0000000000450340

AUTHOR

Natalia Fraija-fernandez

showing 2 related works from this author

Echolocating Whales and Bats Express the Motor Protein Prestin in the Inner Ear: A Potential Marker for Hearing Loss.

2020

Prestin is an integral membrane motor protein located in outer hair cells of the mammalian cochlea. It is responsible for electromotility and required for cochlear amplification. Although prestin works in a cycle-by-cycle mode up to frequencies of at least 79 kHz, it is not known whether or not prestin is required for the extreme high frequencies used by echolocating species. Cetaceans are known to possess a prestin coding gene. However, the expression and distribution pattern of the protein in the cetacean cochlea has not been determined, and the contribution of prestin to echolocation has not yet been resolved. Here we report the expression of the protein prestin in five species of echolo…

inner earhair cells040301 veterinary sciencesHearing lossecholocationHuman echolocationbat0403 veterinary scienceMotor protein03 medical and health sciencesmedicineotorhinolaryngologic diseasesInner earprestin14. Life underwaterimmunofluorescencePrestinCochlea030304 developmental biologyOriginal Research0303 health scienceslcsh:Veterinary medicineGeneral Veterinarybiology04 agricultural and veterinary scienceswhalemedicine.diseaseCell biologynoise-induced hearing lossmedicine.anatomical_structurebiology.proteinlcsh:SF600-1100Veterinary Sciencesense organsmedicine.symptomTransduction (physiology)Noise-induced hearing lossFrontiers in veterinary science
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Japanese Society of Veterinary Science

2019

Synthesium elongatum (Brachycladiidae) is an intestinal digenean described from the finless porpoise (Neophocaena asiaeorientalis) in Japan. Few records of this species exist and there is a remarkable morphological similarity between S. elongatum and S. tursionis, such that a synonymy between the species has been suggested previously. However, no morphological and/or molecular analysis has been carried out to clarify the taxonomic status of S. elongatum. In this study, we collected specimens of Synthesium sp. from N. asiaeorientalis in western Japan. The specimens possess lobed testes within the third quarter of the body, a round ovary, and vitellaria extending to level of uterine field,whi…

MaleFull PaperWildlife SciencePorpoisesSequence Analysis DNAIntestinesSynthesium tursionisJapanSpecies SpecificityAnimalsFemaleTrematodaSynthesium elongatumBrachycladiidaePhylogenyJournal of Veterinary Medical Science
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