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81.
We have investigated the immunostimulatory activity of the medicinal plant Panax quinquefolius L. (North American ginseng). Rat alveolar macrophages were treated with different extracts from 4-year old roots, and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF) production was used as a measure of immunostimulatory activity. Aqueous extracts of P. quinquefolius root (1-100 microg/ml) were found to significantly stimulate alveolar macrophage TNF release. Both a P. quinquefolius methanol extract containing ginsenosides (but no polysaccharides), and pure ginsenoside-Rb1, the major ginsenoside present in P. quinquefolius, were found to be inactive as TNF-stimulating agents. Significant TNF-stimulating activity was found in the extractable polysaccharide fraction, which was hydrolyzed and found to contain glucose, galactose, arabinose, rhamnose, and mannose. This represents the first evidence that North American ginseng exerts cytokine-stimulating activity on macrophages.  相似文献   
82.
The activity of single neurons of the visual cortex in the initial state and upon presentation of a certain program of stimuli, which included a series of modality-specific (light flashes, continuous light) and nonspecific (clicks, tone) stimuli used separately and in combination, was recorded extracellularly by glass electrodes in unanesthetized and uncurarized white rats restrained in a stall. The responses of the neurons to flashes and clicks were analyzed by the poststimulus histogram method. The regular shifts of neuronal activity in response to light flashes (with a frequency of one per second) in the form of an increase or decrease of firing rate were noted not only during the first 150–200 msec (short-latent responses — SLR) but also later, after 700–800 msec (long-latent responses — LLR). The LLR differed from the SLR also by greater variability (decrease or increase upon repeating the stimuli) and by pronounced interaction with the modality-nonspecific stimuli, which had a weak effect on the SLR and by themselves very rarely evoked responses of the visual cortex neurons. The neuron could demonstrate several LLR with a different latent period. The independent nature of each LLR was indicated by the relative independence of its dynamics. All these data permit the consideration that one and the same neuron in one cycle of its activity can be included in different functional systems of the brain, which evidently provide direct reception of information arriving over specific sensory conductors and its subsequent processing. Therefore, neurons, which made up more than half of those investigated, can be regarded as polyfunctional.N. I. Grashchekov Laboratory of Problems of Controlling Functions in Man and Animals, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 242–250, May–June, 1970.  相似文献   
83.
Ultraviolet A (UVA; 320-400 nm) radiation in human skin fibroblasts induces a pattern of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation consisting of a rapid and transient induction of p38 and c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK) activity but not extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK). UVA activation of p38 can be inhibited by the singlet oxygen (1O2) quenchers azide and imidazole, but not by the hydroxyl radical scavengers mannitol or dimethylsulfoxide, pointing to the involvement of 1O2. The same effect has been shown for JNK. Like UVA, 1O2 generated intracellularly upon photoexcitation of Rose Bengal activates p38 and JNK but not ERK. p38 and JNK activation was also elicited by chemiexcitation for the intracellular generation of 1O2 by the lipophilic 1,4-endoperoxide of N,N'-di(2,3-dihydroxypropyl)-1, 4-naphthalene dipropionamide. In contrast, extracellular generation of 1O2, by irradiation of Rose Bengal immobilized on agarose beads or by chemiexcitation employing the hydrophilic 1,4-endoperoxide of disodium 3,3'-(1,4-naphthylidene) dipropionate, was ineffective in activating p38 or JNK. These data suggest that the activation of p38 and JNK by 1O2 occurs only when the electronically excited molecule is generated intracellularly.  相似文献   
84.
