Maternal Consumption Of Canola Oil Suppressed Mammary Gland Tumorigenesis In C3(1) Tag Mice Offspring, 2010 Marshall University
Maternal Consumption Of Canola Oil Suppressed Mammary Gland Tumorigenesis In C3(1) Tag Mice Offspring, Gabriela Ion, Juliana A. Akinsete, W. Elaine Hardman
Biochemistry and Microbiology
Background: Maternal consumption of a diet high in omega 6 polyunsaturated fats (n-6 PUFA) has been shown to increase risk whereas a diet high in omega 3 polyunsaturated fats (n-3 PUFA) from fish oil has been shown to decrease risk for mammary gland cancer in female offspring of rats. The aim of this study was to determine whether increasing n-3 PUFA and reducing n-6 PUFA by using canola oil instead of corn oil in the maternal diet might reduce the risk for breast cancer in female offspring.
Methods: Female SV 129 mice were divided into two groups and placed on …
Electrically Mediated Delivery Of Plasmid Dna To The Skin, Using A Multielectrode Array, 2010 Old Dominion University
Electrically Mediated Delivery Of Plasmid Dna To The Skin, Using A Multielectrode Array, Richard Heller, Yolmari Criz, Loree C. Heller, Richard A. Gilbert, Mark J. Jaroszeski
Bioelectrics Publications
The easy accessibility of skin makes it an excellent target for gene transfer protocols. To take full advantage of skin as a target for gene transfer, it is important to establish an efficient and reproducible delivery system. Electroporation is a strong candidate to meet this delivery criterion. Electroporation of the skin is a simple, direct, in vivo method to deliver genes for therapy. Previously, delivery to the skin was performed by means of applicators with relatively large distances between electrodes, resulting in significant muscle stimulation and pain. These applicators also had limitations in controlling the directionality of the applied field. …
Structural Dynamics And Signaling Roles Of The Aer Pas And F1 Regions, 2010 Loma Linda University
Structural Dynamics And Signaling Roles Of The Aer Pas And F1 Regions, Asharie J. Campbell
Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects
The Aer aerotaxis receptor in Escherichia coli mounts such a rapid response to redox that E. coli changes its swimming behavior within 100 ms after an oxygen pulse. This receptor is a membrane-bound homodimer, and it monitors internal energy (redox) via an FAD cofactor bound to a cytoplasmic N-terminal PAS domain. Understanding PAS sensing is important, as PAS domains comprise a superfamily of more than 25,000 members from all kingdoms. This study focused on the Aer N-terminal PAS sensor, as well as the region tethering it to the membrane anchor, known as the F1. Previous genetic studies on these regions …
Dual-Action Hygienic Coatings: Benefits Of Hydrophobicity And Silver Ion Release And Surface Analysis, 2010 Technological University Dublin
Dual-Action Hygienic Coatings: Benefits Of Hydrophobicity And Silver Ion Release And Surface Analysis, Niall Stobie, Brendan Duffy, John Colreavy, Patrick Mchale, Steven Hinder, Declan Mccormack
Articles
Coatings that demonstrate reduced attachment of crystalline precipitates and the medical device colonising Staphylococcus epidermidis were prepared by the immobilisation of silver doped perfluoropolyether–urethane siloxane thin films on glass substrates. The presence of stratified hydrophobic perfluoropolyether groups protects the coating surface from the attachment of crystalline hydrophilic species such as chlorides and phosphates, whilst silver ion release inhibited attachment of S. epidermidis and subsequent biofilm formation in vitro. The release of silver ions protects the perfluoro groups from the hydrophobic interactions of S. epidermidis cells, which can reduce the hydrophobicity of the protective coating. These coatings also exhibited significant antibacterial …
Farnesol Induces Hydrogen Peroxide Resistance In Candida Albicans Yeast By Inhibiting The Ras-Cyclic Amp Signaling Pathway, 2010 Dartmouth College
Farnesol Induces Hydrogen Peroxide Resistance In Candida Albicans Yeast By Inhibiting The Ras-Cyclic Amp Signaling Pathway, Aurélie Deveau, Amy E. Piispanen, Angelyca A. Jackson, Deborah A. Hogan
Dartmouth Scholarship
Farnesol, a Candida albicans cell-cell signaling molecule that participates in the control of morphology, has an additional role in protection of the fungus against oxidative stress. In this report, we show that although farnesol induces the accumulation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), ROS generation is not necessary for the induction of catalase (Cat1)-mediated oxidative-stress resistance. Two antioxidants, α-tocopherol and, to a lesser extent, ascorbic acid effectively reduced intracellular ROS generation by farnesol but did not alter farnesol-induced oxidative-stress resistance. Farnesol inhibits the Ras1-adenylate cyclase (Cyr1) signaling pathway to achieve its effects on morphology under hypha-inducing conditions, and we demonstrate …
Crystal Structure Of The Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Inhibitory Factor Cif Reveals Novel Active-Site Features Of An Epoxide Hydrolase Virulence Factor, 2010 Dartmouth College
Crystal Structure Of The Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Inhibitory Factor Cif Reveals Novel Active-Site Features Of An Epoxide Hydrolase Virulence Factor, Christopher D. Bahl, Christophe Morisseau, Jennifer M. Bomberger, Bruce A. Stanton, Bruce D. Hammock, George A. O'Toole, Dean R. Madden
