30 results match your criteria: "Rikshospitalet-National Hospital[Affiliation]"

Identification and characterization of pilG, a highly conserved pilus-assembly gene in pathogenic Neisseria.

Mol Microbiol

May 1995

Kaptein W. Wilhelmsen og Frues Bakteriologiske Institutt, Rikshospitalet (National Hospital), University of Oslo, Norway.

Expression of type IV pili appears to be a requisite determinant of infectivity for the strict human pathogens Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Neisseria meningitidis. The assembly of these colonization factors is a complex process. This report describes a new pilus-assembly gene, pilG, that immediately precedes the gonococcal (Gc) pilD gene encoding the pre-pilin leader peptidase.

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The increase in structural capacity due to muscle contraction in the lower leg was investigated in osteopenic and normal rats. Osteopenia was induced by ovariectomy combined with a low-calcium diet (0.01%).

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Paramyxovirus SV5 and multiple sclerosis.

Nature

April 1989

Institute of Immunology and Rheumatology, Rikshospitalet National Hospital, University of Oslo School of Medicine, Norway.

Multiple sclerosis is commonly associated with a local humoral immune response within the central nervous system. A hallmark of this intrathecal response is the presence of electrophoretically demonstrable oligoclonal bands of IgG in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of up to 95% of patients. Observations indicating that a major part of the CSF IgG in some patients may represent antibodies to SV5, a simian virus closely related to human parainfluenza type 2 virus, were recently reported by Goswami et al.

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