The widely distributed grass, Poa annua, is one of the most common alien species in the subantarctic islands. The historical events of its introduction remain generally unknown, as well as the evolutionary consequences of its colonisation in these remote environments. Populations from the Crozet archipelago and Kerguelen Islands were compared in terms of morphology, cytogenetics and enzyme polymorphism. Seeds from natural populations were also sown in an experimental garden in France to test phenotypic plasticity. This preliminary study demonstrated the high phenotypic plasticity in P. annua in the French subantarctic islands. This plasticity and allotetraploidy could be important factors which reinforce the colonising capacities of P. annua. Our results revealed the low genetic diversity of the populations analysed, which could be related to the founding effect or to the fragmentation of the populations. Accepted: 25 April 1999  相似文献   
85.
A non-adiabatic theory of Electron Transfer (ET), which improves the standard theory near the inversion point and becomes equivalent to it far from the inversion point, is presented. The complex amplitudes of the electronic wavefunctions at different sites are used as Kramers variables for describing the quantum tunneling of the electron in the deformable potential generated by its environment (nonadiabaticity) which is modeled as a harmonic classical thermal bath. After exact elimination of the bath, the effective electron dynamics is described by a discrete nonlinear Schrödinger equation with norm preserving dissipative terms and a Langevin random force, with a frequency cut-off, due to the thermalized phonons. This theory reveals the existence of a specially interesting marginal case when the linear and nonlinear coefficients of a two electronic states system are appropriately tuned for forming a Coherent Electron-Phonon Oscillator (CEPO). An electron injected on one of the electronic states of a CEPO generates large amplitude charge oscillations (even at zero temperature) associated with coherent phonon oscillations and electronic level oscillations. This fluctuating electronic level may resonate with a third site which captures the electron so that Ultrafast Electron Transfer (UFET) becomes possible. Numerical results are shown where two weakly interacting sites, a donor and a catalyst, form a CEPO that triggers an UFET to an acceptor. Without a catalytic site, a very large energy barrier prevents any direct ET. This UFET is shown to have many qualitative features similar to those observed in the primary charge separation in photosynthetic reaction centers. We suggest that more generally, CEPO could be a paradigm for understanding many selective chemical reactions involving electron transfer in biosystems.  相似文献   
86.
Coevolution in mutualistic symbiosis can yield, because the interacting partners share common interests, to coadaptation: hosts perform better when associated with symbionts of their own locality than with others coming from more distant places. However, as the two partners of a symbiosis might also experience conflicts over part of their life cycle, coadaptation might not occur for all life‐history traits. We investigated this issue in symbiotic systems where nematodes (Steinernema) and bacteria (Xenorhabdus) reproduce in insects they have both contributed to kill. Newborn infective juveniles (IJs) that carry bacteria in their intestine then disperse from the insect cadaver in search of a new host to infect. We ran experiments where nematodes coinfect insects with bacteria that differ from their native symbiont. In both Steinernema carpocapsae/Xenorhabdus nematophila and Steinernema feltiae/Xenorhabdus bovienii symbioses, we detected an overall specificity which favours the hypothesis of a fine‐tuned co‐adaptation process. However, we also found that the life‐history traits involved in specificity strongly differ between the two model systems: when associated with strains that differ too much from their native symbionts, S. carpocapsae has low parasitic success, whereas S. feltiae has low survival in dispersal stage.  相似文献   
87.
