Search results for "Apparatu"

showing 10 items of 195 documents

Dynamic changes of the microtubule system corresponding to the unequal and spiral cleavage modes in the embryo of the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymor…

1998

Unequal cleavage requires a highly organised cytoskeleton. We investigated the localisation of both tubulins and microtubular arrays in Dreissena eggs during and after fertilisation using confocal laser scanning microscopy. Freshly spawned eggs are arrested in metaphase I. A maternal pool of γ-tubulin is found mainly in the centre of the asters of the meiotic spindle. The paternal pool of γ-tubulin, present in the fertilising sperm, could not be traced within the egg, but a microtubule-organising centre forms near the male pronucleus at anaphase II. Male and female pronuclei grow as they migrate in the wake of their aster and rendezvous. First cleavage is unequal and starts without pronucle…

MaleZygoteSpindle ApparatusAster (cell biology)BiologyCleavage (embryo)MicrotubulesTubulinAnimalsCleavage furrowMetaphaseCytoskeletonAnaphaseCell NucleusPronuclear fusionMicroscopy ConfocalPronucleusCell BiologyAnatomyMale pronucleusImmunohistochemistrySpermatozoaCell biologyBivalviaFertilizationOocytesCell DivisionDevelopmental BiologyZygote (Cambridge, England)
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Electron microscopic study on the larval and adult corpus allatum of Oncopeltus fasciatus dallas (insecta, heteroptera)

1973

1. The ultrastructure of the corpora allata of last larval instars and adults of Oncopeltus was studied. The unpaired gland undergoes submicroscopic alterations and shows signs of degradation in old animals. The organ is partly covered and penetrated by corpus cardiacum tissue. Axons with different types of neurosecretory granules form synaptoid contacts with the corpus allatum cells.

Maleendocrine systemInsectaHistologyGolgi ApparatusBiologyEndoplasmic ReticulumPathology and Forensic MedicineSex FactorsAnimalsElectron microscopicCell NucleusLarvaHeteropteraCell BiologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationNeurosecretory SystemsCorpus CardiacumAxonsJuvenile HormonesMicroscopy ElectronUltrastructureInstarFemaleCorpus allatumLysosomesRibosomesCell NucleolusNeurosecretory granulesZeitschrift f�r Zellforschung und Mikroskopische Anatomie
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Lipid and fatty acid profile of the retina, retinal pigment epithelium/choroid, and the lacrimal gland, and associations with adipose tissue fatty ac…

2008

International audience; Accumulation of lipids within Bruch’s membrane (BrM) and between BrM and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) accounts for one of the biological changes associated with normal aging and may contribute to the development of age-related maculopathies. The origin of these lipids is still being actively investigated. The relative contribution of plasma lipids and lipids coming from the neural retina remains a matter of controversy. Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) have been reported to significantly participate in the retina’s lipid supply, after active remodeling within RPE. Meanwhile, RPE expresses the enzymatic machinery for synthesizing lipoprotein-like particles. The obj…

Malegenetic structuresNUTRUTIONAdipose tissueRetinal Pigment EpitheliumBruch's membranechemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicine[SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineeringLIPIDRETINAPhospholipidsAged 80 and overchemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesFatty AcidsLacrimal ApparatusMiddle AgedLipidsSensory Systems3. Good healthmedicine.anatomical_structureAdipose TissueBiochemistryFemalelipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Cholesterol EstersOrbitmedicine.medical_specialtyLinoleic acidEPITHELIUMLacrimal glandBiologyBRUCH'S MEMBRANE03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceInternal medicineRETINAL PIGMENTmedicineHumans[SPI.GPROC]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process EngineeringAged030304 developmental biologyRetinaRetinal pigment epitheliumChoroidFatty acideye diseasesLACRIMAL GLANDOphthalmologyEndocrinologychemistry030221 ophthalmology & optometryChoroidsense organs
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Studies on vinblastine-induced autophagocytosis in mouse liver. III. A quantitative study.

1982

The microtubule inhibitor vinblastine (25 mg/kg, i.p.) induces autophagocytosis in mouse hepatocytes. The formation of autophagic vacuoles, their contents, and other cellular changes after vinblastine injection in hepatocytes, were studied by light and electron microscopic morphometric analysis. The volume density of autophagic vacuoles increased significantly during the experimental period (24 h). This increase was due to the significant increase in their number, which was approximately 5-fold 4 h, 12 h and 24 h after vinblastine injection. The mean volume of the autophagic vacuoles increased significantly 1 h after vinblastine injection, at which time the formation of new autophagic vacuo…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsLiver cytologymedicine.medical_treatmentIntraperitoneal injectionVacuoleBiologyVinblastinesymbols.namesakeMicePhagocytosisInternal medicinemedicineAutophagyAnimalsLobules of liverEndoplasmic reticulumAcid phosphataseGolgi apparatusVinblastineEndocrinologyBiochemistryLiverbiology.proteinsymbolsmedicine.drugVirchows Archiv. B, Cell pathology including molecular pathology
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Effect of pseudo-gravitational acceleration on the dissolution rate of miscible drops

2017

The effect of pseudo-gravitational acceleration on the dissolution process of two phase miscible systems has been investigated at high acceleration values using a spinning drop tensiometer with three systems: 1-butanol/water, isobutyric acid/water, and triethylamine/water. We concluded that the dissolution process involves at least three different transport phenomena: diffusion, barodiffusion, and gravitational (buoyancy-driven) convection. The last two phenomena are significantly affected by the centrifugal acceleration acting at the interface between the two fluids, and the coupling with the geometry of the dissolving drop leads to a change of the mass flux during the course of the dissol…

