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931.
Changes in grazing management are believed to be responsible for declines in populations of birds breeding in grassland over the last decades. The relationships between grazing management regimes, vegetation structure and composition and the availability of invertebrate food resources to passerine birds remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the foraging site selection of meadow pipits (Anthus pratensis L.) breeding in high intensity sheep-grazed plots or low intensity mixed (i.e. sheep and cattle)-grazed plots. We sampled above-ground invertebrates, measured vegetation height and density and conducted a vegetation survey in areas where meadow pipits were observed to forage and areas that were randomly selected. Birds foraged in areas with a lower vegetation height and density and in areas containing a lower proportion of the dominant, tussock-forming grass species Molinia caerulea. They did not forage in areas with a total higher invertebrate biomass but at areas with preferred vegetation characteristics invertebrate biomass tended to be higher in foraging sites than random sites. The foraging distance of meadow pipits was higher in the intensively grazed plots. Our findings support the hypothesis that resource-independent factors such as food accessibility and forager mobility may determine patch selection and are of more importance as selection criteria than food abundance per se. Food accessibility seems to become an even more important selection criterion under high grazing intensity, where prey abundance and size decrease. In our upland grazing system, a low intensity, mixed grazing regime seems to provide a more suitable combination of sward height, plant diversity, structural heterogeneity and food supply for meadow pipit foraging activity compared to a more intensive grazing regime dominated by sheep.  相似文献   
932.
Campylobacter jejuni is one of the most common bacterial causes of human gastroenteritis, and recent findings suggest that turkeys are an important reservoir for this organism. In this study, 80 C. jejuni isolates from eastern North Carolina were characterized for resistance to nine antimicrobials, and strain types were determined by fla typing, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) with SmaI and KpnI, and (for 41 isolates) multilocus sequence typing (MLST). PFGE analysis suggested that many of the isolates (37/40 [ca. 93%]) in a major genomic cluster had DNA that was partially methylated at SmaI sites. Furthermore, 12/40 (30%) of the isolates in this cluster were completely resistant to digestion by KpnI, suggesting methylation at KpnI sites. MLST of 41 isolates identified 10 sequence types (STs), of which 4 were new. Three STs (ST-1839, ST-2132 and the new ST-2934) were predominant and were detected among isolates from different farms. The majority of the isolates (74%) were resistant to three or more antimicrobials, and resistance to ciprofloxacin was common (64%), whereas resistance to the other drug of choice for treatment of human campylobacteriosis, erythromycin, was never encountered. Most (33/34) of the kanamycin-resistant isolates were also resistant to tetracycline; however, only ca. 50% of the tetracycline-resistant isolates were also kanamycin resistant. Isolates with certain antimicrobial resistance profiles had identical or closely related strain types. Overall, the findings suggest dissemination of certain clonal groups of C. jejuni isolates in the turkey production industry of this region.  相似文献   
933.
We report recessive mutations in the gene for the latent transforming growth factor-β binding protein 4 (LTBP4) in four unrelated patients with a human syndrome disrupting pulmonary, gastrointestinal, urinary, musculoskeletal, craniofacial, and dermal development. All patients had severe respiratory distress, with cystic and atelectatic changes in the lungs complicated by tracheomalacia and diaphragmatic hernia. Three of the four patients died of respiratory failure. Cardiovascular lesions were mild, limited to pulmonary artery stenosis and patent foramen ovale. Gastrointestinal malformations included diverticulosis, enlargement, tortuosity, and stenosis at various levels of the intestinal tract. The urinary tract was affected by diverticulosis and hydronephrosis. Joint laxity and low muscle tone contributed to musculoskeletal problems compounded by postnatal growth delay. Craniofacial features included microretrognathia, flat midface, receding forehead, and wide fontanelles. All patients had cutis laxa. Four of the five identified LTBP4 mutations led to premature termination of translation and destabilization of the LTBP4 mRNA. Impaired synthesis and lack of deposition of LTBP4 into the extracellular matrix (ECM) caused increased transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) activity in cultured fibroblasts and defective elastic fiber assembly in all tissues affected by the disease. These molecular defects were associated with blocked alveolarization and airway collapse in the lung. Our results show that coupling of TGF-β signaling and ECM assembly is essential for proper development and is achieved in multiple human organ systems by multifunctional proteins such as LTBP4.  相似文献   
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936.
