Scanning ion conductance microscopy (SICM) is a powerful and versatile technique that allows an increasingly wide range of interfacial properties and processes to be studied. SICM employs a nanopipette tip that contains electrolyte solution and a quasi-reference counter electrode (QRCE), to which a potential is applied with respect to a QRCE in a bathing solution, in which the tip is placed. The work herein considers the potential-controlled delivery of uncharged electroactive molecules (solute) from an SICM tip to a working electrode substrate to determine the effect of the substrate on electroosmotic flow (EOF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn artificial synapse is developed that mimics ultramicroelectrode (UME) amperometric detection of single cell exocytosis. It comprises the nanopipette of a scanning ion conductance microscope (SICM), which delivers rapid pulses of neurotransmitter (dopamine) locally and on demand at >1000 defined locations of a carbon fiber (CF) UME in each experiment. Analysis of the resulting UME current-space-time data reveals spatiotemporal heterogeneous electrode activity on the nanoscale and submillisecond time scale for dopamine electrooxidation at typical UME detection potentials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Transcription in mammalian cells is a complex stochastic process involving shuttling of polymerase between genes and phase-separated liquid condensates. It occurs in bursts, which results in vastly different numbers of an mRNA species in isogenic cell populations. Several factors contributing to transcriptional bursting have been identified, usually classified as intrinsic, in other words local to single genes, or extrinsic, relating to the macroscopic state of the cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper reports on the use of scanning ion conductance microscopy (SICM) to locally map the ionic properties and charge environment of two live bacterial strains: the Gram-negative and the Gram-positive . SICM results find heterogeneities across the bacterial surface and significant differences among the Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. The bioelectrical environment of the was found to be considerably more negatively charged compared to .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControl of complex intracellular pathways such as protein synthesis is critical to organism survival, but is poorly understood. Translation of a reading frame in eukaryotic mRNA is preceded by a scanning process in which a subset of translation factors helps guide ribosomes to the start codon. Here, we perform comparative analysis of the control status of this scanning step that sits between recruitment of the small ribosomal subunit to the m GpppG-capped 5'end of mRNA and of the control exerted by downstream phases of polypeptide initiation, elongation and termination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDescriptive studies suggest an association between the release of the cysteinyl leukotrienes and clinical asthma. To help clarify this association, we tested the hypothesis that an intravenous infusion of a potent and specific investigational LTD4 receptor antagonist, MK-679, would cause rapid bronchodilation. In a three-period, randomized, double-blind, crossover study, single doses of MK-679, 125 and 500 mg, and placebo were given intravenously by bolus infusion to nine patients with moderate, stable asthma (FEV1 40 to 80% predicted) on individual study days separated by a week.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo probe the specificity of the metalloendoproteinase stromelysin toward peptide substrates, we determined kc/Km values for the stromelysin-catalyzed hydrolyses of peptides whose design was based loosely on the structure of a known SLN substrate, substance P (Arg-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-MetNH2, hydrolysis at Gln-Phe, kc/Km = 1700 M-1 s-1). Several noteworthy points emerge from this study: (i) Catalytic efficiency is dependent on peptide chain length with N-terminal truncation of substance P resulting in more pronounced rate-constant reductions than C-terminal truncation. These results suggest the existence of an extended active site for stromelysin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo probe the substrate specificity of the human metalloproteinase stromelysin (SLN), we determined values of kc/Km for the SLN-catalyzed hydrolysis of substance P (Arg-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-MetNH2; SP; kc/Km = 1790 +/- 140 M-1 s-1), 15 analogues of SP, and 17 other peptides. We found a remarkably narrow substrate specificity for SLN: while SP and its analogues could serve as substrates for SLN (hydrolysis occurred exclusively at the Gln6-Phe7 bond), peptides that were not direct analogues could not (kc/Km less than 3 M-1 s-1). From the study of the SLN-catalyzed hydrolysis of SP and its analogues, the following findings emerged: (1) Decreasing the length of SP results in decreases in kc/Km.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA search for low molecular weight peptide substrates for the metalloendoproteinase, human fibroblast stromelysin, resulted in the discovery that substance P (Arg-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gln-Gln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-Met-NH2) is a substrate for this enzyme and is cleaved exclusively at the Gln6-Phe7 bond. On the basis of this observation, a semicontinuous HPLC-based assay was developed that monitors the production of the hydrolysis product, fragment 7-11 (SP7-11). Steady-state velocities for the production of SP7-11 have been determined as a function of substrate concentration and obey simple, Michaelis-Menten kinetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent approaches in alcohol research have dealt with the positive and negative expectations of drinkers regarding alcohol consumption. In this study 61 White male alcoholics from a residential treatment program in Ireland were compared with 53 White male alcoholics from a similar program in Canada on their rank ordering of 13 positive and 12 negative expected consequences from drinking. The Irish seemed to drink for social reasons, striving for tranquilization, detachment, and self-absorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Stud Alcohol
November 1987
The drinking behavior and alcohol expectancies of 168 Irish adolescents aged 15-18 were compared with those of a group of American adolescents matched on age and sex. The Irish adolescents reported less frequent social drinking and less problematic drinking. However, unlike American adolescents, those Irish youth who did drink in a social, frequent manner also reported drinking-related problems Irish adolescents expect less social benefit, less improvement of cognitive and motor functioning and less sexual enhancement, but greater increase in aggression as a consequence of drinking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPositive and negative alcohol expectancies, values, and their relationship to amount and severity of drinking were examined for Irish and American college students. All Irish seemed to have softer, more aesthetic values than Americans, especially males. Irish college women appeared especially dissatisfied with the conventional roles thrust upon them, and they used alcohol to relieve inhibitions, especially sexual ones.
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