Search results for "Cell Nucleus"

showing 10 items of 379 documents

Nuclear and cytoplasmic interaction of pRb2/p130 and ER-β in MCF-7 breast cancer cells

2006

Estrogens exhibit important biological functions and influence several pathological processes of hormone-dependent diseases. The biological actions of estrogens require their interaction with two estrogen receptors (ER-alpha and ER-beta), which are ligand-dependent transcription factors. ER-alpha and ER-beta exhibit distinct tissue expression patterns as well as show different patterns of gene regulation. In addition, it has been suggested that ER-beta works as a counter partner of ER-alpha through inhibition of the transactivating functions of ER-alpha. For instance, ER-beta seems to play a different role in breast tumorigenesis than ER-alpha, as ER-beta decreased expression in breast canc…

OncologyCytoplasmmedicine.medical_specialtyMolecular Sequence DataEstrogen receptorBreast NeoplasmsEstrogen receptorsmedicine.disease_causeBreast cancerBreast cancerCancer stem cellCell Line TumorInternal medicinemedicineEstrogen Receptor betaHumansImmunoprecipitationGene silencingAmino Acid SequenceTranscription factorBreast cancer; Estrogen receptors; Estrogens; pRb2/130Cell NucleusRegulation of gene expressionRetinoblastoma-Like Protein p130business.industryEstrogensHematologymedicine.diseaseOncologyMCF-7Cancer researchbusinessCarcinogenesispRb2/130
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Experimental techniques for testing the sensitivity of bladder tumours to antineoplastic drugs

1973

A number of laboratory tests can be employed to examine the sensitivity of human bladder tumour cells to various chemotherapeutic agents.-Their principles and methods, and some preliminary results, are described with special reference to certain in vitro and in vivo cytotoxicity tests and to heterotransplantation in the hamster. Satisfactory agreement has sometimes been observed between experimental results and clinical responses, but our experience is still very limited.-The employment of several such tests would probably lead to a greater degree of reliability in the laboratory assessment of the sensitivity of bladder tumours to cytotoxic drugs.

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyAdministration TopicalUrologyTransplantation HeterologousHuman bladderDrug ResistanceHamsterAntineoplastic AgentsBLADDER PAPILLOMAThiophenesFluorescenceCricetinaeInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansGlycosidesMelphalanIn vivo cytotoxicityPodophyllotoxinCell NucleusCarcinoma Transitional Cellbusiness.industryDaunorubicinDemecolcineDNA NeoplasmCytotoxicity Tests ImmunologicMicroscopy FluorescenceUrinary Bladder NeoplasmsDoxorubicinProtein BiosynthesisAntineoplastic DrugsOxidoreductasesbusinessNeoplasm TransplantationThiotepaUrological Research
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Molecular phylogeny of Old World swifts (Aves: Apodiformes, Apodidae, Apus and Tachymarptis) based on mitochondrial and nuclear markers.

2011

We provide a molecular phylogeny for Old World swifts of genera Apus and Tachymarptis (tribe Apodini) based on a taxon-complete sampling at the species level. Phylogenetic reconstructions were based on two mitochondrial (cytochrome b, 12S rRNA) and three nuclear markers (introns of fibrinogen and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase plus anonymous marker 12884) while the myoglobin intron 2 did not show any intergeneric variation or phylogenetic signal among the target taxa at all. In contrast to previous hypotheses, the two genera Apus and Tachymarptis were shown as reciprocally monophyletic in all reconstructions. Apus was consistently divided into three major clades: (1) East Asian cl…

ParaphylyGenetic Markersfood.ingredientApodiformesLineage (evolution)ZoologyAvian ProteinsBirdsMonophylyfoodApusGeneticsAnimalsTachymarptisCladeMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyCell NucleusLikelihood FunctionsbiologyModels GeneticBayes TheoremCytochromes bbiology.organism_classificationMitochondriaRNA RibosomalMolecular phylogeneticsMultilocus Sequence TypingMolecular phylogenetics and evolution
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The nucleus negatively controls the synthesis of mitochondrial proteins in the sea urchin egg.

