排序方式: 共有23条查询结果,搜索用时 4 毫秒
21.
In an appropriate ionic environment, the resting potential of canine cardiac purkinje fibers may have either of two value. By changing the external K concentration, [K](0), in small steps, it was shown that, in the low (1 mM) Cl, Na-containing solutions used in this study, the two levels of resting potential could be obtained only within a narrow range of [K](0) values; that range was usually found between 1 and 4 mM. Within the critical [K](0) range the resting potential could be shifted from either level to the other by the application of small current pulses. It was shown that under these conditions the steady-state current- voltage relationship was “N-shaped,” and that a region of both negative slope, and negative chord conductance lay between the two stable zero-current potentials. The negative chord conductance was largely due to inward sodium current, only part of which was sensitive to tetrodotoxin (TTX). Under appropriate conditions, the negative chord conductance could be abolished by several experimental interventions and the membrane potential thereby shifted from the lower to the higher resting level: those interventions which were effective by presumably diminishing the steady-state inward current included reducing the external sodium concentration, adding TTX, or adding lidocaine; those which presumably increased the steady-state outward current included small increases in [K](0), brief depolarizations to around -20 mV, or the addition of acetylcholine chloride. 相似文献
22.
Monolayer cell cultures derived from B/C mouse embryos were examined for the ability to repair ultraviolet light-induced DNA damage (50–250 erg/mm2) during in vitro aging and subsequent alteration to a continuous cell line. Excision repair was measured by incubating the cultures with [3H]TdR and measuring DNA specific activity, and by performing quantitative autoradiography. DNA repair capacity declined during in vitro aging, and the level of repair correlated with the fraction of cells which retained the capacity to undergo scheduled DNA synthesis. This result indicates that mouse cells aged in vitro undergo a decline in their ability to repair UV-induced DNA damage comparable to that seen in cultured human fibroblasts. In cultures which spontaneously altered into continuously proliferating cell lines, DNA repair capacity increased to high levels, as did the fraction of cells capable of initiating scheduled DNA synthesis. 相似文献
23.
ALFRED KÖPF NATHAN RANK HEIKKI ROININEN & JORMA TAHVANAINEN 《Ecological Entomology》1997,22(2):176-183
1. Noxious larval secretions of leaf beetles, which repel generalist predators, do not deter specialist syrphid fly predators (genus Parasyrphus ). These flies cause considerable mortality to the beetles, but little is known about their foraging behaviour.
2. Larvae of Parasyrphus nigritarsis were attracted to the volatile larval secretions produced by two prey species Phratora vitellinae and Linaeidea aenea. Parasyrphus nigritarsis feeds on both beetles in nature. Phratora vitellinae feeds on willows and utilizes host plant compounds for secretion production, while the alder-feeding L. aenea produces an autogenous secretion.
3. Fly larvae were strongly attracted to pieces of filter paper treated with larval secretion of the beetles. They attempted to feed on them for up to 7 min, and were equally attracted to the secretions of Ph. vitellinae and L. aenea . Fly larvae were also attracted to pure salicyl aldehyde, the main component of the secretion of Ph. vitellinae .
4. Fly larvae searched extensively for prey on leaves that had been damaged by beetle larvae. They also followed trails made with solutions containing faecal matter of prey larvae. They showed no differential preference for Ph. vitellinae or L. aenea , but always rejected larvae of the non-prey leaf beetle Agelastica alni .
5. Beetle secretions thus play an important, but unexpected, role in the feeding behaviour of P. nigritarsis . This predator uses the beetle secretion to locate its prey. The implications of these results for three trophic level interactions are discussed. 相似文献
2. Larvae of Parasyrphus nigritarsis were attracted to the volatile larval secretions produced by two prey species Phratora vitellinae and Linaeidea aenea. Parasyrphus nigritarsis feeds on both beetles in nature. Phratora vitellinae feeds on willows and utilizes host plant compounds for secretion production, while the alder-feeding L. aenea produces an autogenous secretion.
3. Fly larvae were strongly attracted to pieces of filter paper treated with larval secretion of the beetles. They attempted to feed on them for up to 7 min, and were equally attracted to the secretions of Ph. vitellinae and L. aenea . Fly larvae were also attracted to pure salicyl aldehyde, the main component of the secretion of Ph. vitellinae .
4. Fly larvae searched extensively for prey on leaves that had been damaged by beetle larvae. They also followed trails made with solutions containing faecal matter of prey larvae. They showed no differential preference for Ph. vitellinae or L. aenea , but always rejected larvae of the non-prey leaf beetle Agelastica alni .
5. Beetle secretions thus play an important, but unexpected, role in the feeding behaviour of P. nigritarsis . This predator uses the beetle secretion to locate its prey. The implications of these results for three trophic level interactions are discussed. 相似文献