Publications by authors named "O I Iudina"

An experience with using autologous bone marrow mononuclears for regeneration of the heart was analyzed in 97 patients in whom the intracoronary transplantation of autologous mononuclear bone marrow cells was performed. The results were estimated in terms up to 5 years and compared with a group of 37 patients who underwent only conservative treatment. A distinct positive dynamic of clinical and echocardiographic indices in the main group was noted in a subgroup of patients with a decreased ejection fraction (EF less than 50%) as compared with an analogous subgroup of patients in the control group.

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Endomyocardial biopsy remains the gold standard of diagnosis of acute cellular rejection after heart transplantation. However, routine biopsies are of major inconvenience to patients and are also risky and costly. In the present research we considered possibility of non-invasive diagnosis of acute cellular rejection in patients after orthotopic heart transplantation.

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Studies in which Drosophila melanogaster individuals carrying transgenes of animal viruses were used to analyze the action of animal viral proteins on the cell are reviewed. The data presented suggest that host specificity of viruses is determined by their proteins responsible for the penetration of the virus into the cell, while viral proteins responsible for interactions with the host cell are much less host-specific. Due to this, the model of Drosophila with its developed system of searching for genetic interactions can be used to find intracellular targets for the action of viral proteins of the second group.

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Drosophila Merlin, an ortholog of the merlin protein encoded by the human Neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2) gene, is important for the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation in the eye and wing. Also, it has been shown to be involved in male fertility in flies. In the present study, we formation using the comparative light and electron microscopic research of merlin mutants (mer3 and mer4) and ectopic expression of the Mer+ construct.

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The Merlin gene of Drosophila is homologous to the human Neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2) gene an important regulator of proliferation and endocytosis of cell receptors. It was earlier shown that the Thr5 residue of the Drosophila Merlin protein was homologous to Ser518 of the human protein (which was already known to undergo phosphorylation); hence, it was assumed that Thr559 of Drosophila also was a substrate of phosphorylation. The mutant Merlin proteins MerT559D (an analog of the phosphorylated form) and MerT559A (a nonphosphorylated form) were constructed and tested, under the conditions of ectopic expression for the ability to correct the spermatogenesis defects induced by the Mer4 mutation.

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