1983

Enucleation of Paracentrotus lividus eggs, followed by parthenogenetic activation induces a sharp increase in the synthesis of mitochondrial proteins as shown by electrofluorography after in vivo labeling with radioactive amino acids. These results further substantiate the hypothesis that the cell nucleus negatively controls mitochondrial replication in the sea urchin egg.

ParthenogenesisBiologyParacentrotus lividusbiology.animalmedicineProtein biosynthesisAnimalsAmino AcidsSea urchinPolyacrylamide gel electrophoresisOvumchemistry.chemical_classificationCell NucleusProteinsCell BiologyParthenogenesisAnatomybiology.organism_classificationAmino acidCell biologyMitochondriaCell nucleusmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryProtein BiosynthesisSea Urchinsembryonic structuresElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelFemaleNucleusCell biology international reports
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Expression and subcellular targeting of canine parvovirus capsid proteins in baculovirus-transduced NLFK cells

2004

AbstractA mammalian baculovirus delivery system was developed to study targeting in Norden Laboratories feline kidney (NLFK) cells of the capsid proteins of canine parvovirus (CPV), VP1 and VP2, or corresponding counterparts fused to EGFP. VP1 and VP2, when expressed alone, both had equal nuclear and cytoplasmic distribution. However, assembled form of VP2 had a predominantly cytoplasmic localization. When VP1 and VP2 were simultaneously present in cells, their nuclear localization increased. Thus, confocal immunofluorescence analysis of cells transduced with the different baculovirus constructs or combinations thereof in the absence or presence of infecting CPV revealed that the VP1 protei…

Parvovirus CanineRecombinant Fusion Proteinsanimal diseasesvirusesGreen Fluorescent ProteinsBiophysicsMammalian expressionBiochemistryCell LineGreen fluorescent proteinTransduction (genetics)DogsTransduction GeneticStructural BiologyGeneticsAnimalsBaculovirusCanine parvovirusMolecular BiologyCell NucleusEnhanced green fluorescent proteinbiologyParvovirusCanine parvovirusvirus diseasesCell Biologybiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyCell biologyCapsidCytoplasmCell cultureCatsCapsid ProteinsBaculoviridaeNuclear localization sequenceFEBS Letters
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Reorganization of Nuclear Pore Complexes and the Lamina in Late-Stage Parvovirus Infection

2015

Article

Parvovirus Canineanimal diseasesvirusesnuclear pore complexesImmunologyMicrobiologyParvoviridae InfectionsCapsidDogsVirologymedicineotorhinolaryngologic diseasesAnimalsDog DiseasesNuclear poreparvovovirusCell NucleusNuclear LaminaLamin Type BbiologyParvovirusParvovirus infectionCanine parvovirusLamin Type Abiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyVirus-Cell InteractionsCell biologyNuclear Pore Complex ProteinsCell nucleusstomatognathic diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureInsect ScienceNuclear PoreNuclear laminaNucleusLamin
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Parvovirus induced alterations in nuclear architecture and dynamics.

2009

The nucleus of interphase eukaryotic cell is a highly compartmentalized structure containing the three-dimensional network of chromatin and numerous proteinaceous subcompartments. DNA viruses induce profound changes in the intranuclear structures of their host cells. We are applying a combination of confocal imaging including photobleaching microscopy and computational methods to analyze the modifications of nuclear architecture and dynamics in parvovirus infected cells. Upon canine parvovirus infection, expansion of the viral replication compartment is accompanied by chromatin marginalization to the vicinity of the nuclear membrane. Dextran microinjection and fluorescence recovery after ph…

Parvovirus CaninevirusesGreen Fluorescent Proteinslcsh:MedicineGenome ViralKidneyParvoviridae InfectionsParvovirus03 medical and health sciencesLääketieteen bioteknologia - Medical biotechnologymedicineAnimalsHumansNuclear membraneMolecular Biology/Chromatin Structurelcsh:Science030304 developmental biologyMolecular Biology/DNA ReplicationCell Nucleus0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyParvoviruslcsh:R030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyDNA replicationFluorescence recovery after photobleachingDextransbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyChromatin3. Good healthChromatinCell biologyCell nucleusmedicine.anatomical_structureViral replicationVirology/Viral Replication and Gene RegulationCatslcsh:QCell Biology/Nuclear Structure and FunctionViral genome replicationFluorescence Recovery After PhotobleachingHeLa CellsResearch ArticlePloS one
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Exploitation of Microtubule Cytoskeleton and Dynein during Parvoviral Traffic toward the Nucleus

