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51.
Xylobolus frustulatus caused a distinct pocket rot in decorticated oak. Polymerization products appeared to accumulate in advance of delignified wood to form barriers to decay. Medullary ray parenchyma and earlywood vessels were not readily degraded and remained between pockets of decay. Chemical analyses indicated that 97% lignin, 96% xylose, and 69% mannose were removed from pockets of wood during incipient decay. Although 53% of the cellulose was removed from these areas, the remaining white tissues were composed of relatively pure cellulose. Hyphae became abundant as the released cellulose was subsequently removed. In the most advanced stages of decay, hyphae were absent from pockets, and only a sparse lining of crystals, found to contain a high concentration of calcium, remained.  相似文献   
52.

Background  

Movement of cells, either as amoeboid individuals or in organised groups, is a key feature of organ formation. Both modes of migration occur during Drosophila embryonic gonad development, which therefore provides a paradigm for understanding the contribution of these processes to organ morphogenesis. Gonads of Drosophila are formed from three distinct cell types: primordial germ cells (PGCs), somatic gonadal precursors (SGPs), and in males, male-specific somatic gonadal precursors (msSGPs). These originate in distinct locations and migrate to associate in two intermingled clusters which then compact to form the spherical primitive gonads. PGC movements are well studied, but much less is known of the migratory events and other interactions undergone by their somatic partners. These appear to move in organised groups like, for example, lateral line cells in zebra fish or Drosophila ovarian border cells.  相似文献   
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Given a multiple alignment of orthologous DNA sequences and a phylogenetic tree for these sequences, we investigate the problem of reconstructing a most parsimonious scenario of insertions and deletions capable of explaining the gaps observed in the alignment. This problem, called the Indel Parsimony Problem, is a crucial component of the problem of ancestral genome reconstruction, and its solution provides valuable information to many genome functional annotation approaches. We first show that the problem is NP-complete. Second, we provide an algorithm, based on the fractional relaxation of an integer linear programming formulation. The algorithm is fast in practice, and the solutions it produces are, in most cases, provably optimal. We describe a divide-and-conquer approach that makes it possible to solve very large instances on a simple desktop machine, while retaining guaranteed optimality. Our algorithms are tested and shown efficient and accurate on a set of 1.8 Mb mammalian orthologous sequences in the CFTR region.  相似文献   
56.
The human adenovirus E4orf6 and E1B55K proteins promote viral replication by targeting several cellular proteins for degradation. The E4orf6 product has been shown by our group and others to form an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex that contains elongins B and C and cullin family member Cul5. E1B55K associates with this complex, where it is believed to function primarily to introduce bound substrates for degradation via proteasomes. In addition to p53, its first known substrate, the E4orf6/E1B 55-kDa complex (E4orf6/E1B55K) was shown to promote the degradation of Mre11 and DNA ligase IV; however, additional substrates are believed to exist. This notion is strengthened by the fact that none of these substrates seems likely to be associated with additional functions shown to be mediated by the E4orf6-associated E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, including export of late viral mRNAs and blockage of export of the bulk cellular mRNAs from the nucleus. In an attempt to identify new E4orf6/E1B55K substrates, we undertook a proteomic screen using human p53-null, non-small-cell lung carcinoma H1299 cells expressing either E4orf6 protein alone or in combination with E1B55K through infection by appropriate adenovirus vectors. One cellular protein that appeared to be degraded by E1B55K in combination with the E4orf6 protein was a species of molecular mass ∼130 kDa that was identified as the integrin α3 subunit (i.e., very late activation antigen 3 alpha subunit). Preliminary analyses suggested that degradation of α3 may play a role in promoting release and spread of progeny virions.Viruses are well known to promote replication by inhibiting or enhancing endogenous cellular machinery or, in some cases, by reprogramming key cellular pathways. Human adenoviruses have developed effective ways to modulate the immune response, apoptosis, double-strand break repair, mRNA export, and translation to optimize virus replication and the spreading of progeny virions. The expression of adenovirus E1A proteins stabilizes p53 and induces apoptosis (8, 33); however, this effect is reversed in infected cells by the action of two early products: the E1B 55-kDa (E1B55K) and E4orf6 proteins (35, 36). We and others have shown that these proteins act through the formation of an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex analogous to the SCF and VBC complexes but which contains, in addition to elongins B and C and the RING protein Rbx1, the cullin family member Cul5 (18, 41, 43). This E4orf6-mediated E3 ligase complex blocks p53-induced apoptosis (35, 36) by promoting the ubiquitination of p53, followed by its degradation by proteasomes (41, 43). E4orf6 protein mediates the assembly of the complex