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This study continues analysis from a companion paper on over 350,000 insured Swedish dogs up to 10 years of age contributing to more than one million dog-years at risk during 1995–2000. The age patterns for total and diagnostic mortality and for general causes of death (trauma, tumour, locomotor, heart and neurological) are presented for numerous breeds. Survival estimates at five, eight and 10 years of age are calculated. Survival to 10 years of age was 75% or more in Labrador and golden retrievers, miniature and toy poodles and miniature dachshunds and lowest in Irish wolfhounds (91% dead by 10 years). Multivariable analysis was used to estimate the relative risk for general and more specific causes of death between breeds accounting for gender and age effects, including two-way interactions. Older females had tumour as a designated cause of death more often than males in most breeds, but not in the Bernese mountain dog. Information presented in this and the companion paper inform our understanding of the population level burden of disease, and support decision-making at the population and individual level about health promotion efforts and treatment and prognosis of disease events.  相似文献   
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Eukaryotic cells coordinate chromosome duplication by assembly of protein complexes at origins of DNA replication and by activation of cyclin-dependent kinase and Cdc7p-Dbf4p kinase. We show in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that although Cdc7p levels are constant during the cell division cycle, Dbf4p and Cdc7p-Dbf4p kinase activity fluctuate. Dbf4p binds to chromatin near the G(1)/S-phase boundary well after binding of the minichromosome maintenance (Mcm) proteins, and it is stabilized at the non-permissive temperature in mutants of the anaphase-promoting complex, suggesting that Dbf4p is targeted for destruction by ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis. Arresting cells with hydroxyurea (HU) or with mutations in genes encoding DNA replication proteins results in a more stable, hyper-phosphorylated form of Dbf4p and an attenuated kinase activity. The Dbf4p phosphorylation in response to HU is RAD53 dependent. This suggests that an S-phase checkpoint function regulates Cdc7p-Dbf4p kinase activity. Cdc7p may also play a role in adapting from the checkpoint response since deletion of CDC7 results in HU hypersensitivity. Recombinant Cdc7p-Dbf4p kinase was purified and both subunits were autophosphorylated. Cdc7p-Dbf4p efficiently phosphorylates several proteins that are required for the initiation of DNA replication, including five of the six Mcm proteins and the p180 subunit of DNA polymerase alpha-primase.  相似文献   
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We have isolated a full-length mouse cDNA encoding a lysine-rich protein of 1,131 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 126 kDa. The protein binds in a sequence-unspecific manner to DNA, is localized exclusively in the nucleus, and contains a putative ATP binding site and a stretch of 80 amino acids with homology to the carboxy terminus of prokaryotic DNA ligases. On the basis of the following facts, we conclude that the isolated cDNA encodes the 140-kDa subunit of mouse replication factor C (mRFC140). (i) The sequence around the ATP binding site shows significant homology to three small subunits of human replication factor C. (ii) Polyclonal antibodies raised against the protein encoded by this cDNA cross-react with the 140-kDa subunit of purified human replication factor C (hRFC140) and recognize in mouse cell extracts an authentic protein with an apparent molecular mass of 130 kDa. (iii) Sequence comparison with a human cDNA isolated by using tryptic peptide sequence information from purified hRFC140 revealed 83% identity of the encoded proteins. The mRFC140 gene is ubiquitously expressed, and two mRNAs approximately 5.0 and 4.5 kb long have been detected. The gene was mapped by in situ hybridization to mouse chromosome 5, and its human homolog was mapped to chromosome 4 (p13-p14).  相似文献   
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The accurate copying of genetic information in the double helix of DNA is essential for inheritance of traits that define the phenotype of cells and the organism. The core machineries that copy DNA are conserved in all three domains of life: bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. This article outlines the general nature of the DNA replication machinery, but also points out important and key differences. The most complex organisms, eukaryotes, have to coordinate the initiation of DNA replication from many origins in each genome and impose regulation that maintains genomic integrity, not only for the sake of each cell, but for the organism as a whole. In addition, DNA replication in eukaryotes needs to be coordinated with inheritance of chromatin, developmental patterning of tissues, and cell division to ensure that the genome replicates once per cell division cycle.The genetic information within the cells of our body is stored in the double helix of DNA, a long cylinderlike structure with a radius that is only 10 Å or one billionth of a meter but can be of considerable length. A single DNA molecule within a bacterium that grows in our gut flora is approximately 5 million base pairs in length and when stretched out, is about 1.6 mm in length, roughly the diameter of a pinhead. In contrast, the single DNA molecule in the largest human chromosome is 245,203,898 base pairs or about 8.33 cm long. The entire human genome, consisting of its 24 different chromosomes in a male is about 3 billion base pairs or 1 m long. Each cell in our body, with rare exceptions, contains two copies of the genome and thus 2 m of total DNA. Thus the scale and complexity of duplicating genomes is remarkable. For example, ∼2200 human cells can sit on the top of a 1.5 mm pinhead and when extracted and laid out in a line, the DNA from these cells would be ∼4.5 km (2.8 miles) long. In our