Dartmouth Scholarship
Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) inhibitory factor (Cif) is a virulence factor secreted by Pseudomonas aeruginosa that reduces the quantity of CFTR in the apical membrane of human airway epithelial cells. Initial sequence analysis suggested that Cif is an epoxide hydrolase (EH), but its sequence violates two strictly conserved EH motifs and also is compatible with other alpha/beta hydrolase family members with diverse substrate specificities. To investigate the mechanistic basis of Cif activity, we have determined its structure at 1.8-A resolution by X-ray crystallography. The catalytic triad consists of residues Asp129, His297, and Glu153, which are conserved across the …
Il-28 Supplants Requirement For Treg Cells In Protein Σ1-Mediated Protection Against Murine Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (Eae), 2010 Dartmouth College
Il-28 Supplants Requirement For Treg Cells In Protein Σ1-Mediated Protection Against Murine Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (Eae), Agnieszka Rynda, Massimo Maddaloni, Javier Ochoa-Repáraz, Gayle Callis, David W. Pascual
Dartmouth Scholarship
Conventional methods to induce tolerance in humans have met with limited success. Hence, efforts to redirect tolerogen uptake using reovirus adhesin, protein sigma 1 (pσ1), may circumvent these shortcomings based upon the recent finding that when reovirus pσ1 is engineered to deliver chicken ovalbumin (OVA) mucosally, tolerance is obtained, even with a single dose. To test whether single-dose tolerance can be induced to treat EAE, proteolipid protein (PLP130–151) was genetically fused to OVA to pσ1 (PLP:OVA-pσ1) and shown to significantly ameliorate EAE, suppressing proinflammatory cytokines by IL-10+ forkhead box P3 (FoxP3)+ CD25+CD4+ T …
The Distribution, Composition, And Formation Of Sahara Desert Microbialites From The Base Of The Meski Plateau, Outside Erfoud, Morocco, 2010 University of Massachusetts Amherst
The Distribution, Composition, And Formation Of Sahara Desert Microbialites From The Base Of The Meski Plateau, Outside Erfoud, Morocco, Sean Faulkner
Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014
Seven distinctly different museum-quality concretionary morphotypes of elongate, spheroidal, banded, botryoidal, columnar, rosette, and speleothem in regolith at two small sites at the base of the Meski Plateau near Erfoud, Morocco are described. Although most are isolated hand samples, the largest concretions are meter-sized blocks. Not one sample resembles any surrounding outcrop or bedrock. The barite rosettes formed first via periodic mixing of Ba2+/SO42- saturated solutions. They provided nuclei for cyclical precipitation-based concentric concretion development. The speleothem formed via precipitation from a carbonate-saturated solution in a large void within porous sandstone. The sand concretions formed when calcite precipitated around grains …
Yersinia Pestis Virulence Factor Yopm Undermines The Function Of Distinct Ccr2+Gr1+ Cells In Spleen And Liver During Systemic Plague, 2010 University of Kentucky
Yersinia Pestis Virulence Factor Yopm Undermines The Function Of Distinct Ccr2+Gr1+ Cells In Spleen And Liver During Systemic Plague, Zhan Ye
University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations
Yersinia pestis, the infective agent of bubonic and pneumonic plague, is classified as a category A agent of bioterrorism. YopM, a protein toxin of Y. pestis, is necessary for full virulence in a systemic plague mouse model with ambient-temperature grown bacteria. We used this model to identify the cells undermined by YopM. Natural killer (NK) cells were previously reported to be lost in spleen and blood in a YopM-associated way; however, NK cell depletion was found not to occur in liver, and ablation of NK cells had no effect on bacterial growth, indicating that NK cells are redundant …
Deconstructing Ihf-Mediated Inhibition Of The Complex Acs Promoter, 2010 Loyola University Chicago
Deconstructing Ihf-Mediated Inhibition Of The Complex Acs Promoter, David S. Thach
Dissertations
acs encodes a high affinity enzyme that permits survival during carbon starvation. As befits a survival gene, its transcription is subject to complex regulation. Previously, the Wolfe lab reported that CRP activates acs transcription by binding tandem DNA sites located upstream of the major acsP2 promoter and that the nucleoid protein IHF binds three specific sites located just upstream. The most proximal site (IHF III) exhibits reduced transcription compared to the full-length promoter or to a construct lacking all three IHF sites. The goal of my research was to understand how IHF III inhibits CRP-dependent acs transcription. First, I helped …
Hypervirulent Clostridium Difficile Strains: Adherence, Toxin Production And Sporulation, 2010 Loyola University Chicago
Hypervirulent Clostridium Difficile Strains: Adherence, Toxin Production And Sporulation, Michelle Marie Merrigan
Dissertations
Clostridium difficile is a leading cause of nosocomial infections, and recently emerged "hypervirulent" C. difficile strains have caused epidemics worldwide. We hypothesized that multiple factors were responsible for this phenotype, particularly the interaction of C. difficile with the epithelial cell, as well as toxin production and sporulation.