Amrinone is a bipyridine compound with characteristic effects on the force-velocity relationship of fast skeletal muscle, including a reduction in the maximum shortening velocity and increased maximum isometric force. Here we performed experiments to elucidate the molecular mechanisms for these effects, with the additional aim to gain insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying the force-velocity relationship. In vitro motility assays established that amrinone reduces the sliding velocity of heavy meromyosin-propelled actin filaments by 30% at different ionic strengths of the assay solution. Stopped-flow studies of myofibrils, heavy meromyosin and myosin subfragment 1, showed that the effects on sliding speed were not because of a reduced rate of ATP-induced actomyosin dissociation because the rate of this process was increased by amrinone. Moreover, optical tweezers studies could not detect any amrinone-induced changes in the working stroke length. In contrast, the ADP affinity of acto-heavy meromyosin was increased about 2-fold by 1 mm amrinone. Similar effects were not observed for acto-subfragment 1. Together with the other findings, this suggests that the amrinone-induced reduction in sliding velocity is attributed to inhibition of a strain-dependent ADP release step. Modeling results show that such an effect may account for the amrinone-induced changes of the force-velocity relationship. The data emphasize the importance of the rate of a strain-dependent ADP release step in influencing the maximum sliding velocity in fast skeletal muscle. The data also lead us to discuss the possible importance of cooperative interactions between the two myosin heads in muscle contraction.Muscle contraction, as well as several other aspects of cell motility, results from cyclic interactions between myosin II motors and actin filaments. These force-generating interactions are driven by the hydrolysis of ATP at the myosin active site as outlined in Scheme 1 (13). In the absence of actin, the Pi and ADP release steps (k4 and k5) are rate-limiting for the entire cycle at high (>12 °C) and low temperatures, respectively (46). In the presence of actin, the rate of Pi release increases significantly, and the overall cycle is accelerated more than 2 orders of magnitude. The sliding velocity of myosin-propelled motors is generally believed to be rate-limited by actomyosin dissociation (rate constant k5, k6, or k2 in Scheme 1) (7). Alternatively, some studies (8, 9) have suggested that the sliding velocity is determined by the fraction of myosin heads in the weak-binding states, AM4 ATP and AM ADP Pi. However, it is worth emphasizing that KT is very low under physiological conditions (1, 3) with low population of these states. For the same reason, the rate of dissociation of the AM complex is governed by K1 and k2.Open in a separate windowSCHEME 1.Simplified kinetics scheme for MgATP turnover by myosin (lower row) and actomyosin (upper row). Inorganic phosphate is denoted by Pi; MgATP is denoted by ATP, and MgADP is denoted by ADP; myosin is denoted by M. The states AM*ADP and AM ADP correspond to myosin heads with their nucleotide binding pocket in a partially closed and open conformation, respectively (7, 52). Rate constants are indicated by lowercase letters (rightward transitions, k2k5 and k2k5, or leftward transitions, k−2k−5 and k−2k−5) and equilibrium constants by uppercase letters (K1, K1, KT, K3, K3, K6, k6, and KDP). The equilibrium constants are association constants except for simple bimolecular reactions where they are defined as ki/ki.For the study of contractile mechanisms in both muscle and other types of cells, drugs may be useful as pharmacological tools affecting different transitions or states in the force-generating cycle. Whereas the use of drugs as tools may be less specific than site-directed mutagenesis, it also has advantages. The motor protein function may be studied in vivo, with maintained ordering of the protein components, e.g. as in the muscle sarcomere, allowing more insight into the relationship between specific molecular events and contractile properties of muscle. A drug that has been used quite extensively in this context is butanedione monoxime. The usefulness of this drug is based on firm characterization of its effect on actomyosin function on the molecular level (3, 1013). More recently other drugs, like N-benzyl-p-toluene sulfonamide (14, 15) and blebbistatin (16), have been found to affect myosin function, and their effects at the molecular level have also been elucidated in some detail (14, 15, 17, 18). Both these drugs appear to affect the actomyosin interaction in a similar way as butanedione monoxime by inhibiting a step before (or very early in) the myosin power stroke, leading to the inhibition of actomyosin cross-bridge formation and force production.In contrast to the reduced isometric force, caused by the above mentioned drugs, the bipyridine compound amrinone (Fig. 1A) has been found to increase the isometric force production of fast intact skeletal muscles of the frog (19, 20) and mouse (21) and also of fast (but much less slow) skinned muscle fibers of the rat (22). In all the fast myosin preparations, the effect of about 1 mm amrinone on isometric force was associated with characteristic changes of the force-velocity relationship (Fig. 1B), including a reduced maximum velocity of shortening (1922) and a reduced curvature of the force-velocity relationship (1922). The latter effect was accompanied (20, 21) by a less pronounced deviation of the force-velocity relationship