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Articles 31 - 57 of 57
Full-Text Articles in Medical Sciences
Immunologic Evaluation Of Ectopic Gestation, Tawfig Amin Nasser
Immunologic Evaluation Of Ectopic Gestation, Tawfig Amin Nasser
Health Services Research Dissertations
Ectopic gestation is an error in the implantation site of the blastocyst. Extrauterine implantation presents a unique environment since the protective features of the uterus are absent. This study is an investigation into the immunoregulatory differences that may develop as a result of a change in the feto-maternal junction.
The effects of female plasma on one-way mixed lymphocyte cultures and mitogen-stimulated cultures, anti-paternal lymphocytotoxicity, and lymphocyte phenotypes were determined on normal, ectopic and non-pregnant females. The results indicated that pregnant female plasma enhanced the response of autologous lymphocytes to spouse and male control lymphocytes. Enhancement was not seen in the …
Maximizing The Return From Genome Research: Introduction, Thomas G. Field Jr.
Maximizing The Return From Genome Research: Introduction, Thomas G. Field Jr.
RISK: Health, Safety & Environment (1990-2002)
Professor Field introduces and explains the origins of the symposium.
Overview Of Federal Technology Transfer, Lawrence Rudolph
Overview Of Federal Technology Transfer, Lawrence Rudolph
RISK: Health, Safety & Environment (1990-2002)
Mr. Rudolph reviews approximately thirteen years of legal and political developments that have contributed to laws governing the extent to which private firms may secure rights in technology at least partly developed with federal funds.
Update - March 1994, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update - March 1994, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update
In this issue:
-- The Human Genome Project: A Molecular Approach to Defining Humanity
-- Some Legal Ramifications for Newborns
-- Ethical and Legal Ramifications of Predictive Genetic Information
-- Graduate program combines biomedical and clinical ethics
The Amino-Terminal Functions Of The Simian Virus 40 Large T Antigen Are Required To Overcome Wild-Type P53-Mediated Growth Arrest Of Cells., Robin S. Quartin, Charles N. Cole, James M. Pipas, Arnold J. Levine
The Amino-Terminal Functions Of The Simian Virus 40 Large T Antigen Are Required To Overcome Wild-Type P53-Mediated Growth Arrest Of Cells., Robin S. Quartin, Charles N. Cole, James M. Pipas, Arnold J. Levine
Dartmouth Scholarship
High levels of the p53 tumor suppressor protein can block progression through the cell cycle. A model system for the study of the mechanism of action of wild-type p53 is a cell line (T64-7B) derived from rat embryo fibroblasts transformed by activated ras and a temperature-sensitive murine p53 gene. At 37 to 39 degrees C, the murine p53 protein is in a mutant conformation and the cells actively divide, whereas at 32 degrees C, the protein has a wild-type conformation and the cells arrest in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Wild-type simian virus 40 large T antigen and …
Technology Transfer: A View From The Trenches, Harvey Drucker
Technology Transfer: A View From The Trenches, Harvey Drucker
RISK: Health, Safety & Environment (1990-2002)
Dr. Drucker, who has lab-wide responsibility for technology transfer at Argonne National Laboratory, argues that transferring rights in discoveries made through tax supported research to private entities can contribute to public welfare in many ways.
Origins Of The Human Genome Project, Robert Mullan Cook-Deegan
Origins Of The Human Genome Project, Robert Mullan Cook-Deegan
RISK: Health, Safety & Environment (1990-2002)
Dr. Cook-Deegan recounts some of the scientific and political history leading to controversy about the proper mix of private and public roles in pursuing genome research and bringing its fruits to bear, e.g., in preventing and curing disease.
Overview Of Potential Intellectual Property Protection For Biotechnology, Kate H. Murashige
Overview Of Potential Intellectual Property Protection For Biotechnology, Kate H. Murashige
RISK: Health, Safety & Environment (1990-2002)
Dr. Murashige compares the function and value of copyright, patent and trade secret laws in recovering investments in developing genome-related biotechnology.
