Recent years have seen considerable progress in epidemiological and molecular genetic research into environmental and genetic factors in schizophrenia, but methodological uncertainties remain with regard to validating environmental exposures, and the population risk conferred by individual molecular genetic variants is small. There are now also a limited number of studies that have investigated molecular genetic candidate gene-environment interactions (G × E), however, so far, thorough replication of findings is rare and G × E research still faces several conceptual and methodological challenges. In this article, we aim to review these recent developments and illustrate how integrated, large-scale investigations may overcome contemporary challenges in G × E research, drawing on the example of a large, international, multi-center study into the identification and translational application of G × E in schizophrenia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSodium cholate (NaC) and sodium deoxycholate (NaDC) in binary and ternary aqueous mixtures were investigated by means of surface tension, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), small angle neutron scattering (SANS) and mutual diffusion coefficient analysis. Concerning the NaC-H(2)O and NaDC-H(2)O binary mixtures, the surface tension, EPR and diffusion measurements confirmed the formation of micelles above a well detectable critical concentration. The SANS data indicated for both systems, the formation of ellipsoidal micelles whose major axis increased with concentration and minor axis remained constant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mutual diffusion coefficients for two aqueous ternary systems, both containing a protein, human serum albumin (HSA, component 1), were measured. The first system contained a neutral polymer, polyethylene glycol (PEG, component 2), and the second an "organic solvent", 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD, component 3). Both PEG and MPD are used as co-precipitants in HSA crystallization protocols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have experimentally investigated multicomponent diffusion in a protein-polymer-salt-water quaternary system. Specifically, we have measured the nine multicomponent diffusion coefficients, D(ij), for the lysozyme-poly(ethylene glycol)-NaCl-water system at pH 4.5 and 25 degrees C using precision Rayleigh interferometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel approach, based on chitosan heavy-metal sequestrating ability, is proposed for chromium(III) removal from spent tanning liquor. Experimental results, obtained at lab-scale using real wastewater, are presented and discussed. Resulting efficiencies are extremely high, and strongly dependent on chitosan dose and pH value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structure of chemically-crosslinked chitosan and chitosan-poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP) hydrogels is investigated by means of the combined use of small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), intradiffusion, and swelling degree measurements. These hydrogels may be described in terms of an inhomogeneous structure composed by polymer-rich and polymer-poor regions. The polymer-rich regions, whose correlation distance zeta is ranged between approximately 600 and approximately 850 A, are, in turn, characterized by the presence of a network formed by the chemical crosslinks, with a mean correlation distance xi approximately 90 A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of the polymer molecular weight on the interaction between pentaethylene glycol n-octyl ether (C(8)E(5)) and poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) has been investigated by a combined experimental strategy including tensiometry, potentiometry, calorimetry, fluorescence quenching and intradiffusion (pulsed gradient spin echo-NMR) measurements. PAA samples with an average molecular weight varying in a wide range (M (w)=2000, 100,000, 250,000, and 450,000) have been considered. The measurements have been performed at constant polymer concentration (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany bacterial pathogens coordinate their virulence factor expression in a cell density-dependent manner. This population-dependent coordination of gene expression in bacteria has been termed "quorum sensing" (QS). N-Acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs) are used by over 70 Gram-negative bacterial species as autoinducers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteria use small diffusible molecules to exchange information in a process called quorum sensing. An important class of autoinducers used by Gram-negative bacteria is the family of N-acylhomoserine lactones. Here, we report the discovery of a previously undescribed nonenzymatically formed product from N-(3-oxododecanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone; both the N-acylhomoserine and its novel tetramic acid degradation product, 3-(1-hydroxydecylidene)-5-(2-hydroxyethyl)pyrrolidine-2,4-dione, are potent antibacterial agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction between pentaethylene glycol n-octyl ether (C8E5) and low-molecular-weight poly(acrylic acid) (PAA, M(w)=2000) in aqueous solution has been investigated by various experimental techniques at constant polymer concentration (0.1% w/w) with varying surfactant molality. Spectrofluorimetry, using pyrene as molecular probe, shows (i) the formation of surfactant-polymer aggregates at a surfactant molality (T(1)) lower than the critical micelle concentration (cmc) of C8E5 in water and (ii) the formation of free micelles at a surfactant molality (T(2)) slightly higher than the cmc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dioxirane-mediated epoxidation of alkenes in the presence of supported alpha-fluorotropinones 5 and 9 has been evaluated. The catalysts anchored onto silica supports 5 have shown comparable activity with respect to the homogeneous counterpart 10 and good stability on recycling. In the second part of this paper the enantiomerically enriched alpha-fluorotropinone 4 was anchored onto both mesoporous MCM-41 and amorphous KG-60 silicas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr
