635 results match your criteria: "University of Wales College of Cardiff[Affiliation]"
Proc Biol Sci
November 1993
Welsh School of Pharmacy, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
The effect of high pressure on the response to glycine or kainate of voltage-clamped Xenopus oocytes micro-injected with messenger-RNA derived from either rat spinal cord or whole brain, respectively, has been investigated. Current responses were measured at 1 bar (= 10(5) Pa), 50 bar, 100 bar and 150 bar, with PO2 fixed at 1 bar and the balance helium. Glycine elicited a depolarizing current response which was antagonized by nanomolar concentrations of strychnine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem J
November 1993
Department of Biochemistry, School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
The activity of microsomal delta 12-desaturase in Acanthamoeba castellanii was increased after growing cultures were chilled from the optimal growth temperature (30 degrees C) to 15 degrees C. This increase was detectable in microsomes isolated from organisms subjected to only 10 min chilling. The mechanism of induction was investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Otolaryngol
November 1993
Department of Physiology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, United Kingdom.
The effect of pressure, warmth, and control stimuli applied to the axilla and lateral chest wall on unilateral nasal airway resistance and facial skin temperature was investigated in 60 healthy adults. Nasal resistance was measured by posterior rhinomanometry and skin temperature with an infrared thermometer. A significant increase in unilateral nasal resistance ipsilateral to the applied stimulus was seen with both pressure and warmth (p = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVis Neurosci
January 1994
Vision Research Unit, School of Psychology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, Wales.
Two basic types of cholinergic receptor have been identified in nervous systems: nicotinic and muscarinic. In the mammalian visual system, the balance of evidence suggests that nicotinic activity is associated primarily with transmission and processing of information while muscarinic activity reflects modulatory influences arising in the brainstem and basal forebrain. We have measured contrast sensitivity functions using a two-alternative forced-choice procedure in young human volunteers with and without administration of nicotine (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Dermatol
November 1993
School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
The occurrence of zinc-induced synthesis of metallothionein in skin after topical application of the anti-acne drug Zineryt lotion was investigated in hamster ears. The dinitrophenyl hapten-sandwich immunohistochemical method involving a monoclonal anti-metallothionein (MT) antibody (E9) was used to detect and localize zinc-binding MT in the 'treated' and untreated hamster skin. Atomic absorption spectrophotometry and dithizone histochemistry indicated that zinc penetrated the skin more readily, and accumulated more efficiently within the sebaceous glands, when applied to the skin surface as the organo-zinc complex, rather than as the inorganic zinc salt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiol Behav
November 1993
Health Psychology Research Unit, School of Psychology, University of Wales College of Cardiff.
The present study examined the effects of sleep deprivation on performance, mood, and cardiovascular functioning in the late morning and early afternoon. The results showed that the sleep-deprived subjects felt less alert and detected fewer targets in a cognitive vigilance task. Selective impairments due to sleep deprivation were also observed in a logical reasoning task.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Rev Camb Philos Soc
November 1993
Microbiology Group (PABIO), University of Wales College of Cardiff, Wales, UK.
While it is generally acknowledged that modern science began with the quantification of time in the measurement of linear physical processes in space by Galileo and Newton, the biological sciences have only recently developed appropriate experimental and mathematical methods for the description of living systems in terms of processes of non-linear, recursive dynamics. We now recognize that living organisms have patterns of exquisitely timed processes that are as intricate as their spatial structure and organization. Self-similarities of life processes in time and space have evolved to generate an ensemble of oscillators within which analogous functions may be discerned on many different time scales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Respir J
November 1993
Dept of Physiology, School of Psychology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.
The aim of the present study was to determine whether the ability to suppress cough voluntarily is an index of cough severity in upper respiratory tract infection. Cough was measured by means of a microphone linked to a pen recorder and subjects were instructed to voluntarily suppress cough in order to determine cough suppression time. Subjective scores of symptom severity, mood and psychological parameters were made prior to cough measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Auton Nerv Syst
November 1993
Department of Anatomy, University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.
Neurons in the hypogastric (main pelvic) ganglia of 4- and 24-month-old male rats were investigated by enzyme histochemical methods for NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activities and by immunofluorescence for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) immunoreactivities. Systematic random sampling of standard sized areas of ganglion parenchyma revealed a content (per unit area) of 40.9 +/- 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
October 1993
Department of Geology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, P.O. Box 914, Cardiff CF1 3 YE, UK.
Remarkable preservation in coalified and pennineralized fossils from Upper Silurian and Lower Devonian sediments deposited some 420 to 390 million years ago provides insight into the major anatomical innovations associated with the early stages in the colonization of the land by higher plants. Using uniformitarian principles, such information, combined with gross morphology, can then be used to reconstruct the pioneers as growing, metabolizing and reproducing organisms, as well as allowing assessment of affinity, although apart from the lycophytes, they have no close relationship with extant groups. In considering vascular tissues, diversity is exemplified by descriptions of the metaxylem in protosteles of Zosterophyllopsida and Drepanophycopsida (putative lycophytes), of Psilophyton (Trimerophytopsida), of the Rhyniaceae (including Rhynia gwynnevaughanii, certain Taeniocrada spp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Ecol Evol
October 1993
David Lloyd is in the Microbiology Group (PABIO), University of Wales College of Cardiff, PO Box 915, Cardiff, UK CFI 3TL.
Denitrification is the key step of the nitrogen cycle in which gaseous end products are released from the nitrate of terrestrial and aquatic environments. Although this process has always been regarded as an anaerobic one, recent research indicates that aerobic denitrification can be demonstrated with laboratory cultures and suggests that it may be widespread environmentally. Thus, denitrifying bacteria are both taxonomically and physiologically diverse, and may be predominantly aerobic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOphthalmic Physiol Opt
October 1993
Department of Optometry and Vision Sciences, University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.
An investigation of the effects of uncorrected refractive errors upon a central visual field examination has been made with a view to establishing what the likely effects would be of omitting a refractive correction when screening the visual field with a threshold related, supra-threshold strategy on the Henson CFA3000. The results indicate that, while a linear relationship exists between the extent of threshold elevation and the product of residual refractive error and pupil size, the scatter in the results means that accurate predictions cannot be made in individual cases. The threshold elevation was found to be independent of eccentricity (within the central 21 degrees from fixation) and did not increase the variability of results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biochem
October 1993
Department of Biochemistry, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
1. Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) was isolated from five rat tissues: white adipose, skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle, mammary gland and lung. 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Dermatol
October 1993
Medicines Research Unit, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
A multicentre, randomized, double-blind, controlled crossover clinical trial was conducted on 33 patients with severe refractory atopic dermatitis, to determine the effects of cyclosporin (5 mg/kg/day) on their health-related quality of life. Treatments were administered for 8-week periods. One group (n = 16) received placebo followed by cyclosporin, and the other (n = 17) received cyclosporin and then placebo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunol Methods
September 1993
School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, Cathays Park, UK.
The time taken to perform diagnostic agglutination tests can be significantly reduced by applying an ultrasonic standing wave field to a droplet of reactants held in a capillary tube. Avian erythrocytes, bacteria and latex particles from commercially available test kits were agglutinated in 15 s, 5 min, and 1 min respectively. These times compare favourably with the times of 30 min, 4 h, and 8 min required for agglutination by the methods prescribed for the respective kits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Biochem
September 1993
Department of Biochemistry, University of Wales College of Cardiff.
Sodium borohydride and sodium cyanoborohydride were assessed as potential reagents for determining ligand-induced changes in accessibility to the active-site of aspartate aminotransferase. Rates of reduction of the imine formed between Lys258 and pyridoxal phosphate were determined in the presence of increasing concentrations of the dicarboxylate substrate analogues glutarate and maleate. The rate of reduction decreased to a limiting value which was about 40-fold lower than the equivalent rate in the absence of dicarboxylate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Microbiol
September 1993
Department of Biochemistry, University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.
J Infect
September 1993
School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
We report the case of a 63-year-old woman whose indwelling urethral catheter became blocked regularly at 4-5 day intervals over a period of 10 weeks. 'Worm-like' structures 25-30 cm in length were found either in the catheter, completely occluding the lumen, or in the drainage tube thereby blocking the valve of the drainage bag. Electron microscopy showed that these structures were composed of bacteria, while culture revealed them to be mixed communities of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis and Proteus mirabilis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
September 1993
Department of Physiology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
The effects on lumbar motoneurons of thoracic cord stimulation were investigated in the neonatal rat hemisected spinal cord in vitro using intracellular recording. Four responses were evoked--a fast, excitatory postsynaptic potential, a second component to the fast excitatory postsynaptic potential, a fast inhibitory postsynaptic potential and a slow excitatory postsynaptic potential. The fast (CNQX-sensitive) excitatory postsynaptic potential was probably monosynaptic, was blocked by CNQX, (10 microM) and showed a frequency-dependent run-down at stimulation frequencies between 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
August 1993
Department of Microbiology, University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands, and Microbiology Group, School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, Cardiff CF1 3TL, United Kingdom.
The effects of metronidazole, CO, methanogens, and CO(2) on the fermentation of glucose by the anaerobic fungus Neocallimastix sp. strain L2 were investigated. Both metronidazole and CO caused a shift in the fermentation products from predominantly H(2), acetate, and formate to lactate as the major product and caused a lower glucose consumption rate and cell protein yield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEMS Microbiol Lett
August 1993
School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.
An inexpensive infrared sensor was constructed and used for the rapid testing of bacterial antibiotic susceptibility by detection of changes in absorbance at 950 nm. By comparing cultures of clinical isolates together with control strains (Escherichia coli NCTC 10418, Staphylococcus aureus NCTC 6571 or Pseudomonas aeruginosa NCTC 10662) after addition of an antibiotic, results on susceptibility were obtained within 3-5 h from the original plate culture. Representative strains of E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Psychol
August 1993
Health Psychology Research Unit, School of Psychology, University of Wales College of Cardiff.
Disturbances of memory, concentration and motor function are often reported by patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). The present study objectively evaluated these behavioural problems using a computerized test battery measuring memory, attention and motor skills. Fifty-seven CFS patients were compared with 19 matched controls and all subjects completed the performance test battery and filled in questionnaires measuring psychopathology and mood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Chem
August 1993
School of Mathematics, University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.
Numerous papers have been written to show which combinations of Shewhart-type quality-control charts are optimal for detecting systematic shifts in the mean response of a process, increases in the random error of a process, and linear drift effects in the mean response across the assay batch. One paper by Westgard et al. (Clin Chem 1977;23:1857-67) especially seems to have attracted the attention of users.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem J
August 1993
Department of Biochemistry, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.
Glutamate semialdehyde aminotransferase (glutamate-1-semialdehyde 2,1-aminomutase; EC 5.4.3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYeast
August 1993
Microbiology Group (PABIO), University of Wales College of Cardiff.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae HSc was grown with ethanol at concentrations up to 10% (v/v). The immediate effects of additions of externally added ethanol on CO2 production and O2 consumption of washed organisms were studied by stopped-flow membrane inlet quadrupole mass spectrometry. Fermentative activities of organisms grown with ethanol (0-5% v/v) showed similar sensitivities to inhibition by ethanol, whereas those grown with 10% (v/v) ethanol had become protected and were markedly less sensitive.
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