2003

ABSTRACT Canine parvovirus (CPV), a model virus for the study of parvoviral entry, enters host cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis, escapes from endosomal vesicles to the cytosol, and then replicates in the nucleus. We examined the role of the microtubule (MT)-mediated cytoplasmic trafficking of viral particles toward the nucleus. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy showed that capsids were transported through the cytoplasm into the nucleus after cytoplasmic microinjection but that in the presence of MT-depolymerizing agents, viral capsids were unable to reach the nucleus. The nuclear accumulation of capsids was also reduced by microinjection of an anti-dynein antibody. More…

Parvovirus CaninevirusesImmunoelectron microscopyImmunologyDyneinActive Transport Cell Nucleusmacromolecular substancesMicrotubulesMicrobiologyMotor proteinCapsidCytosolMicrotubuleVirologymedicineAnimalsCytoskeletonCytoskeletonCell NucleusbiologyDyneinsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionVirus-Cell InteractionsCell biologyMicroscopy ElectronTubulinmedicine.anatomical_structureCytoplasmInsect ScienceCatsbiology.proteinNucleusJournal of Virology
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Quantification of the heterogeneity of prognostic cellular biomarkers in ewing sarcoma using automated image and random survival forest analysis

2014

Driven by genomic somatic variation, tumour tissues are typically heterogeneous, yet unbiased quantitative methods are rarely used to analyse heterogeneity at the protein level. Motivated by this problem, we developed automated image segmentation of images of multiple biomarkers in Ewing sarcoma to generate distributions of biomarkers between and within tumour cells. We further integrate high dimensional data with patient clinical outcomes utilising random survival forest (RSF) machine learning. Using material from cohorts of genetically diagnosed Ewing sarcoma with EWSR1 chromosomal translocations, confocal images of tissue microarrays were segmented with level sets and watershed algorithm…

PathologyCytoplasmMicroarrayslcsh:MedicineCohort StudiesMedicine and Health Scienceslcsh:ScienceMultidisciplinaryTissue microarrayApplied MathematicsPrognosisRandom forestBioassays and Physiological AnalysisOncologyFeature (computer vision)Research DesignPhysical SciencesBiomarker (medicine)SarcomaAnatomyAlgorithmsStatistics (Mathematics)Research Articlemedicine.medical_specialtyComputer and Information SciencesHistologyClinical Research DesignCD99Feature selectionBone NeoplasmsComputational biologySarcoma EwingBiology12E7 AntigenResearch and Analysis MethodsAntigens CDArtificial IntelligenceCell Line TumormedicineCancer Detection and DiagnosisBiomarkers TumorHumansStatistical MethodsCell Nucleuslcsh:RBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologyImage segmentationmedicine.diseaselcsh:QCell Adhesion MoleculesMathematicsPLoS ONE
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Ductal Carcinoma In Situ of the Breast: A Comparative Analysis of Histology, Nuclear Area, Ploidy, and Neovascularization Provides Differentiation Be…

2002

Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a heterogeneous group of lesions that has been subdivided into three types: well differentiated (grade I), moderately differentiated (grade II), and poorly differentiated (grade III). Forty-five cases of DCIS were analyzed for image analysis: nuclear area, DNA ploidy, and vascularization in order to establish a more precise correlation between the histologic grade and these morphometric parameters. Our results confirm that the mean nuclear area, DNA ploidy, and microvessel density (MVD) progressively increased from DCIS grade I to DCIS grade III. The analysis of the nuclear area in relationship to DCIS grading demonstrated a progressive increase of values …

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyBreast NeoplasmsNeovascularizationStatistical significanceImage Processing Computer-AssistedInternal MedicineHumansMedicineNeoplasmskin and connective tissue diseasesneoplasmsGrading (tumors)Cell NucleusPloidiesNeovascularization Pathologicbusiness.industryCarcinoma in situCarcinoma Ductal BreastHistologyDNA NeoplasmDuctal carcinomamedicine.diseasebody regionsOncologyTumor progressionFemaleSurgerymedicine.symptombusinessCarcinoma in SituThe Breast Journal
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