Cd40 Ligand Expression Is Defective In A Subset Of Patients With Common Variable Immunodeficiency., Mary Farrington, Laura S. Grosmaire, Shigeaki Nonoyama, Susanna H. Fischer, Diane Hollenbaugh, Jeffrey A. Ledbetter, R. J. Noelle
Cd40 Ligand Expression Is Defective In A Subset Of Patients With Common Variable Immunodeficiency., Mary Farrington, Laura S. Grosmaire, Shigeaki Nonoyama, Susanna H. Fischer, Diane Hollenbaugh, Jeffrey A. Ledbetter, R. J. Noelle
Dartmouth Scholarship
Common variable immunodeficiency (CVI) is characterized by hypogammaglobulinemia and recurrent bacterial infections due to failure of CVI B cells to differentiate in vivo into immunoglobulin-secreting plasma cells. We hypothesized that T-cell dysfunction resulting in abnormal contact-mediated B-cell activation may play a prominent role in the failure of CVI B cells to produce specific antibody. We have previously shown that B-cell proliferation and IgE production after stimulation with anti-CD40 and interleukin (IL) 4 were normal in 22 CVI patients evaluated, indicating that CVI B cells respond to signals delivered via CD40. Here we report that CD40 ligand (gp39) mRNA expression by …
Separate Metabolic Pathways Leading To Dna Fragmentation And Apoptotic Nuclear Chromatin Condensation, D. Sun, Shibo Jiang, Li-Mou Zheng, David M. Ojcius, John Ding-E. Young
Separate Metabolic Pathways Leading To Dna Fragmentation And Apoptotic Nuclear Chromatin Condensation, D. Sun, Shibo Jiang, Li-Mou Zheng, David M. Ojcius, John Ding-E. Young
All Dugoni School of Dentistry Faculty Articles
Apoptosis is the predominant form of cell death observed in a variety of physiological and pathological conditions such as cancer involution, insect metamorphosis, the development of the immune and nervous systems, and embryogenesis. The typical nuclear changes taking place in apoptotic cells include extensive condensation of chromatin and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation into units of 200 base pairs. However, the mechanisms responsible for both chromatin condensation and DNA fragmentation have yet to be elucidated. In this study, micrococcal nuclease and the divalent cations, Ca2+ and Mg2+, were applied to isolated nuclei in an attempt to reconstitute in vitro the digestion of …
Morphometric Analysis Of Enteric Lesions In C3h/Hen Mice Inoculated With Serpulina Hyodysenteriae Serotypes 2 And 4 With Or Without Oral Streptomycin Pretreatment, Jagannatha V. Mysore, Gerald Duhamel
Morphometric Analysis Of Enteric Lesions In C3h/Hen Mice Inoculated With Serpulina Hyodysenteriae Serotypes 2 And 4 With Or Without Oral Streptomycin Pretreatment, Jagannatha V. Mysore, Gerald Duhamel
School of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences: Faculty Publications
The segmental distribution and sequential progression and the role of the indigenous bacterial flora in the development of enteric lesions associated with Serpulina hyodysenteriae infection in laboratory mice have not been defined. We examined the distribution and sequential morphometric changes in the large intestine of mice orally inoculated with S. hyodysenteriae serotypes 2 and 4. To determine the role of colonization resistance conferred by the indigenous bacterial flora, 40 female C3H/HeN mice were administered water alone or water containing 5 mg/mL streptomycin sulfate ad libitum for seven days prior to orogastric inoculation either with S. hyodysenteriae or sterile trypticase soy …
Inactivation Of Hit Cell Ca2+ Current By A Simulated Burst Of Ca2+ Action Potentials, L. S. Satin, S. J. Tavalin, P. D. Smolen
Inactivation Of Hit Cell Ca2+ Current By A Simulated Burst Of Ca2+ Action Potentials, L. S. Satin, S. J. Tavalin, P. D. Smolen
Pharmacology and Toxicology Publications
ABSTRACT A novel voltage-clamp protocol was developed to test whether slow inactivation of Ca2+ current occurs during bursting in insulin-secreting cells. Single insulin-secreting HIT cells were patch-clamped and their Ca2+ currents were isolated pharmacologically. A computed ,3-cell burst was used as a voltage-clamp command and the net Ca2+ current elicited was determined as a cadmium difference current. Ca2+ current rapidly activated during the computed plateau and spike depolarizations and then slowly decayed. Integration of this Ca2+ current yielded an estimate of total Ca influx. To further analyze Ca2+ current inactivation during a burst, repetitive test pulses to + 10 mV …
The Role Of Methylation And Chromatin Structure In The Regulation Of The O6-Methylguanine-Dna Methyltransferase (Mgmt) Gene In Human Glioma Cells, Joseph F. Costello
The Role Of Methylation And Chromatin Structure In The Regulation Of The O6-Methylguanine-Dna Methyltransferase (Mgmt) Gene In Human Glioma Cells, Joseph F. Costello
Dissertations
No abstract provided.
