52 results match your criteria: "Scarborough College[Affiliation]"

The specific inhibitory motoneuron to the crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) opener muscle provides neuromuscular synapses to the muscle fibers and axoaxonal synapses to the excitatory motor nerve terminals. Freeze fracture of the membrane in both types of synapses show that the presynaptic active zone consists of clusters of large particles (putative calcium channels), which are often encircled by large depressions representing fused synaptic vesicles on the internal leaflet or P face of the presynaptic membrane. Corresponding pits and protrusions mark the external leaflet or E face of the presynaptic membrane.

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HETEROZYGOSITY, AGGRESSION, AND POPULATION FLUCTUATIONS IN MEADOW VOLES (MICROTUS PENNSYLVANICUS).

Evolution

August 1994

Division of Life Sciences, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, 1265 Military Trail, Scarborough, Ontario, M1C 1A4, Canada.

We tested whether variation in heterozygosity could produce cyclic changes in population size in meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus). For this to occur, three conditions must be met: (1) populations are more outbred (heterozygotic) at high than low population density, (2) heterozygotic voles are more aggressive than relatively inbred individuals, and (3) heterozygotic voles have lower reproductive fitness, though being superior at defending resources. We found no evidence that heterozygosity varied with population size or that reproductive success varied with heterozygosity.

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Cognitive functions and aging in the dog: acquisition of nonspatial visual tasks.

Behav Neurosci

February 1994

Life Sciences Division, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Old, middle-aged, and young dogs were compared on discrimination and reversal learning and on acquisition of a delayed-nonmatching-to-sample (DNMS) test of recognition memory. DNMS acquisition was acquired more rapidly by young dogs. Reversal deficits were found between aged mixed-breed dogs and young beagles, but not between old and young beagles.

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The single excitor motoneuron to the limb opener muscle in the crayfish Procambarus clarkii provides multiterminal innervation to individual muscle fibers. At low impulse frequencies, these neuromuscular synapses generate a threefold larger junctional potential in fibers of the proximal region of the muscle compared to those in the central region. Focal extracellular recording from synapse-bearing "boutons" showed more quantal release at low frequencies in the proximal region.

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The monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) inhibitor L-deprenyl, widely used to treat Parkinson's disease, has frequently been studied in animal models. We have examined the effects of several variables on activity levels of MAO-A and B in rat brain and liver following chronic (3 wks) treatment with L-deprenyl. Significant effects were observed for sex (females showed lower overall MAO-B activity in the liver), dose (MAO-A and B inhibition increased with dose, with females exhibiting greater sensitivity), route of administration (subcutaneous injection was more efficient than oral dosing), and dosing interval (MAO-B was significantly inhibited when dosing interval was increased to as long as 168 hours).

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Nerve terminals of the common inhibitor motoneuron in a crab (Eriphia spiniforns) limb closer muscle and in a crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) limb accessory flexor muscle make neuromuscular synapses with the muscle membrane (postsynaptic inhibition) as well as axo-axonal synapses with the terminals of the excitatory axon (presynaptic inhibition). That transmission is from the inhibitor to the excitor terminals at these axo-axonal synapses is indicated by the occurrence on the inhibitor membrane of presynaptic dense bars denoting sites of transmitter release. Axo-axonal synapses with the opposite polarity, in which transmission is from an excitatory onto an inhibitory terminal, were occasionally seen either adjacent to or separate from the inhibitory axo-axonal synapse.

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Age-related remodeling of lobster neuromuscular terminals.

Exp Gerontol

September 1992

Life Sciences Division, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Multiterminal innervation of a lobster limb muscle by an identified excitor motoneuron was examined during primary development and adult growth. To keep pace with the growth in the target muscle, axonal branches proliferate by sprouting from synaptic terminals; an increasingly complex branching pattern results. Neuromuscular synapses multiply in number, enlarge in size, and become perforated.

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The molecular mechanisms by which meiotic events are regulated are at present unknown. To approach this problem, we have exploited the natural synchrony of Lilium meiocytes to compare the nuclear protein profiles of a variety of stages of meiosis. This approach has facilitated the identification of a number of nuclear proteins that appear and disappear in a stage-specific fashion.

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Rats were chronically prepared with stimulation electrodes in the angular bundle and recording electrodes in the dentate gyrus under electrophysiological guidance. Following testing of dentate gyrus field potentials, the animals were given a single injection of kainic acid which caused repeated seizures and led to status epilepticus. The seizures were stopped by administration of a barbiturate anesthetic after 60 min.

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Leupeptin causes an accumulation of lipofuscin-like substances in liver cells of young rats.

Mech Ageing Dev

March 1991

Division of Life Science, University of Toronto, Scarborough College, Ontario, Canada.

Leupeptin, a thiol protease inhibitor, has previously been shown to cause a dense accumulation of substances resembling age pigment and called ceroid-lipofuscin, in brain cells of young rats. Thus far, however, attempts to produce age pigments in hepatocytes of normal young rats with protease inhibitor(s) have not been successful. The present study provides the first demonstration that leupeptin induces lipofuscin-like substances in normal young rat hepatocytes.