To test if host interaction varied in HV strains, we developed a quantitative host-cell adherence assay, and found that while C. difficile strains varied in adherence to human intestinal epithelial cells, hypervirulent strains were not significantly more adherent than other strains. The bacterial surface protein SlpA varied in both size and amount between …
Coronavirus Replicase Proteins: Multifunctional Mediators Of Replication And Innate Immunity Evasion, 2010 Loyola University Chicago
Coronavirus Replicase Proteins: Multifunctional Mediators Of Replication And Innate Immunity Evasion, Mark Anthony Clementz
Dissertations
Coronaviruses are positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses. The majority of the RNA encodes non-structural proteins (nsps) that are translated as a large polyprotein, which is cleaved by the papain-like (PLP) and picornavirus 3C-like (3CLpro) proteases. The nsps modify host membranes to produce double membrane vesicles (DMVs) upon which the replicase-transcriptase assembles and synthesizes viral RNA. nsp3, nsp4, and nsp6 are integral membrane proteins believed to be involved in DMV formation. Work presented here demonstrates that nsp4 is subjected to N-linked glycosylation and mutation of N258 to threonine in nsp4 confers a temperature sensitive phenotype to MHV-A59 infectious clone virus. This virus …
Candida Albicans Cellwall Components And Farnesol Stimulate The Expression Of Both Inflammatory And Regulatory Cytokines In The Murine Raw264.7 Macrophage Cell Line, 2010 University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Candida Albicans Cellwall Components And Farnesol Stimulate The Expression Of Both Inflammatory And Regulatory Cytokines In The Murine Raw264.7 Macrophage Cell Line, Suman Ghosh, Nina Howe, Katie Volk, Swetha Tati, Kenneth W. Nickerson, Thomas M. Petro
Kenneth Nickerson Papers
Candida albicans causes candidiasis, secretes farnesol, and switches from yeast to hyphae to escape from macrophages after phagocytosis. However, before escape, macrophages may respond to C. albicans’ pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) through toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) and dectin-1 receptors by expressing cytokines involved in adaptive immunity, inflammation, and immune regulation. Therefore, macrophages and the RAW264.7 macrophage line were challenged with C. albicans preparations of live wild-type cells, heat-killed cells, a live mutant defective in hyphae formation, a live mutant producing less farnesol, or an isolate producing farnesoic acid instead of farnesol. Interleukin-6 (IL-6), and IL-1b, IL- 10, and tumor …
Subtype-Associated Differences In Hiv-1 Reverse Transcription Affect The Viral Replication, 2010 University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Subtype-Associated Differences In Hiv-1 Reverse Transcription Affect The Viral Replication, Sergey Iordanskiy, Mackenzie Waltke, Yanjun Feng, Charles Wood
Nebraska Center for Virology: Faculty Publications
Background: The impact of the products of the pol gene, specifically, reverse transcriptase (RT) on HIV-1 replication, evolution, and acquisition of drug resistance has been thoroughly characterized for subtype B. For subtype C, which accounts of almost 60% of HIV cases worldwide, much less is known. It has been reported that subtype C HIV-1 isolates have a lower replication capacity than B; however, the basis of these differences remains unclear.