Mass fluxConvectionMaterials scienceBuoyancyApplied MathematicsDrop (liquid)General Physics and AstronomyThermodynamicsStatistical and Nonlinear Physics02 engineering and technologyengineering.material021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyGravitational acceleration01 natural sciencesOrganic compounds Equipment and apparatus Mass diffusion Gravity waves G factorMass transfer0103 physical sciencesengineering010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyTransport phenomenaDissolutionMathematical PhysicsSettore CHIM/02 - Chimica FisicaChaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science
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Pressure dependence of density and structural relaxation of glass near the glass transition region

2017

International audience; A simplified and effective pressure cell together with an experimental procedure has been developed and applied to compress samples of SCHOTT N-BK7 glass under static high pressures in a piston-cylinder apparatus. Results from the density and volume recovery measurements show that, the glass samples were effectively densified in piston-cylinder apparatus with the density at room temperature increasing linearly with frozen-in pressure. To explain the experimental data, we developed a mathematical model based on a suggestion by Gupta (1988) with two internal parameters, named fictive temperature (Tf) and fictive pressure (Pf), which fits the experimental data well.

Materials sciencePiston-cylinder apparatus[ SPI.MAT ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/MaterialsThermodynamics02 engineering and technologyPressure dependence021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesFictive temperatureHigh pressureFictive pressureVolume (thermodynamics)High pressure0103 physical sciencesMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesRelaxation (physics)Piston-cylinder apparatusGlass010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyGlass transitionStructural relaxationPressure cell
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Distribution of gamma‐tubulin differs in primary and secondary oocytes of Ephestia kuehniella (Pyralidae, Lepidoptera)

1996

In a previous study, barrel-shaped spindles were found in metaphase I oocytes of Ephestia kuehniella (Pyralidae, Lepidoptera). Aster microtubules (MTs) were missing (Wolf, 1993 : Cell Motil Cytoskeleton 24 :200-204). This points to an acentriolar organization of the spindle apparatus. The present study was aimed at the question of whether gamma-tubulin, a newly detected member of the tubulin superfamily that has often been identified in microtubule-organizing centers, plays a role in the nucleation of MTs in meiotic spindles of the moth. To this end, the distribution of gamma-tubulin was examined in oocytes of E. kuehniella using an antibody against gamma-tubulin in combination with indirec…

Meiosis IImacromolecular substancesCell BiologyAster (cell biology)BiologySpindle pole bodySpindle apparatusCell biologyMeiosisBotanyGeneticsHomologous chromosomeSpindle organizationDevelopmental BiologyAnaphaseMolecular Reproduction and Development
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Ultrastructure of differentiating hemocytes in the embryo of Oncopeltus fasciatus dallas (insecta, heteroptera).

1978

The hemocytes of Oncopeltus differentiate rather early during embryogenesis. They are segregated by the mesoderm soon after its formation (about 50h after egg deposition). Newly segregated hemocytes show the “typical” features of “embryonic” cells: many free ribosomes, a few strands of rough ER, the cisternae of which are considerably distended, electron lucent vacuoles around the periphery, and glycogen deposits. A few hours thereafter the hemocytes undergo striking subcellular changes. First, glycogen, electron lucent vacuoles and rough ER disappear and phagocytotic activity can be observed. Golgi complexes become well expressed and give rise to electron dense vesicles which fuse to large…

MesodermHistologyHemocytesInsectaGolgi ApparatusVacuoleBiologyEndoplasmic ReticulumPathology and Forensic Medicinesymbols.namesakePhagocytosismedicineAnimalsInclusion BodiesBlood CellsEndoplasmic reticulumVesicleEmbryogenesisCell DifferentiationCell BiologyAnatomyGolgi apparatusCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCytoplasmLarvaVacuolessymbolsUltrastructureRibosomesGlycogenCell and tissue research
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Mikroskops un tā lietošana

1927

MicroscopyOptical apparatus and instrumentsOptiskie aparāti un instrumentiMikroskopiMikroskopija:TECHNOLOGY::Engineering physics::Optical physics [Research Subject Categories]Microscopes
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Mutations in KATNB1 Cause Complex Cerebral Malformations by Disrupting Asymmetrically Dividing Neural Progenitors

2014

SummaryExome sequencing analysis of over 2,000 children with complex malformations of cortical development identified five independent (four homozygous and one compound heterozygous) deleterious mutations in KATNB1, encoding the regulatory subunit of the microtubule-severing enzyme Katanin. Mitotic spindle formation is defective in patient-derived fibroblasts, a consequence of disrupted interactions of mutant KATNB1 with KATNA1, the catalytic subunit of Katanin, and other microtubule-associated proteins. Loss of KATNB1 orthologs in zebrafish (katnb1) and flies (kat80) results in microcephaly, recapitulating the human phenotype. In the developing Drosophila optic lobe, kat80 loss specificall…

Microtubule-associated proteinNeurogenesisNeuroscience(all)Cell CountKataninSpindle ApparatusBiologymedicine.disease_causeArticleMice03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNeural Stem CellsNeuroblastmedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHumansProgenitor cellZebrafishMitosisZebrafishAdenosine TriphosphatasesMutationGeneral NeuroscienceOptic Lobe NonmammalianBrainDendritesbiology.organism_classificationSpindle apparatusmedicine.anatomical_structureCentrosome030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCerebral malformationsMutationMicrocephalybiology.proteinDrosophilaNeuronKataninMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsNeuroscienceCell Division030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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