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The paired thoracic chelipeds or claws of adult snapping shrimp, Alpheus heterochelis, are bilaterally asymmetric, consisting of an enlarged and elaborate, sound-producing major (snapper) claw and a much smaller minor (pincer) claw. These paired claws vary in the composition of their external sensilla. Both possess long serrulate and simple short setae but the snapper also have plumose setae and long serrulate setae on the plunger.

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This research concerns the development of children's understanding of representational change and its relation to other cognitive developments. Children were shown deceptive objects, and the true nature of the objects was then revealed. Children were then asked what they thought the object was when they first saw it, testing their understanding of representational change; what another child would think the object was, testing their understanding of false belief; and what the object looked like and really was, testing their understanding of the appearance-reality distinction.

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The epithelium of the posterior intestine and hindgut of recently metamorphosed adult lampreys (Petromyzon marinus L.) prior to and during spontaneous feeding was examined using light and electron microscopy. These two regions differ slightly in their general morphology but possess the same mucosal cell types.

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Light and electron microscopy were used to examine the morphology of the mucosa of the diverticulum, anterior intestine, and transition zone in prefeeding and spontaneously feeding adult lampreys (Petromyzon marinus L.). Absorptive (either types A or B), ciliated, and enteroendocrine cells are present in all regions but the diverticulum and anterior intestine also possess zymogen (secretory) cells.

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Aggressive behavior of adult meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) towards young.

Oecologia

April 1984

Division of Life Sciences, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, M1C 1A4, West Hill, Ontario, Canada.

Field evidence indicates that adult microtines, especially females, may be a major cause of poor juvenile survival and this may be instrumental in their population regulation. This suggests that males and females behave differently towards young animals. To examine how adult males, nonlactating females, and lactating females behave towards strange young, I introduced young animals into the home cage of the adults.

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A mutant MF1 previously isolated from Dictyostelium mucoroides-7 (Dm7) formed macrocysts with or without light when plated on agar at high cell dinsities. At lower cell densities, however, the MF1 cells formed only fruiting bodies. This failure to form macrocysts was shown to be due to the subthreshfold concentration of a volatile substance(s) required for macrocyst formation.

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The events in the transformation of the intestine of the larval lamprey into the adult intestine were followed through the seven (1-7) stages of metamorphosis in anadromous Petromyzon marinus L. Light and electron-microscope observations demonstrated that the processes of degeneration, differentiation, and proliferation are involved in the transformation. In the anterior intestine, degeneration of cells and the extrusion of others into the lumen results in the disappearance of secretory (zymogen) cells and the decline in numbers of endocrine and ciliated cells.

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Electron microscopy was used to follow the transformation of the endostyle to a thyroid gland in the anadromous sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus L., throughout metamorphosis (stages 1-7). Transformation of the larval (ammocoete) endostyle begins at the first signs of external change (stages 1-2), and the adult form of the gland is reached by stage 5.

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Significance of algal extracellular products to bacteria in lakes and in cultures.

Microb Ecol

September 1980

Life Science Division, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, M1C IA4, Toronto, Canada.

In simulated diurnal experiments withChlorella pyrenoidosa andPseudomonas fluorescens, bacterial growth was virtually confined to the daylight period and occurred at the expense of glycolate, the predominant extracellular product of the alga. Both glycolate levels and(14)C-DOC excretion rates were much lower in mixed algal-bacterial than in axenicChlorella cultures.This close coupling of bacterial growth to algal photosynthesis and extracellular release was also observed in Jack's Lake, but not in Lake Erie.

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Infanticide in microtines: Importance in natural populations.

Oecologia

January 1980

Department of Zoology, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, M1C 1A4, West Hill, Ontario, Canada.

To test the hypothesis that the incidence of infanticide should increase as population density increases in microtines (Mallory and Brooks, 1978), an index of pregnancy success was developed. There was no negative correlation between population density and pregnancy success in four species of Microtus and thus the hypothesis is refuted. There was a positive correlation between instantaneous growth rate and pregnancy success in M.

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The fiber composition of the distal accessory flexor muscle (DAFM) and the branching pattern of its excitor axon were compared in several species of crabs, in the lobster and the crayfish. The muscle is composed exclusively of long sarcomere (> 6 μm) fibers and therefore of the slow type. In all the crab species, except one, there is a distal to proximal gradient of fibers with increasing sarcomere lengths; this gradient is reverse in lobsters and crayfish.

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Morphology of the epithelium in the alimentary tract of the larval lamprey, Petromyzon marinus L.

J Morphol

February 1978

Department of Zoology, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, West Hill, Ontario M1C 1A4 Canada.

The alimentary tract of the ammocoete of the lamprey, Petromyzon marinus L., is divisible into three morphologically distinct regions: the oesophagus, the anterior intestine, and the posterior intestine. The epithelium of the oesophagus possesses mucous, ciliated, and columnar cells and appears to be specialized for movement of food particles.

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Cell renewal in the epithelium of the alimentary tract of the larval lamprey, Petromyzon marinus L.

J Morphol

February 1978

Department of Zoology, Scarborough College, University of Toronto, West Hill, Ontario M1C 1A4 Canada.

Light microscopic autoradiography with H-thymidine demonstrates that the three regions of the alimentary tract in the larval (ammocoete) lamprey, Petromyzon marinus L., possess different patterns for renewing their epithelium. In the oesophagus, columnar and mucous cells originate from stem cells located at the bases of folds and migrate to the tops of the folds where they are apparently extruded.

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