Antiparasitic And Antiproliferative Effects Of Indoleamine 2,3-Dioxygenase Enzyme Expression In Human Fibroblasts., Sohan L. Gupta, Joseph M. Carlin, Padma Pyati, Wei Dai, Elmer R. Pfefferkorn, Martin J. Murphy Jr
Antiparasitic And Antiproliferative Effects Of Indoleamine 2,3-Dioxygenase Enzyme Expression In Human Fibroblasts., Sohan L. Gupta, Joseph M. Carlin, Padma Pyati, Wei Dai, Elmer R. Pfefferkorn, Martin J. Murphy Jr
Dartmouth Scholarship
Studies were carried out to evaluate the proposed role of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (INDO) induction in the antimicrobial and antiproliferative effects of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) in human fibroblasts. The INDO cDNA coding region was cloned in the pMEP4 expression vector, containing the metallothionein (MTII) promoter in the sense (+ve) or the antisense (-ve) orientation. Human fibroblasts (GM637) stably transfected with the sense construct expressed INDO activity after treatment with CdCl2 or ZnSO4, but cells transfected with the antisense construct did not. The growth of Chlamydia psittaci was strongly inhibited in INDO +ve cells but not in INDO -ve cells after treatment …
Cooperative Binding Of Ets-1 And Core Binding Factor To Dna., David Wotton, Jacques Ghysdael, Shuwen Wang, Nancy A. Speck, Michael J. Owen
Cooperative Binding Of Ets-1 And Core Binding Factor To Dna., David Wotton, Jacques Ghysdael, Shuwen Wang, Nancy A. Speck, Michael J. Owen
Dartmouth Scholarship
Two phorbol ester-inducible elements (beta E2 and beta E3) within the human T-cell receptor beta gene enhancer each contain consensus binding sites for the Ets and core binding factor (CBF) transcription factor families. Recombinant Ets-1 and purified CBF bound individually to beta E2 and beta E3, in which the Ets and core sites are directly adjacent. In this report, we show that CBF and Ets-1 bind together to beta E2 and beta E3 and that Ets-1-CBF-DNA complexes are favored over the binding of either protein alone to beta E2. Formation of Ets-1-CBF-DNA complexes increased the affinity of Ets-1-DNA interactions and …
Quinine And Quinidine Inhibit K-Cl Cotransport In Low K Sheep Erythrocytes, Norma C. Adragna, Peter K. Lauf
Quinine And Quinidine Inhibit K-Cl Cotransport In Low K Sheep Erythrocytes, Norma C. Adragna, Peter K. Lauf
Pharmacology and Toxicology Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Reactive Oxygen-Dependent Dna Damage Resulting From The Oxidation Of Phenolic Compounds By A Copper-Redox Cycle Mechanism, Y. Li, M. A. Trush
Reactive Oxygen-Dependent Dna Damage Resulting From The Oxidation Of Phenolic Compounds By A Copper-Redox Cycle Mechanism, Y. Li, M. A. Trush
Osteopathic Medicine, Jerry M. Wallace School of
No abstract provided.