body, about 500–700 million new blood cells are born every minute in the bone marrow (Doulatov et al. 2012), containing a total of about 1 million km of DNA, or enough DNA to wrap around the equator of the earth 25 times. Thus DNA replication is a serious business in our body, occurring from the time that a fertilized egg first begins duplicating DNA to yield the many trillions of cells that make up an adult body and continuing in all tissues of the adult body throughout our life. The amount of DNA duplicated in an entire human body represents an unimaginable amount of information transfer. Moreover, each round of duplication needs to be highly accurate, making one mistake in less than 100 million bases copied per cell division. How copying of the double helix occurs and how it is so highly accurate is the topic of this collection. Inevitably the processes of accurate copying of the genome can go awry, yielding mutations that affect our lives, and thus the collection outlines the disorders that accelerate human disease.However, the problem of copying DNA is much more complicated than indicated above. The 2 m of DNA in each human cell is wrapped up with histone proteins within the cell’s nucleus that is only about 5 μm wide, presenting a compaction in DNA length of about 2 million-fold. How can the copying process deal with the fact that the DNA is wrapped around proteins and scrunched into a volume that creates a spatial organization problem of enormous magnitude? Not only is the DNA copied, but the proteins associated with the DNA need to be duplicated, along with all the chemical modifications attached to DNA and histones that greatly influence developmental patterning of gene expression. The protein machineries that replicate DNA and duplicate proteins within the chromosomes are some of the most complex and intriguing machineries known. Furthermore, the regulations of the processes are some of the most complex because they need to ensure that each DNA molecule in each chromosome is copied once, and only once each time before a cell divides. Errors in the regulation of DNA replication lead to accelerated mutation rates, often associated with increased rates of cancer and other diseases.The process of accurately copying a genome can be broken down into various subprocesses that combine to provide efficient genome duplication. Central to the entire process is the machinery that actually copies the DNA with high fidelity, including proteins that start the entire process and the proteins that actually copy one helix to produce two. Superimposed on this fundamental process are mechanisms that detect and repair errors and damage to the DNA. Also associated with the DNA replication apparatus are the proteins that ensure that the histone proteins and their modifications in chromatin are inherited along with the DNA. Finally, other machineries cooperate with the DNA replication apparatus to ensure that the resulting two DNA molecules, the sister chromatids, are tethered together until the cell completes duplicating all of its DNA and segregates the sister chromatids evenly to the two daughter cells. Only by combining all of these processes can genetic inheritance ensure that each cell has a faithful copy of its parent’s genome.  相似文献   
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Absorption, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), and electrospray mass spectral (ESI-MS) data are reported for the heme binding NEAr iron Transporter (NEAT) domains of IsdA and IsdC, two proteins involved in heme scavenging by Staphylococcus aureus. The mass spectrometry data show that the NEAT domains are globular in structure and efficiently bind a single heme molecule. In this work, the IsdA NEAT domain is referred to as NEAT-A, the IsdC NEAT domain is referred to as NEAT-C, heme-free NEAT-C is NEAT-A and NEAT-C are inaccessible to small anionic ligands. Reduction of the high-spin Fe(III) heme iron to 5-coordinate high-spin Fe(II) in NEAT-A results in coordination by histidine and opens access, allowing for CO axial ligation, yielding 6-coordinate low-spin Fe(II) heme. In contrast, reduction of the high-spin Fe(III) heme iron to 5-coordinate high-spin Fe(II) in NEAT-C results in loss of the heme from the binding site of the protein due to the absence of a proximal histidine. The absorption and MCD data for NEAT-A closely match those previously reported for the whole IsdA protein, providing evidence that heme binding is primarily a property of the NEAT domain.  相似文献   
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Global warming is increasing the overheating risk for many organisms, though the potential for plasticity in thermal tolerance to mitigate this risk is largely unknown. In part, this shortcoming stems from a lack of knowledge about global and taxonomic patterns of variation in tolerance plasticity. To address this critical issue, we test leading hypotheses for broad-scale variation in ectotherm tolerance plasticity using a dataset that includes vertebrate and invertebrate taxa from terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats. Contrary to expectation, plasticity in heat tolerance was unrelated to latitude or thermal seasonality. However, plasticity in cold tolerance is associated with thermal seasonality in some habitat types. In addition, aquatic taxa have approximately twice the plasticity of terrestrial taxa. Based on the observed patterns of variation in tolerance plasticity, we propose that limited potential for behavioural plasticity (i.e. behavioural thermoregulation) favours the evolution of greater plasticity in physiological traits, consistent with the ‘Bogert effect’. Finally, we find that all ectotherms have relatively low acclimation in thermal tolerance and demonstrate that overheating risk will be minimally reduced by acclimation in even the most plastic groups. Our analysis indicates that behavioural and evolutionary mechanisms will be critical in allowing ectotherms to buffer themselves from extreme temperatures.  相似文献   
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