from the hyperbolic shape (23) at high loads. There have been different interpretations of the drug effects. It has been proposed (2022) that amrinone might competitively inhibit the MgATP binding by myosin. However, more recently, results from in vitro motility assay experiments (24) challenged this idea. These results showed that amrinone reduces the sliding velocity (Vmax) at saturating MgATP concentrations but not at MgATP concentrations close to, or below, the Km value for the hyperbolic relationship between MgATP concentration and sliding velocity. Such a combination of effects is consistent with a reduced MgADP release rate (24) but not with competitive inhibition of substrate binding. However, effects of amrinone on the MgADP release rate have not been directly demonstrated. Additionally, in view of the uncertainty about what step actually determines the sliding velocity at saturating [MgATP] (see above and Refs. 79), it is of interest to consider other possible drug effects that could account for the data of Klinth et al. (24). These include the following: 1) an increased drag force, e.g. because of enhancement of weak actomyosin interactions; 2) a reduced step length; and 3) effects of the drug on the rate of MgATP-induced dissociation of actomyosin.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.A, structure of amrinone. B, experimental force-velocity data obtained in the presence (filled symbols) and absence (open symbols) of 1.1 mm amrinone. The data, from intact single frog muscle fibers, were obtained at 2 °C and fitted by Hill''s (42) hyperbola (lines) for data truncated at 80% of the maximum isometric force. Filled line, equation fitted to control data, a/P0* = 0.185; P0*/P0 = 1.196. Dashed line, amrinone, a/P0* = 0.347; P0*/P0 = 1.009. Force-velocity data were obtained in collaboration with Professor K. A. P. Edman. Same data as in Fig. 8 of Ref. 20. Note a decrease in maximum sliding velocity and curvature of the force-velocity relationship at low force, in response to amrinone. Also note that amrinone caused increased isometric force and a reduced deviation of the force-velocity relationship from the Hill''s hyperbola at high force. All changes of the force-velocity relationship were statistically significant (20), and similar changes were later also observed in intact mouse muscle and skinned rat muscle fibers. Data in Fig. 1 are published by agreement with Professor K. A. P. Edman.To differentiate between these hypotheses for the amrinone effects, and to gain more general insight into fundamental aspects of muscle function (e.g. mechanisms underlying the force-velocity relationship), we here study the molecular effects of amrinone on fast skeletal muscle myosin preparations in the presence and absence of actin.In vitro motility assay studies at different ionic strengths suggest that drag forces, caused by increased fraction of myosin heads in weak binding states, are not important for the effect of amrinone on sliding velocity. Likewise, optical tweezers studies showed no effect of the drug on the myosin step length. Finally, ideas that amrinone should reduce sliding velocity by reduced rate of MgATP-induced dissociation could be discarded because the drug actually increased the rate of this process. Instead, we found an amrinone-induced increase in the MgADP affinity of heavy meromyosin (HMM) in the presence of actin. Interestingly, similar effects of amrinone were not observed using myosin S1. As discussed below, this result and other results point to an amrinone-induced reduction in the rate of a strain-dependent MgADP release step. Simulations, using a model modified from that of Edman et al. (25), support this proposed mechanism of action. The results are discussed in relation to fundamental mechanisms underlying the force-velocity relationship of fast skeletal muscle, including which step determines shortening velocity and the possible importance of inter-head cooperativity.  相似文献   
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939.
Understanding the recovery dynamics of ecosystems presents a major challenge in the human-impacted tropics. We tested whether secondary forests follow equilibrium or non-equilibrium dynamics by evaluating community reassembly over time, across different successional stages, and among multiple life stages. Based on long-term and static data from six 1-ha plots in NE Costa Rica, we show that secondary forests are undergoing reassembly of canopy tree and palm species composition through the successful recruitment of seedlings, saplings, and young trees of mature forest species. Such patterns were observed over time within sites and across successional stages. Floristic reassembly in secondary forests showed a clear convergence with mature forest community composition, supporting an equilibrium model. This resilience stems from three key factors co-occurring locally: high abundance of generalist species in the regional flora, high levels of seed dispersal, and local presence of old-growth forest remnants.  相似文献   
940.

Background  

Snake venom toxins evolve more rapidly than other proteins through accelerated changes in the protein coding regions. Previously we have shown that accelerated segment switch in exons to alter targeting (ASSET) might play an important role in its functional evolution of viperid three-finger toxins. In this phenomenon, short sequences in exons are radically changed to unrelated sequences and hence affect the folding and functional properties of the toxins.  相似文献   
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