by its interaction with elongin C through its three BC boxes (11, 41, 43). E1B55K, which appears to associate with the E4orf6 protein only when present in the ligase complex (4), is thought to function as a substrate recognition factor that brings substrates to the complex because, although both E4orf6 and E1B55K bind p53 independently, interaction of E1B55K with p53 is essential for the efficient degradation of p53 (41, 48). In addition to protecting infected cells from early lysis via p53-induced apoptosis, the E4orf6/E1B55K ligase complex performs other functions essential for virus replication. Two other substrates of the complex have been identified: a member of the MRN DNA repair complex, Mre11, and the central component of the nonhomologous end-joining DNA repair system, DNA ligase IV (2, 56). Degradation of both of these proteins prevents viral genome concatenation, which interferes with the packaging of viral DNA into virions (2, 56). E1B55K binds to p53, Mre11, and DNA ligase IV and has been demonstrated to colocalize with p53 and Mre11 in perinuclear cytoplasmic bodies termed aggresomes (1, 2, 32). More recently, we and others have obtained results that suggest that the E4orf6-associated E3 ligase complex regulates viral and cellular mRNA export (5, 66). The Cul5-based ligase activity was shown to be essential for selective viral mRNA export and the block of cellular mRNA export from the nucleus (66), thus contributing to the shutoff of cellular protein synthesis initiated by L4-100K (20). The actual substrates of the complex responsible for regulating mRNA export are currently unknown.As discussed in detail below, our efforts to identify substrates of the E4orf6/E1B55K complex led us to consider a member of the integrin family as a potential substrate. Integrins are members of a family of surface receptors that function in several ways through the formation of cell-extracellular matrices and cell-cell interactions (reviewed in references 21, 26, and 63). Integrins are typically composed of two transmembrane glycoproteins forming heterodimers of α and β subunits each of approximately 80 to 150 kDa. There are at least 18 α subunits and 8 β subunits in mammals that can dimerize in limited combinations to form more than 20 functionally distinct integrins with different ligand specificities. Integrin heterodimers function as transmembrane receptors that link external factors to intracellular signaling pathways. In addition to roles in cell adhesion, these communication events are implicated in a large range of cellular processes, including proliferation, differentiation, translation, migration, and apoptosis. Some of these processes depend on the intracellular trafficking pathways of the integrins (reviewed in references 9, 24, 40, and 44), including the long-loop recycling pathway in which integrins present in clathrin-coated endosomes move first to the perinuclear recycling center, where some accumulate, including the β1 integrin subunit (31), before returning to the plasma membrane. The integrin α3β1 is a member of the β1 integrin subfamily in which the α3 subunit (VLA-3a) is coupled to the β1 subunit to form the very late activation antigen (VLA-3 or CD49c) (21, 59, 60). α3β1 is expressed in a wide range of tissues in which it binds a variety of extracellular matrix substrates, including fibronectin, collagen, thrombospondin 1, and laminins 1, 5, 8, 10, and 11 (13). These associations allow the integrin α3β1 to fill its primary role in cell adhesion. α3β1 also participates in intercellular adhesion through several protein-protein interactions (10, 27, 53, 55, 58), making it a major contributor in the regulation of cellular adhesion.Human adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) particles interact with cell surface receptors to facilitate internalization into target cells. In the high-affinity interacting model (reviewed in reference 29), the viral fiber knob polypeptide binds the coxsackie adenovirus receptor (CAR) protein on the surface of cells as the primary cell binding event (primary receptor). The penton base polypeptide then binds a cell surface integrin (secondary receptor), leading to entry of the capsid into the cell by a process termed receptor-mediated endocytosis or clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Several types of integrins have been identified as being used by Ad5 to mediate virus internalization: αMβ1, αMβ2, αVβ1, αVβ3, αVβ5, and α5β1 (22, 30, 49, 65). Salone et al. have shown that α3β1 serves as an alternative cellular receptor for adenovirus serotype 5 (49). It promotes entry of the virus into cells, transduction of DNA, and mediates adenovirus infection in both CAR-positive and CAR-negative cell lines. Thus, in addition to functions related to cell adhesion, integrin α3β1 plays an important role in the adenovirus infection cycle.To identify new targets for degradation by the E4orf6/E1B55K ubiquitin ligase, we used a proteomic screen covering most cellular proteins to look for any polypeptide that exhibited a significant decrease in amount following the coexpression from appropriate adenovirus vectors of the E4orf6 protein and E1B55K. This screen revealed several interesting candidates, including integrin α3, a species of 130 kDa that also was found to be reduced in wild-type (wt) virus infection. The degradation of α3 was seen to be dependent on the Cul5-based ligase complex driven by E4orf6 and E1B55K. We also found evidence that the E4orf6/E1B55K ligase complex appears to be involved in cell detachment from the extracellular matrix, a function that could play a role in virus spread.  相似文献   
57.

