Search results for " Toxins"

showing 10 items of 330 documents

Variability in the cadherin gene in an Ostrinia nubilalis strain selected for Cry1Ab resistance

2008

Transgenic corn expressing Cry1Ab (a Bacillus thuringiensis toxin) is highly effective in the control of Ostrinia nubilalis. For its toxic action, Cry1Ab has to bind to specific insect midgut proteins. To date, in three Lepidoptera species resistance to a Cry1A toxin has been conferred by mutations in cadherin, a protein of the Lepidoptera midgut membrane. The implication of cadherin in the resistance of an Ostrinia nubilalis colony (Europe-R) selected with Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Ab protoxin was investigated. Several major mutations in the cadherin (cdh) gene were found, which introduced premature termination codons and/or large deletions (ranging from 1383 to 1701bp). The contribution …

MutantDrug ResistanceGenetically modified cropsMothsBiologyBiochemistryOstriniaHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensisBotanyGenetic variationAnimalsMolecular BiologyGeneGeneticsPolymorphism GeneticBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsCadherinfungiGenetic Variationfood and beveragesMidgutCadherinsbiology.organism_classificationEndotoxinsInsect ScienceMutationInsect ProteinsInsect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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Impact of Minimally Invasive Surgery in the Spectrum of Current Achalasia Treatment Options

2011

Minimally invasive Heller myotomy has evolved the “gold standard” procedure for achalasia in the spectrum of current treatment options. The laparoscopic technique has proved superior to the thoracoscopic approach due to improved visualization of the esophagogastric junction. Operative controversies most recently include the length of the myotomy, especially of its fundic part, with respect to the balance between postoperative persistent dysphagia and development of gastroesophageal reflux, as well as the type of the added antireflux procedure. Perioperative mortality should approach 0%, and favorable long-term results can be achieved in > 90%.

Myotomymedicine.medical_specialtyBotulinum Toxinsmedicine.medical_treatmentAchalasiaCatheterizationPostoperative Complicationsotorhinolaryngologic diseasesHumansMinimally Invasive Surgical ProceduresMedicineEsophagogastric junctionIntraoperative ComplicationsHeller myotomyAnti-Dyskinesia Agentsbusiness.industryThoracoscopyGold standardTreatment optionsRoboticsmedicine.diseaseDysphagiadigestive system diseasesSurgeryEsophageal AchalasiaInvasive surgeryQuality of LifeLaparoscopySurgeryEsophagoscopymedicine.symptombusinessScandinavian Journal of Surgery
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Differences in the temperature dependencies of uptake of botulinum and tetanus toxins in Aplysia neurons

1992

The respective neuroselective actions of botulinum type A (BoNT) and tetanus (TeTx) neurotoxins on cholinergic and non-cholinergic synapses of Aplysia are mainly due to differences in their extracellular neuronal targetting. Further information was gained on this neuroselectivity by examining the temperature dependencies of binding, internalization and intracellular action of both toxins. After reduction of temperature from 22 degrees C to 10 degrees C, the binding of neither BoNT nor TeTx was significantly altered whereas the neuronal uptake of BoNT, but not of TeTx, was prevented. Although TeTx internalization could be detected at the low temperature, its intracellular activity was greatl…

NeuronsBotulinum ToxinsGeneral Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectTemperatureBiologybiology.organism_classificationAcetylcholineSynapseTetanus ToxinAplysiaAplysiamedicineExtracellularBiophysicsAnimalsNeurotoxinCholinergicInternalizationNeuroscienceAcetylcholineIntracellularmedia_commonmedicine.drugNeuroscience Letters
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Cycloamphilectenes, a new type of potent marine diterpenes: inhibition of nitric oxide production in murine macrophages.