N-Ethylmaleimide Treatment Of Low K Sheep Red-Blood-Cells At Different Temperatures Reveals Role Of Thiols And Mg For Activation And Inactivation Of K-Cl Cotransport, Peter K. Lauf, R. Moezzi, Norma C. Adragna
N-Ethylmaleimide Treatment Of Low K Sheep Red-Blood-Cells At Different Temperatures Reveals Role Of Thiols And Mg For Activation And Inactivation Of K-Cl Cotransport, Peter K. Lauf, R. Moezzi, Norma C. Adragna
Pharmacology and Toxicology Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Functional Comparisons Of Three Glutamate Transporter Subtypes Cloned From Human Motor Cortex, Jeffrey L. Arriza, Wendy A. Fairman, Jacques I. Wadiche, Geoffrey H. Murdoch, Michael Kavanaugh, Susan G. Amara
Functional Comparisons Of Three Glutamate Transporter Subtypes Cloned From Human Motor Cortex, Jeffrey L. Arriza, Wendy A. Fairman, Jacques I. Wadiche, Geoffrey H. Murdoch, Michael Kavanaugh, Susan G. Amara
Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Faculty Publications
Reuptake plays an important role in regulating synaptic and extracellular concentrations of glutamate. Three glutamate transporters expressed in human motor cortex, termed EAAT1, EAAT2, and EAAT3 (for excitatory amino acid transporter), have been characterized by their molecular cloning and functional expression. Each EAAT subtype mRNA was found in all human brain regions analyzed. The most prominent regional variation in message content was in cerebellum where EAAT1 expression predominated. EAAT1 and EAAT3 mRNAs were also expressed in various non- nervous tissues, whereas expression of EAAT2 was largely restricted to brain. The kinetic parameters and pharmacological characteristics of transport mediated by each …
Cell-Surface Receptors For Gibbon Ape Leukemia Virus And Amphotropic Murine Retrovirus Are Inducible Sodium-Dependent Phosphate Symporters, Michael Kavanaugh, Daniel G. Miller, Weibin Zhang, Wendy Law, Susan L. Kozak, David Kabat, A. Dusty Miller
Cell-Surface Receptors For Gibbon Ape Leukemia Virus And Amphotropic Murine Retrovirus Are Inducible Sodium-Dependent Phosphate Symporters, Michael Kavanaugh, Daniel G. Miller, Weibin Zhang, Wendy Law, Susan L. Kozak, David Kabat, A. Dusty Miller
Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Faculty Publications
Cell surface receptors for gibbon ape leukemia virus (Glvr-1) and murine amphotropic retrovirus (Ram-1) are distinct but related proteins having multiple membrane-spanning regions. Distant homology with a putative phosphate permease of Neurospora crassa suggested that these receptors might serve transport functions. By expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes and in mammalian cells, we have identified Glvr-1 and Ram-1 as sodium-dependent phosphate symporters. Two-electrode voltage-clamp analysis indicates net cation influx, suggesting that phosphate is transported with excess sodium ions. Phosphate uptake was reduced by > 50% in mouse fibroblasts expressing amphotropic envelope glycoprotein, which binds to Ram-1, indicating that Ram-1 is a major …
Control Of Cationic Amino Acid Transport And Retroviral Receptor Functions In A Membrane Protein Family, Michael Kavanaugh, Hao Wang, Zheng Zhang, Weibin Zhang, Yan-Na Wu, Esther Dechant, R. Alan North, David Kabat
Control Of Cationic Amino Acid Transport And Retroviral Receptor Functions In A Membrane Protein Family, Michael Kavanaugh, Hao Wang, Zheng Zhang, Weibin Zhang, Yan-Na Wu, Esther Dechant, R. Alan North, David Kabat
Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Faculty Publications
A partial cDNA sequence indicated that the T lymphocyte early-activation gene (Tea) encodes a protein related to the dual-function ecotropic retrovirus receptor/cationic amino acid transporter (ecoR/CAT1), and RNA blots suggested highest Tea expression in T lymphocytes and liver (MacLeod, C.L., Finley, K., Kakuda, D. Kozad, C.A., and Wilkinson, M.F. (1990) Mol. Cell. Biol. 7, 3663-3674). The sequence of full-length Tea cDNA from liver (3683 bases) predicts a 657-amino-acid protein (CAT2 alpha) with 12-14 transmembrane domains. A long (515 base) region with six initiation codons and termination codons precedes the translation start codon. The liver Tea cDNA is identical to Tea …
Functional Expression Of Two Glucose Transporter Isoforms From The Parasitic Protozoan Leishmania Enriettii, Chris K. Langford, Brian M. Little, Michael Kavanaugh, Scott M. Landfear
Functional Expression Of Two Glucose Transporter Isoforms From The Parasitic Protozoan Leishmania Enriettii, Chris K. Langford, Brian M. Little, Michael Kavanaugh, Scott M. Landfear
Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Faculty Publications
The parasitic protozoan Leishmania enriettii contains a family of tandemly repeated genes, designated Pro-1, that encode proteins with significant sequence similarity to mammalian facilitative glucose transporters. Pro-1 mRNAs are expressed almost exclusively in the promastigote or insect stage of the parasite life cycle. The Pro-1 tandem repeat encodes two isoforms of the putative transporter, iso-1 and iso-2, which have identical predicted amino acid sequences except for their NH2-terminal hydrophilic domains. We have now expressed both iso-1 and iso-2 by microinjecting their RNAs into Xenopus oocytes and assaying these oocytes for transport of various radiolabeled ligands. Both iso-1 and iso-2 transport …
Cloning Of The Cellular Receptor For Amphotropic Murine Retroviruses Reveals Homology To That For Gibbon Ape Leukemia Virus, Daniel G. Miller, Robert H. Edwards, A. Dusty Miller
Cloning Of The Cellular Receptor For Amphotropic Murine Retroviruses Reveals Homology To That For Gibbon Ape Leukemia Virus, Daniel G. Miller, Robert H. Edwards, A. Dusty Miller
Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences Faculty Publications
The host and tissue specificity of retrovirus infection is largely determined by specific cellular receptors that mediate virus entry. Genes encoding these receptors are widely distributed in the genome, and the receptors identified to date show no sequence similarity. We have identified the cellular receptor for amphotropic murine retroviruses, Ram-1, by screening a rat cDNA expression library introduced into amphotropic virus-resistant hamster cells. The 656-amino acid receptor is homologous to the gibbon ape leukemia virus receptor at both hydrophobic termini but is highly divergent in the central hydrophilic region. Both receptors appear to be integral membrane proteins having multiple membrane-spanning …
Genetic Determinism Or Genetic Discrimination, George P. Smith Ii
Genetic Determinism Or Genetic Discrimination, George P. Smith Ii
Scholarly Articles
The first part of this essay evaluates the contemporary focus of the genetic revolution seen as such through the Human Genome Initiative - a project which brings not only great hope for new advancements of genetic knowledge designed to control disease and minimize human suffering, but raises real fears of unabated invasions of personal privacy that in turn would lead to discrimination for those found to be genetically handicapped. The extent to which this central fear is justified or rational is justified within the present context of the Genome Initiative, together with the past practices of genetic screening, will then …
Accessing Genomic Information For Nonmedical Purposes, George P. Smith Ii
Accessing Genomic Information For Nonmedical Purposes, George P. Smith Ii
Scholarly Articles
No abstract provided.
Optimizing Conditions For Cloning Cdna From Chicken Brain, Stephen Clark
Optimizing Conditions For Cloning Cdna From Chicken Brain, Stephen Clark
Masters Theses & Specialist Projects
Acoustic over stimulation can lead to hair cell loss in the auditory epithelium. Hair cell loss or damage in mammals often results in decreased auditory sensitivity which is irreversible. However for birds, hair cells which are damaged by acoustic trauma or ototoxic drugs may be replaced by regeneration. As the first step in determining the molecular mechanisms of hair cell regeneration, gene expression techniques including cDNA synthesis and cloning were attempted first with the chicken brain. The initial attempts at making cDNA libraries were elusive; therefore, experiments were performed to identify problems and enhance the efficiency of specific steps. These …
Localisation And Detection Of A Polymorphism In The Human Skeletal Beta-Tropomyosin Gene (Tpm2), Clive C.J. Hunt
Localisation And Detection Of A Polymorphism In The Human Skeletal Beta-Tropomyosin Gene (Tpm2), Clive C.J. Hunt
Theses : Honours
Tropomyosin is one of the components of the thin filaments of muscle, binding to actin, and, together with troponin, regulating contraction in a calcium-dependent manner (Cho et al.,1990). There are at least four distinct tropomyosin genes in vertebrates and each may encode at least six different isoforms of tropomyosin by alternate splicing (Novy et al, 1993; MacLeod et al., 1988). The alpha-tropomyosin gene TPM1 has recently been localised to 15q22 (Eyre et al, 1994) and has been shown to be mutated in some cases of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (Thierfelder et al., 1994). The alpha-tropomyosin gene TPM3 has been recently localised …