Background

Phagocytosis has been extensively examined in ‘professional’ phagocytic cells using pH sensitive dyes. However, in many of the previous studies, a separation between the end of internalization, beginning of acidification and completion of phagosomal-endosomal/lysosomal fusion was not clearly established. In addition, very little work has been done to systematically examine phagosomal maturation in ‘non-professional’ phagocytic cells. Therefore, in this study, we developed a simple method to measure and decouple particle internalization, phagosomal acidification and phagosomal-endosomal/lysosomal fusion in Madin-Darby Canine Kidney (MDCK) and Caco-2 epithelial cells.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Our method was developed using a pathogen mimetic system consisting of polystyrene beads coated with Internalin A (InlA), a membrane surface protein from Listeria monocytogenes known to trigger receptor-mediated phagocytosis. We were able to independently measure the rates of internalization, phagosomal acidification and phagosomal-endosomal/lysosomal fusion in epithelial cells by combining the InlA-coated beads (InlA-beads) with antibody quenching, a pH sensitive dye and an endosomal/lysosomal dye. By performing these independent measurements under identical experimental conditions, we were able to decouple the three processes and establish time scales for each. In a separate set of experiments, we exploited the phagosomal acidification process to demonstrate an additional, real-time method for tracking bead binding, internalization and phagosomal acidification.

Conclusions/Significance

Using this method, we found that the time scales for internalization, phagosomal acidification and phagosomal-endosomal/lysosomal fusion ranged from 23–32 min, 3–4 min and 74–120 min, respectively, for MDCK and Caco-2 epithelial cells. Both the static and real-time methods developed here are expected to be readily and broadly applicable, as they simply require fluorophore conjugation to a particle of interest, such as a pathogen or mimetic, in combination with common cell labeling dyes. As such, these methods hold promise for future measurements of receptor-mediated internalization in other cell systems, e.g. pathogen-host systems.  相似文献   
58.

Background  

Despite the prevalence and biological relevance of both signaling pathways and alternative pre-mRNA splicing, our knowledge of how intracellular signaling impacts on alternative splicing regulation remains fragmentary. We report a genome-wide analysis using splicing-sensitive microarrays of changes in alternative splicing induced by activation of two distinct signaling pathways, insulin and wingless, in Drosophila cells in culture.  相似文献   
59.
60.
Smith JA  Blanchette RA  Newcombe G 《Mycologia》2004,96(6):1330-1338
Current taxonomy places all rust fungi that occur on willow (Salix spp.) in North America in one species complex, Melampsora epitea Thüm. Characteristics of M. epitea isolates from the Canadian arctic were compared to M. epitea isolates from temperate regions of North America. Sequences from internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of rDNA were obtained from urediniospores from rust-infected Salix leaves collected in the Canadian arctic and in Minnesota and compared. Phylogenetic analysis of nuclear ribosomal ITS regions indicated that arctic M. epitea samples were divergent from temperate M. epitea isolates, perhaps in part because all rusts examined diverged according to host species. Four urediniospore characteristics were examined: area, circularity (shape factor), major axis length and spine density. Statistically significant (P < 0.05) differences were observed for spine density among all host species except S. nigra and S. bebbiana. However major axis length differed between these species. These results represent the first evidence that arctic and temperate Melampsora species on Salix hosts in North America have evolved distinct molecular and morphological characters.  相似文献   
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