Results: We analyzed the impact of the pol gene products from HIV-1 B and C subtypes on the maturation of HIV virions, accumulation of reverse transcription products, integration of …
Genome Sequence Of The Pea Aphid Acyrthosiphon Pisum, 2010 University of Miami
Genome Sequence Of The Pea Aphid Acyrthosiphon Pisum, The International Aphid Genomics Consortium
Biology Articles and Papers
Aphids are important agricultural pests and also biological models for studies of insect-plant interactions, symbiosis, virus vectoring, and the developmental causes of extreme phenotypic plasticity. Here we present the 464 Mb draft genome assembly of the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum. This first published whole genome sequence of a basal hemimetabolous insect provides an outgroup to the multiple published genomes of holometabolous insects. Pea aphids are host-plant specialists, they can reproduce both sexually and asexually, and they have coevolved with an obligate bacterial symbiont. Here we highlight findings from whole genome analysis that may be related to these unusual biological features. …
Soil Organic Matter Fractions And Aggregate Distribution In Response To Tall Fescue Stands, 2010 Murray State University
Soil Organic Matter Fractions And Aggregate Distribution In Response To Tall Fescue Stands, I. P. Handayani, Mark S. Coyne, R. S. Tokosh
Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Publications
The study was conducted to evaluate the influences of tall fescue management on soil organic matter fractions and macro- and microaggregate distribution. Soil samples were collected from four paired adjacent fields consisting of five years of tall fescue mono and poly stands in Western Kentucky. Soil samples from 0 to 15 cm and 15 to 30 cm soil depths were analyzed for soil organic C and N, particulate organic matter C (POM-C) and N (POM-N), macro- and micro aggregate distribution and C-associated with macro- and micro- aggregates. Significant effects were observed between stands for all the properties, except total C, …
Chronology And Evolution Of The Hiv-1 Subtype C Epidemic In Ethiopia, 2010 University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Chronology And Evolution Of The Hiv-1 Subtype C Epidemic In Ethiopia, Damien C. Tully, Charles Wood
Nebraska Center for Virology: Faculty Publications
Objective—To reconstruct the onset date and evolutionary history of the HIV-1 subtype C epidemic in Ethiopia - one of the earliest recorded subtype C epidemics in the world.
Design—HIV-1 C env sequences with a known sampling year isolated from HIV-1 positive patients from Ethiopia between 1984 and 2003.
Methods—Evolutionary parameters including origin and demographic growth patterns were estimated using a Bayesian coalescent-based approach under either strict or relaxed molecular clock models.
Results—Bayesian evolutionary analysis indicated a most recent common ancestor date of 1965 with three distinct epidemic growth phases. Regression analysis of root-to-tip distances revealed a highly similar estimate for …
Topological Layers In The Hiv-1 Gp120 Inner Domain Regulate Gp41 Interaction And Cd4-Triggered Conformational Transitions, 2010 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Topological Layers In The Hiv-1 Gp120 Inner Domain Regulate Gp41 Interaction And Cd4-Triggered Conformational Transitions, Andrés Finzi, Shi-Hua Xiang, Beatriz Pacheco, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Wang, Jessica Haight, Aemro Kassa, Brenda Danek, Marie Pancera, Peter D. Kwong, Joseph Sodroski
Nebraska Center for Virology: Faculty Publications
The entry of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) into cells is initiated by binding of the gp120 exterior envelope glycoprotein to the receptor, CD4. How does CD4 binding trigger conformational changes in gp120 that allow the gp41 transmembrane envelope glycoprotein to mediate viral-cell membrane fusion? The transition from the unliganded to the CD4-bound state is regulated by two potentially flexible topological layers (layers 1 and 2) in the gp120 inner domain. Both layers apparently contribute to the noncovalent association of unliganded gp120 with gp41. After CD4 makes initial contact with the gp120 outer domain, layer 1-layer 2 interactions strengthen gp120-CD4 binding …
The Microscope (2010-2011), 2010 University of Tennessee, Knoxville
The Microscope (2010-2011), Department Of Microbiology
The Microscope
No abstract provided.
The Construction And Analysis Of Marker Gene Libraries, 2010 University of Tennessee, Knoxville
The Construction And Analysis Of Marker Gene Libraries, S.M. Short, F. Chen, Steven Wilhelm
Microbiology Publications and Other Works
Marker genes for viruses are typically amplified from aquatic samples to determine whether specific viruses are present in the sample, or to examine the diversity of a group of related viruses. In this chapter, we will provide an overview of common methods used to amplify, clone, sequence, and analyze virus marker genes, and will focus our discussion on viruses infecting algae, bacteria, and heterotrophic flagellates. Within this chapter, we endeavor to highlight critical aspects and components of these methods. To this end, instead of providing a detailed experimental protocol for each of the steps involved in examining virus marker gene …