2003

The inhibitory effect of a series of 6 cycloamphilectenes, novel marine diterpenes based on amphilectene skeletons and isolated from the Vanuatu sponge Axinella sp., on NO, PGE(2) and TNFalpha production in murine peritoneal macrophages was studied. These compounds reduced potently nitric oxide production in a concentration-dependent manner with IC(50) values in the submicromolar range (0.1-4.3 microM). Studies on intact cells and Western blot analysis showed that the more potent cycloamphilectenes reduced the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase without affecting cyclo-oxygenase-2 expression. Among them cycloamphilectene 2, the unique compound bearing an exocyclic methylene group,…

NeutrophilsBlotting WesternNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIElectrophoretic Mobility Shift AssayIn Vitro TechniquesNitric OxideGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyDinoprostoneNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundMiceStructure-Activity RelationshipWestern blotmedicineAnimalsEdemaHumansGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and PharmaceuticsMethylenebiologymedicine.diagnostic_testPancreatic ElastaseTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaMacrophagesZymosanAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-SteroidalAxinellaNF-kappa BMembrane ProteinsGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPoriferaNitric oxide synthaseIsoenzymesSpongechemistryBiochemistryCyclooxygenase 2Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthasesbiology.proteinMacrophages PeritonealTumor necrosis factor alphaFemaleMarine ToxinsDiterpenesNitric Oxide SynthaseLife sciences
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Simultaneous analysis of twenty-six mycotoxins in durum wheat grain from Italy

2016

Abstract A multi-mycotoxin analysis method based on liquid chromatography coupled to triple quadrupole mass spectrometry was validated and applied for the determination of twenty-six mycotoxins, including eight trichothecenes, three fumonisins, sterigmatocystin, ochratoxin A, four aflatoxins, zearalenone, five “emerging” mycotoxins and three Alternaria mycotoxins in 74 durum wheat samples from central Italy. Eighty-eight percent of the analysed samples contained one or more mycotoxins, with enniatin B showing the highest contamination levels (78% of samples with levels ranging from 23 to 1826 ng/g), followed by enniatin B1 (10–1384 ng/g) and deoxynivalenol (48–2267 ng/g). This work gives an…

Ochratoxin AFusariumAflatoxinCereals; Fusarium; toxins; Co-occurrence; Liquid chromatography-massspectrometry; ValidationCereals01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyFusariumValidationCo-occurrenceFood scienceMycotoxinZearalenonebiology010401 analytical chemistrytoxins04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAlternariabiology.organism_classification040401 food science0104 chemical scienceschemistryAgronomyLiquid chromatography-massspectrometryEnniatinFood ScienceBiotechnologySterigmatocystinFood Control
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Potential Health Risk Associated with Mycotoxins in Oat Grains Consumed in Spain

2021

Spain is a relevant producer of oats (Avena sativa), but to date there has been no study on the occurrence/co-occurrence of mycotoxins in oats marketed in Spain. The present study is addressed to overcome this lack of knowledge. One hundred oat kernel samples were acquired across different Spanish geographic regions during the years 2015–2019 and analyzed for mycotoxin content using an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC–ESI–MS/MS) method and matrix-matched calibration. The focus was on the regulated mycotoxins although other relevant mycotoxins were considered. The percentage of incidence (levels ≥ limit of detection), mean an…

Ochratoxin AaflatoxinsAflatoxinfood.ingredientAvenaHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisdeoxynivalenolFood ContaminationBiologyToxicologymedicine.disease_causeRisk AssessmentAliments Microbiologia01 natural sciencesArticlechemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyfoodmycotoxinsco-occurrencemedicineHumansFood scienceMycotoxinZearalenoneoatsFumonisin B2Fumonisin B1Toxinzearalenone010401 analytical chemistryRAliments Toxicologia04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesHT-2 and T-2 toxins040401 food science0104 chemical sciencesfood safetyAvenachemistryUPLC-MS/MSMedicineEdible GrainEnvironmental MonitoringToxins
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Pathogenesis of Sepsis Syndrome: Possible Relevance of Pore-Forming Bacterial Toxins

1996

This review focuses on a group of bacterial products whose very existence is known to only a minority of clinicians, and whose potential significance as inducers of the sepsis syndrome has eluded the attention of most microbiologists. This is unfortunate because pore-forming bacterial toxins possess all the properties for contributing to the pathogenesis of local and systemic inflammatory reactions. Because pore formers generally are highly immunogenic proteins, the prospects for immune intervention are described that may eventually be of benefit to patients. The subject is therefore of interest not only from a theoretical but also from a practical point of view.

PathogenesisMicrobial toxinsImmune interventionImmunologySepsis syndromemedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causeExotoxin
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Novel Analogs and Stereoisomers of the Marine Toxin Neodysiherbaine with Specificity for Kainate Receptors

2007

Antagonists for kainate receptors (KARs), a family of glutamategated ion channels, are efficacious in a number of animal models of neuropathologies, including epilepsy, migraine pain, and anxiety. To produce molecules with novel selectivities for kainate receptors, we generated three sets of analogs related to the natural marine convulsant neodysiherbaine (neoDH), and we characterized their pharmacological profiles. Radioligand displacement assays with recombinant alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) and KARs demonstrated that functional groups at two positions on the neoDH molecule are critical pharmacological determinants; only binding to the glutamate receptor …

PharmacologyAgonistAlaninemedicine.drug_classChemistryProtein subunitStereoisomerismKainate receptorAMPA receptorBridged Bicyclo Compounds HeterocyclicLigand (biochemistry)ArticleCell LineReceptors Kainic AcidBiochemistryConvulsantmedicineHumansMolecular MedicineMarine ToxinsReceptorMarine toxinJournal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Tyrosine-phosphorylation-dependent and Rho-protein-mediated control of cellular phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate levels

1998

The polyphosphoinositide PtdIns(4,5)P2, best known as a substrate for phospholipase C isozymes, has recently been recognized to be involved in a variety of other cellular processes. The aim of this study was to examine whether the cellular levels of this versatile phospholipid are controlled by tyrosine phosphorylation. The studies were performed in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells stably expressing the M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor. Inhibition of tyrosine phosphatases by pervanadate induced an up-to-approx.-2.5-fold increase in the total cellular level of PtdIns(4,5)P2, which was both time- and concentration-dependent. In contrast, the tyrosine kinase inhibitors, genistein and…

Phosphatidylinositol 45-DiphosphateBacterial ToxinsBiologyBiochemistryCell LineGTP Phosphohydrolaseschemistry.chemical_compoundEnzyme activatorBacterial ProteinsGTP-Binding ProteinsPhospholipase DHumansPhosphorylationTyrosinerhoB GTP-Binding ProteinMolecular BiologyPhospholipase CADP-Ribosylation FactorsClostridioides difficilePhospholipase DMembrane ProteinsTyrosine phosphorylationCell BiologyTyrphostinsGenisteinCell biologyEnzyme ActivationBiochemistryPhosphatidylinositol 45-bisphosphatechemistryTyrosinePhosphorylationVanadatesTyrosine kinaseResearch ArticleBiochemical Journal
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A role for Rho in receptor- and G protein-stimulated phospholipase C Reduction in phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate by Clostridium difficile toxi…

1996

Receptors coupled to heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins) activate phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns(4,5)P2)-hydrolyzing phospholipase C (PLC) enzymes by activated alpha of free beta gamma subunits of the relevant G proteins. To study whether low molecular weight G proteins of the Rho family are involved in receptor signaling to PLC, we examined the effect of Clostridium difficile toxin B, which glucosylates and thereby inactivates Rho proteins, on the regulation of PLC activity in human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells stably expressing the m3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) subtype. Toxin B treatment of HEK cells did not affect basal PLC activi…

Phosphatidylinositol 45-DiphosphateBotulinum ToxinsG proteinBacterial ToxinsClostridium difficile toxin AClostridium difficile toxin BBiologychemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsGTP-Binding ProteinsHeterotrimeric G proteinHumansPhosphatidylinositolCells CulturedADP Ribose TransferasesPharmacologyPhospholipase CHEK 293 cellsGeneral MedicineReceptors MuscarinicMolecular biologyCell biologychemistryPhosphatidylinositol 45-bisphosphateType C PhospholipasesrhoA GTP-Binding ProteinNaunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology
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