In this study, intact flagellin proteins were purified from strains of Clostridium difficile and analyzed using quadrupole time of flight and linear ion trap mass spectrometers. Top-down studies showed the flagellin proteins to have a mass greater than that predicted from the corresponding gene sequence. These top-down studies revealed marker ions characteristic of glycan modifications. Additionally, diversity in the observed masses of glycan modifications was seen between strains. Electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry was used to demonstrate that the glycan was attached to the flagellin protein backbone in O linkage via a HexNAc residue in all strains examined. Bioinformatic analysis of C. difficile genomes revealed diversity with respect to glycan biosynthesis gene content within the flagellar biosynthesis locus, likely reflected by the observed flagellar glycan diversity. In C. difficile strain 630, insertional inactivation of a glycosyltransferase gene (CD0240) present in all sequenced genomes resulted in an inability to produce flagellar filaments at the cell surface and only minor amounts of unmodified flagellin protein.Clostridium difficile, a gram-positive, anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium, is an emerging opportunistic pathogen and the leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis in humans. The recent emergence of the hypervirulent NAP1/027 strain in hospitals of North America has resulted in increased mortality rates (18, 19). While previous reports of C. difficile epidemics were restricted to single institutions or wards, more recently, there appears to be a wider distribution of outbreaks (20), accompanied by increasing severity of disease as well as a significant increase in the numbers of case fatalities reported (21). The pathogen is most frequently associated with antibiotic treatment, which disrupts the gut flora, allowing C. difficile to colonize and multiply (16). Extensive studies have demonstrated that two toxins, TcdA and TcdB, are responsible for severe tissue damage and consequent manifestation of disease (34). Infection with C. difficile can lead to severe diarrhea, abdominal pain, and further complications, such as pseudomembranous colitis, inflammation, and ulceration of the lining of the intestinal wall (5, 16). Importantly, recurrence rates following treatment can be as high as 35% irrespective of the drug used in initial treatment (10, 35). The estimated incidence in Canadian hospitals ranges from 38 to 95 cases per 100,000 patients (1), while in the United States, the estimated number of cases of C. difficile disease exceeds 250,000/year (36), with related health care costs of $1 billion annually (16). While prevention through antibiotic stewardship and optimal management of disease is the most obvious strategy currently used, there is a great need for alternate methods of treatment.Prior to the production and release of toxin, the organism must germinate from a recalcitrant spore form and proceed to colonize the gastrointestinal tract. This colonization process is an important first step in the disease process, whereby the organism penetrates the mucus layer and adheres to the underlying colonic epithelial cells, thereby facilitating the delivery of toxins to host cell receptors. Adhesion, an early critical step in colonization, involves a number of virulence factors, but the precise mechanisms by which bacteria adhere to the mucosa and initiate infection remain to be elucidated. Such adhesins include the flagellum (29) and the high-molecular-weight surface layer protein (6). C. difficile is known to express peritrichous flagella, and it has been observed that the level of adherence of flagellated strains to the mouse cecum is 10-fold higher than the level of adherence of nonflagellated strains (29).The flagellum plays a role in the ability of bacteria to adapt to their unique biological niches. Flagella from a wide range of bacteria have been shown to be important as both colonization and virulence factors, as well as critical to biofilm formation in many species (3, 37). In recent years, a rapidly increasing body of work has described the process of flagellar glycosylation in a diverse number of bacterial species (reviewed in reference 17). The diversity of glycan structures found on these organisms from unique environments points to a novel biological role for the respective glycans, which has yet to be revealed. In some cases, it has been demonstrated that the process of flagellar glycosylation has a role in both flagellar assembly and host-pathogen interactions (17). In Campylobacter spp., for example, in addition to being required for flagellar assembly, flagellar glycosylation plays a role in autoagglutination properties of cells and subsequent virulence and contributes to antigenic specificity (11). The sites of glycosylation of flagellin monomers from a diverse number of bacterial species have all been shown to reside within the two surface-exposed domains (denoted D2 and D3) of the flagellin monomer when assembled within the flagellar filament (22). Structural analysis of Salmonella enterica flagellin has revealed that these regions are surface exposed in the assembled filament and, hence, are well positioned to facilitate a myriad of extracellular interactions with either host cells or environmental substrates.Many of the studies of bacterial flagellar glycosylation have focused upon gram-negative organisms. Of the motile gram-positive bacteria, flagellin from Listeria monocytogenes has been shown to be glycosylated with β-O-linked GlcNAc at up to six sites/flagellin (23). The flagellins of Clostridium botulinum have also been reported to be glycosylated with legionaminic or hexuronic acid derivatives (32), and preliminary evidence for glycosylation of C. tyrobutyricum flagellin has been reported (4). However, a functional role for glycosylation has yet to be revealed for any of these organisms. It has been reported that purified C. difficile flagellin monomers from various strains migrate at a molecular weight greater than that predicted from the translated DNA sequence, but flagellin monomers showed no reactivity with standard glycan staining kits (31).In this study, we show that flagellins of C. difficile strain 630 as well as those from recent clinical isolates of C. difficile are modified with diverse O-linked glycan moieties. In addition, we have identified through mutagenesis a glycosyltransferase gene from the flagellar biosynthesis locus; it is involved in the glycosylation process and, upon inactivation, leads to loss of surface-associated flagellin protein.  相似文献   
88.
