase, consisting of a catalytic subunit (AcsF/CycI) and an auxiliary protein, Ycf54. Deletion of Ycf54 impairs cyclase activity and results in severe Chl deficiency, but its exact role is not clear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Photoheterotrophic bacteria represent an important part of aquatic microbial communities. There exist two fundamentally different light-harvesting systems: bacteriochlorophyll-containing reaction centers or rhodopsins. Here, we report a photoheterotrophic strain isolated from an oligotrophic lake, which contains complete sets of genes for both rhodopsin-based and bacteriochlorophyll-based phototrophy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This research evaluates the mechanical properties of hybrid adhesive bonds with various 100% cotton fabrics in static and quasi-static conditions and the influence of alkali surface treatment (NaOH) of the cotton fabrics on the mechanical properties. Biological fibers in polymers are characterized by low wettability with the matrix, which decreases mechanical properties. Adhesive bonds usually operate in cyclic stress, which causes irreversible failure before maximal strength.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) is a relatively common disease. There are two distinct forms of RP - primary (PRP), where no other associated diseases are present, and secondary (SRP), where RP is associated with other diseases. It can be challenging to differentiate between RP and other diseases through medical history alone, due to the episodic nature of RP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The paper is focused on the research of the cyclic loading of hybrid adhesive bonds based on eggshell microparticles in polymer composite. The aim of the research was to characterize the behavior of hybrid adhesive bonds with composite adhesive layer in quasi-static tests. An epoxy resin was used as the matrix and microparticles of eggshells were used as the filler.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protoporphyrinogen IX oxidase (PPO), the last enzyme that is common to both chlorophyll and heme biosynthesis pathways, catalyzes the oxidation of protoporphyrinogen IX to protoporphyrin IX. PPO has several isoforms, including the oxygen-dependent HemY and an oxygen-independent enzyme, HemG. However, most cyanobacteria encode HemJ, the least characterized PPO form.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cyanobacteria possess a family of one-helix high-light-inducible proteins (HLIPs) that are widely viewed as ancestors of the light-harvesting antenna of plants and algae. HLIPs are essential for viability under various stress conditions, although their exact role is not fully understood. The unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A characteristic feature of the order Rhodobacterales is the presence of a large number of photoautotrophic and photoheterotrophic species containing bacteriochlorophyll. Interestingly, these phototrophic species are phylogenetically mixed with chemotrophs. To better understand the origin of such variability, we sequenced the genomes of three closely related haloalkaliphilic species, differing in their phototrophic capacity and oxygen preference: the photoheterotrophic and facultatively anaerobic bacterium Rhodobaca barguzinensis, aerobic photoheterotroph Roseinatronobacter thiooxidans, and aerobic heterotrophic bacterium Natronohydrobacter thiooxidans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Lymphoproliferative disease often presents the clinician and pathologist with a diagnostic dilemma, particularly in the early course of the disease.

Methods: We used modified BIOMED-2 protocols to detect monoclonal expansions of immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) and T-cell receptor (TCR) genes in 957 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples from 717 patients. To eliminate false-positive results, heteroduplex analysis was used after PCR reactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 represents a favored model organism for photosynthetic studies. Its easy transformability allowed construction of a vast number of Synechocystis mutants including many photosynthetically incompetent ones. However, it became clear that there is already a spectrum of Synechocystis "wild-type" substrains with apparently different phenotypes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The experimental platform in hematooncology is still searching for more valid prognostic and predictive factors on clinical, morphological and molecular levels. The bridge closer to daily practice is so-called translation medicine and from this point of view we have tried to sort diffuse large B-cell lymphoma not otherwise specified. The applied methodological approaches are morphology, indirect immunohistochemistry on formaline-fixed, parrafin-embeded tissue, Hans classifier sorting, expression of Bcl-2, CD5, CD20, CD30 and NfκB proteins in comparison with the clinical (Ann Arbor stage, IPI, aa-IPI, PFS, OS), laboratory and cytogenetic results (complex and simplex karyotypes).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fuchs' syndrome (Stevens-Johnson syndrome without skin involvement) is a sporadically diagnosed disease. Most authors consider it to be a pure mucosal variant of Stevens-Johnson syndrome; however, some consider the syndrome a separate entity. The complete absence of cutaneous symptoms may be the reason that not all cases of Fuchs' syndrome are diagnosed and properly classified.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF