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Selected Works

Selected Works

1979

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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Brain Mechanisms For Offense, Defense And Submission, David B. Adams May 1979

Brain Mechanisms For Offense, Defense And Submission, David B. Adams

David Adams

A preliminary attempt is made to analyze the intraspecific aggressive behavior of mammals in terms of specific neural circuitry. The results of stimulation, lesion, and recording studies of aggressive behavior in cats and rats are reviewed and analyzed in terms of three hypothetical motivational systems: offense, defense, and submission. A critical distinction, derived from ethological theory, is made between motivating stimuli that simultaneously activate functional groupings of motor patterning mechanisms, and releasing and directing stimuli that are necessary for the activation of discrete motor patterning mechanisms. It is suggested that motivating stimuli activate pathways that converge upon sets of homogeneous …


Biosynthesis And Degradation Of Acetylcholine Receptors In Rat Skeletal Muscles. Effects Of Electrical Stimulation, Diana Linden, D.M. Fambrough Mar 1979

Biosynthesis And Degradation Of Acetylcholine Receptors In Rat Skeletal Muscles. Effects Of Electrical Stimulation, Diana Linden, D.M. Fambrough

Diana Linden

Synthesis and degradation of acetylcholine receptors in rat skeletal muscles were measured in organ culture. The rate of de novo biosynthesis and incorporation of acetylcholine receptors into extrajunctional membranes of denervated muscles was measured by determining the rate of appearance of [1] [2H, 13C, 15N]-acetylcholine receptors when muscles were cultured in medium containing [1] [2H, 13C, 15N]-amino acids. Denervated extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles were found to synthesize new receptors for several days in organ culture at an average rate of 1.4%/h. The degradation rates for extrajunctional and junctional acetylcholine receptors were estimated by irreversibly labeling acétylcholine receptors on …


Immunobiology Of Malaria, Clarence Lee, Yvonne Hogan, Georgiana Aboko-Cole Mar 1979

Immunobiology Of Malaria, Clarence Lee, Yvonne Hogan, Georgiana Aboko-Cole

Clarence Lee

Malaria, the number one disease in the world, is caused by intracellular protozoans belonging to the Subphylum, Sporozoa; Suborder, Haemosphoridia; and Family, Plasmodiidae. The four classical organisms producing disease in man are Plasmodium vivax, P. falciparum, P. malariae, and P. ovale. Although malaria has been known to man for centuries, attempts are still being made to control and eliminate its devastating effects in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. Current active interest in malarial immunology and immunopathology derives from two main facts: (1) that human malaria is still one of the chief health problems in a broad tropical and …


Nutritional Ecology Of Microtine Rodents: Digestibility Of Forage, George Batzli, F Cole Dec 1978

Nutritional Ecology Of Microtine Rodents: Digestibility Of Forage, George Batzli, F Cole

F. Russell Cole

No abstract provided.


Rna Sequencing Provides Evidence For Allelism Of Determinants Of The N-, B-, Or Nb- Tropism Of Murine Leukemia Viruses, Jean Rommelaere, Helen Donis-Keller, Nancy Hopkins Dec 1978

Rna Sequencing Provides Evidence For Allelism Of Determinants Of The N-, B-, Or Nb- Tropism Of Murine Leukemia Viruses, Jean Rommelaere, Helen Donis-Keller, Nancy Hopkins

Helen Donis-Keller

Previous genetic and biochemical studies identified three large RNAase T1-resistant oligonucleotides, each associated with either the N-, B- or NB-tropism of murine C-type viruses of BALB/c origin. These oligonucleotides were shown to lie in the 5′ third of the oligonucleotide maps of their respective viruses. We sequenced the three oligonucleotides and found that they share a 10 base sequence. Together these observations provide good evidence that the determinants of N-, B- or NB-tropism monitored by the three oligonucleotides are allelic.The oligonucleotides associated with N- and B-tropism differ in sequence at four of sixteen nucleotides, while the B- and NB-tropism-associated oligonucleotides …