MfpAMt and QnrB4 are two newly characterized pentapeptide repeat proteins (PRPs) that interact with DNA gyrase. The mfpAMt gene is chromosome borne in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, while qnrB4 is plasmid borne in enterobacteria. We expressed and purified the two PRPs and compared their effects on DNA gyrase, taking into account host specificity, i.e., the effect of MfpAMt on M. tuberculosis gyrase and the effect of QnrB4 on Escherichia coli gyrase. Whereas QnrB4 inhibited E. coli gyrase activity only at concentrations higher than 30 μM, MfpAMt inhibited all catalytic reactions of the M. tuberculosis gyrase described for this enzyme (supercoiling, cleavage, relaxation, and decatenation) with a 50% inhibitory concentration of 2 μM. We showed that the D87 residue in GyrA has a major role in the MfpAMt-gyrase interaction, as D87H and D87G substitutions abolished MfpAMt inhibition of M. tuberculosis gyrase catalytic reactions, while A83S modification did not. Since MfpAMt and QnrB4 have been involved in resistance to fluoroquinolones, we measured the inhibition of the quinolone effect in the presence of each PRP. QnrB4 reversed quinolone inhibition of E. coli gyrase at 0.1 μM as described for other Qnr proteins, but MfpAMt did not modify M. tuberculosis gyrase inhibition by fluoroquinolones. Crossover experiments showed that MfpAMt also inhibited E. coli gyrase function, while QnrB4 did not reverse quinolone inhibition of M. tuberculosis gyrase. In conclusion, our in vitro experiments showed that MfpAMt and QnrB4 exhibit opposite effects on DNA gyrase and that these effects are protein and species specific.The pentapeptide repeat protein (PRP) family includes more than 500 proteins in the prokaryotic and eukaryotic kingdoms (45). PRPs are characterized by the repetition of the pentapeptide repeat motif [S,T,A,V][D,N][L,F][S,T,R][G] (6), which results in a right-handed β-helical structure (8, 17). The functions of the majority of the members of this large and heterogeneous family remain unknown, but three PRPs, McbG (from Escherichia coli), MfpAMt (from Mycobacterium tuberculosis), and Qnr (from Klebsiella pneumoniae and other enterobacteria) were reported to interact with DNA gyrase, at least with the E. coli enzyme (17, 33, 35, 44). McbG was shown to protect E. coli DNA gyrase from the toxic action of microcin B17 (33). Qnr and MfpAMt were involved in resistance to fluoroquinolones, which are synthetic antibacterial agents prescribed worldwide for the treatment of various infectious diseases, including tuberculosis (7).DNA gyrase is an essential ATP-dependent enzyme that transiently cleaves a segment of double-stranded DNA, passes another piece of DNA through the break, and reseals it (12). DNA gyrase is unique in catalyzing the negative supercoiling of DNA in order to facilitate the progression of RNA polymerase. Most eubacteria, such as E. coli, have two type II DNA topoisomerases, i.e., DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, but a few, such as M. tuberculosis, harbor only DNA gyrase (11).Quinolones target type II topoisomerases, and their activity is measured by the inhibition of supercoiling by gyrase or decatenation by topoisomerase IV and stabilization of complexes composed of topoisomerase covalently linked to cleaved DNA (16). The DNA gyrase active enzyme is a GyrA2GyrB2 heterotetramer. The quinolone-gyrase interaction site in gyrase is thought to be located at the so-called quinolone resistance-determining regions (QRDR) in the A subunit (amino acids 57 to 196 in GyrA) and the B subunit (amino acids 426 to 466 in GyrB), which contain the majority of mutations conferring quinolone resistance (19). The GyrB QRDR is thought to interact with the GyrA QRDR to form a drug-binding pocket (18). Resistance to quinolones is usually due to chromosomal mutations either in the structural genes encoding type II topoisomerases (QRDR) (19, 22) or in regulatory genes producing decreased cell wall permeability or enhancement of efflux pumps (36). The recent emergence of plasmid-borne resistance genes, such as qnr (9, 13, 31, 38, 46), aac(6′)-Ib-cr (32, 39) and qepA (34, 47), renewed interest in quinolone resistance, and especially interest in the new Qnr-based mechanism. Three qnr determinants have been identified so far: qnrA (variants A1 to A6), qnrB (variants B1 to B19), and qnrS (variants S1 and S2) (15, 21, 23, 27). Qnr confers a new mechanism of quinolone resistance by mediating DNA gyrase protection (42): in vitro, QnrA1 and QnrB1 protect E. coli DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV from the inhibitory effect of fluoroquinolones in a concentration-dependent manner (23, 42-44). Although Qnr was shown to bind GyrA and GyrB and compete with DNA binding, the consequences of Qnr binding for enzyme performance are not yet clear.mfpA, a chromosomal gene that encodes a 192-amino-acid PRP, is an intrinsic quinolone resistance determinant of Mycobacterium smegmatis (29). A similar gene, mfpAMt, was found in the M. tuberculosis genome, and MfpAMt shows 67% identity with MfpA. Recent crystallography analysis of MfpAMt showed that its atomic structure displays size, shape, and electrostatic similarity to B-form DNA, and MfpAMt has been suggested to interact with DNA gyrase via DNA mimicry (17). The effect of MfpAMt was studied by testing E. coli DNA gyrase, and MfpAMt showed catalytic inhibition (17, 37), but whether it protects gyrase from quinolones was not assessed. Because the structure and functions of the M. tuberculosis gyrase, as well as its interaction with quinolones, differ from those of the E. coli gyrase (2, 3, 20, 26, 28), we suspected that the PRP-topoisomerase interaction exhibits species specificity, i.e., depends on the proteins issued from the same host.Our objective was to compare the effects of MfpAMt and Qnr on their respective targets, i.e., the effect of MfpAMt on the M. tuberculosis gyrase and the effect of Qnr on the E. coli gyrase, by assessing (i) the catalytic reactions of the enzyme and (ii) the interaction with the DNA gyrase-DNA-fluoroquinolone ternary complex. Among the Qnr proteins, we selected the QnrB4 protein, which is a frequent variant of QnrB and has not yet been purified and studied. We cloned, expressed, and purified the two PRPs, MfpAMt and QnrB4, as recombinant His tag fusion proteins and assessed their functions under the same experimental conditions.  相似文献   
89.
90.
A novel MR-guided brain therapy device operating at 1 MHz has been designed and constructed. The system has been installed and tested in a clinical 1.5 T Philips Achieva MRI. Skull bone distortions induced on the ultrasonic beam are corrected using the concept of time reversal focusing. Prior to the treatment, a 3D CT scan of the patient head is performed and used as entry parameters for three-dimensional finite differences simulations that compute the propagation of the wave field through the human skull. The simulated phase distortions are then used as inputs for transcranial corrections. Temperature elevations during the treatment are imaged using MRI thermometry thus ensuring the control and safety of this therapeutic approach. First experiments are performed on four human cadavers and the promising results allow us to envision a first clinical investigation of this therapeutic approach in a near future. First targeted applications correspond to the non-invasive treatment of brain metastases and neurologic disorders such as the essential tremor.  相似文献   
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