Publications by authors named "P Busselen"

We present a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the Utaka, an informal taxonomic group of cichlid species from Lake Malawi. We analyse both nuclear and mtDNA data from five Utaka species representing two (Copadichromis and Mchenga) of the three genera within Utaka. Within three of the five analysed species we find two very divergent mtDNA lineages.

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Peripheral isolated populations may undergo rapid divergence from the main population due to various factors such as a bottleneck or a founder effect followed by genetic drift or local selection pressures. Recent populations of two economically important Copadichromis species in Lake Malombe, a satellite lake of Lake Malawi, were neither genetically nor morphometrically distinct from their source populations in the main lake. Evidence was found for a founder effect which had a different impact on the genetic composition of the two species.

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Simmondsin, a glycoside extracted from jojoba meal (Simmondsia chinensis), causes a reduction in food intake after oral administration. To investigate the mechanism by which simmondsin reduces food intake, fasted and free-feeding rats were given simmondsin-supplemented food and simultaneously injected with devazepide, a specific antagonist of peripheral-type cholecystokinin receptors (CCKA receptors). In free-feeding rats, supplementation of food with 0.

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In rat papillary muscle, rapid cooling causes membrane depolarization which initiates action potentials that lead to a contraction. This rapid cooling contraction (RCC) can be blocked by TTX, Mn2+, Ni2+ or high K+ superfusion. In the presence of caffeine (0.

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Polyamine levels were measured by means of high-performance liquid chromatography in Langendorff-perfused rat hearts subjected to the calcium paradox protocol. The concentrations of putrescine, spermidine and spermine did not change significantly during calcium-free perfusion but decreased when calcium was readmitted. This decrease was due to membrane disruption and release of the polyamines into the coronary effluent.

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