October 2002
Diffusion has a central role in protein crystal growth both in microgravity conditions and on ground. Recently several reports have been focused on the importance to use the generalized Fick's equations in n-component systems where crystals grow. In these equations the total flux of each component is produced by the own concentration gradient (main flow) and by the concentration gradient of the other components (cross-flow) present in the system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArterial stiffness may be an indicator of early vascular changes signaling the development of vascular disease, while hypercholesterolemia is a well-recognized promoter of atherogenesis. It has been shown that hypercholesterolemic children have a thicker intima-media in the carotid artery than children with normal cholesterol. The aim of this study was to assess the stiffness of the abdominal aorta in children with hypercholesterolemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommon carotid intima-media thickness was measured by B-mode ultrasound imaging in 46 children (mean age, 7.4 years) with serum cholesterol > or = 6.4 mmol/L (mean, 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtamines form a class of low-molecular-weight proteins that protect the chromosomal DNA in the spermatic cells of eukaryotic organisms. Protamines are located in the small and/or large groove of DNA where they complex the DNA nucleotides. Very little is known up to date on the role and specificity of binding of the various protamine fractions belonging to a single eukaryotic species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Intellect Disabil Res
February 1992
Twenty-nine healthy HBsAg- and HBsAb-negative children with Down's syndrome who were living at home (mean age 42 months; 19 M, 10 F) were vaccinated against hepatitis B virus either with recombinant DNA or plasma-derived vaccine. Both groups of children responded well to the vaccination schedules, with HBsAb seroconversion rates close to 100%. Vaccination against hepatitis B in preschool children with Down's syndrome is effective in spite of the existing abnormalities of the immune function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFourteen patients (six males, eight females; mean age, 20 years) with homocystinuria due to homozygous cystathionine-beta-synthase (CBS) deficiency, underwent a vascular examination. Fourteen heterozygotes (seven males, seven females; mean age, 46 years), including 12 parents and one daughter of homozygotes (obligate heterozygotes), and one sister of a homozygote (with low enzyme activity as evaluated in vitro), were also examined. Homozygotes and heterozygotes were compared with two separate control groups of different age (mean age, 20 and 43 years, respectively).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical and biochemical findings in an Italian sibship affected by carbonic anhydrase II deficiency are described. Evidence of clinical heterogeneity and an increased frequency of the disease in the Mediterranean area and the Middle East are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Hum Genet
October 1989
Lactase is an enterocyte brush-border membrane beta-glycosidase that splits lactose, the sugar of milk. In mammals, including many human populations, intestinal lactase activity is very high in the suckling and declines to low levels after weaning. There are two human adult lactase phenotypes, one in which high lactase activity persists and another in which it declines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interaction between S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet) and sodium poly(styrene sulfonate) NaPSS) was studied by means of ultrafiltration and ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy at several pH values and sodium sulfate concentrations. The results obtained are interpreted mainly in terms of electrostatic interactions and permit the evaluation of the binding constants under different experimental conditions. Furthermore, ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy data show a specific short-range interaction between the aromatic electronic system of AdoMet and the NaPSS aromatic ring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe human gene for plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) has been isolated and its promoter region characterized. PAI-1 regulation by glucocorticoids, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and the phorbol ester PMA is shown to be exerted at the promoter level. A fragment spanning 805 nucleotides of the 5' flanking and 72 of the 5' untranslated region contain information enough to promote transcription and to respond to glucocorticoids when fused to a reporter gene and transfected into human fibrosarcoma cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed classification coefficients and an equation to detect heterozygotes for phenylketonuria. The combination of several variables (Phe, Phe/Tyr, Phe2/Tyr) gave a safe diagnosis in more than 96% of cases. We then computerized a random selection of our population, which was divided into two groups: the first was "selected" to compute discriminant functions, while the second, excluded from computation, was used to check the fitness of our method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe regional chromosomal location of the human gene for plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI1) was determined by three independent methods of gene mapping. PAI1 was localized first to 7cen-q32 and then to 7q21.3-q22 by Southern blot hybridization analysis of a panel of human and mouse somatic cell hybrids with a PAI1 cDNA probe and in situ hybridization, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on 2 patients with the Neuhäuser megalocornea-mental retardation syndrome, a recessively inherited clinical entity of relatively recent description (McKusick 24931). A review of the few previous reported patients and our 2 patients shows that megalocornea and mental retardation are the 2 minimal diagnostic criteria. Short stature, seizures, neurological symptoms, microcephaly or macrocephaly, and minor anomalies are all additional nonobligatory manifestations.
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