Publications by authors named "Stephan S"

Replication factor C (RF-C) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) assemble a complex, called sliding clamp, onto DNA. The clamp in turn loads DNA polymerases (pol) delta and epsilon to form the corresponding holoenzymes, which play an essential role in replication of eukaryotic chromosomal DNA and in several DNA repair pathways. To determine the fate of RF-C after loading of PCNA onto DNA, we tagged the RF-C subunit p37 with a protein kinase A recognition motif, so that the recombinant five-subunit RF-C complex could be 32P-labeled and quantitatively detected in femtomolar amounts.

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In order to identify organ and cellular targets of persistent enterovirus infection in vivo, immunocompetent mice (SWR/J, H-2q) were inoculated intraperitoneally with coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3). By use of in situ hybridization for the detection of enteroviral RNA, we show that CVB3 is capable of inducing a multiorgan disease. During acute infection, viral RNA was visualized at high levels in the heart muscle, pancreas, spleen, and lymph nodes and at comparably low levels in the central nervous system, thymus, lung, and liver.

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Although intra-abdominal lymphangioma and mesenteric cysts are rare benign tumours, they have to be considered in the differential diagnosis of abdominal pain. Differentiation of these lesions is important, because lymphangiomas may follow a proliferative and invasive course. From 1979 to 1993 four patients with intra-abdominal cystic lymphangiomas and two with mesenteric cysts underwent operations in our surgical department.

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JC virus, a human papovavirus, is the causative agent of the demyelinating brain disease progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy (PML). PML is a rare but fatal disease which develops as a complication of severe immunosuppression. Latent JC virus is harbored by many asymptomatic carriers and is transiently reactivated from the latent state upon immunosuppression.

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The Bird's Nest inferior vena caval filter (Cook, Bloomington, Ind) has been approved for clinical use since 1989. The authors report two cases of cephalic migration of the filter. Both cases of migration occurred in association with a massive thromboembolism after placement of the filter.

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The effect which hydrostatic pressure exerts on the hydrolysis of dinitrophenyl phosphate and nitrophenyl phosphate by the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium-transport enzyme was determined. Activation volumes for substrate hydrolysis at saturating and non-saturating concentrations of calcium were determined and used to evaluate volume increments for initial calcium binding. A reaction scheme in which two unidirectional substrate-driven reactions transfer high-affinity into low-affinity calcium-binding sites was applied to determine binding-volume increments.

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The effect of pressure on the hydrolysis of dinitrophenyl phosphate (DnpP) and p-nitrophenyl phosphate (NpP) by the sarcoplasmatic reticulum transport enzyme in permeabilized and native closed vesicles activated by calcium or strontium, respectively, in aqueous and Me2SO-containing media has been studied. At atmospheric pressure, the enzyme in permeabilized vesicles, saturated with respect to substrates and activating ions, hydrolyzes DnpP ten times faster than NpP; for both substrates, calcium activation exceeds that by strontium only a little (20%). In aqueous media the enzyme displays, under all activating conditions, an almost identical curvilinear relationship between the logarithm of enzyme activity and pressure.

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Mops, used as a proton buffer, specifically enhances the accumulation of calcium or strontium by light sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles driven by ATP or dinitrophenylphosphate as energy-yielding substrates when calcium-precipitating agents are absent. The enhancement of ion uptake by Mops is much greater for strontium than for calcium and is further increased when potassium is replaced by sodium as the dominant monovalent cation. Mops affects neither the activity of the calcium- or strontium-activated transport enzyme nor the active accumulation of calcium in the presence of oxalate, i.

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Herpes simplex virus (HSV) induces within the host cell genome DNA amplification which can be suppressed by coinfection with adeno-associated virus (AAV). To characterize the AAV functions mediating this effect, cloned AAV type 2 wild-type or mutant genomes were transfected into simian virus 40 (SV40)-transformed hamster cells together with the six HSV replication genes (encoding UL5, UL8, major DNA-binding protein, DNA polymerase, UL42, and UL52) which together are necessary and sufficient for the induction of SV40 DNA amplification (R. Heilbronn and H.

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An impaired ability to concentrate, loss of intellectual performance, and changes in personality are frequently-mentioned psychological symptoms of sleep apnoea. Apnea-associated disturbances of sleep structure as well as nocturnal cerebral hypoxia are possible causes. Twenty men and two women with an average age of 51.

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