Search results for "Complement"

showing 10 items of 2113 documents

Alpha- and gamma-interferon (IFNα, IFNγ) but not interleukin-1 (IL-1) modulate synthesis and secretion of β2-microglobulin by hepatocytes

1988

Soluble serum beta 2-microglobulin has been thought to result from membrane shedding by activated T-lymphocytes. This hypothesis could explain the increase of beta 2-microglobulin serum levels during virally induced mononucleosis, but not elevated levels as observed in other virally induced and in malignant diseases. In this paper we demonstrate that beta 2-microglobulin is a true secretory protein, and that its synthesis in hepatocytes is modulated by IFNs but not by IL-1. While the 45,000 MW HLA antigen can be found only in cell lysates, beta 2-microglobulin is shown to be secreted also into the culture medium like other secretory proteins (e.g. albumin-factor B-complement C3). Furthermor…

Clinical BiochemistryAlpha (ethology)Alpha interferonBiologyBiochemistryLiver Neoplasms ExperimentalInterferonAlbuminsmedicineAnimalsHumansSecretionInterferon gammaBeta (finance)Cells CulturedAcute-phase proteinComplement C3General MedicineMolecular biologySecretory proteinLiverBiochemistryInterferonsbeta 2-MicroglobulinComplement Factor BInterleukin-1medicine.drugEuropean Journal of Clinical Investigation
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Cloning and sequencing of the chicken egg-white avidin-encoding gene and its relationship with the avidin-related genes Avrl-Avr5

1995

Abstract The gene encoding chicken egg-white avidin (Avd) was amplified from chromosomal DNA, cloned and sequenced. The entire coding region of preavidin (pre-Avd) containing four exons was identified by comparing the Avd gene (1119 bp) with the cDNA. It had a high identity percentage (91–95%) with the previously isolated Avd-related genes 1–5 (Avrl–Avr5) . Interestingly, comparison of Avd with the Avr genes showed that the introns were better conserved (on average 97%) than the exons (90%). The Avd gene, as well as the cDNA, encodes a Gln residue at position 53 of the mature protein, which is in contrast to the previously determined amino-acid sequence.

CloningGeneticsNucleic acid sequenceIntronGeneral MedicineBiologyMolecular biologyExonComplementary DNAGeneticsbiology.proteinCoding regionGeneAvidinGene
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A Novel Chitin-binding Protein from the Vestimentiferan Riftia pachyptila Interacts Specifically with β-Chitin

2001

Abstract A cDNA from Riftia pachyptila was cloned. It encodes a novel 21.3-kDa protein from the worm protective tube, named RCBP (for Riftia chitin-binding protein). On the basis of partial tube-peptide sequences previously obtained, experiments using reverse transcriptase-mediated polymerase chain reaction and rapid amplification of cDNA ends led to the complete cDNA sequence. Analysis of its deduced amino acid sequence shows the presence of two chitin-binding domains. These domains are closely related to type 2 chitin-binding domains that are restricted to the animal kingdom. We showed by affinity assay and immunogold labeling that RCBP is the first protein so far known that binds specifi…

CloningMessenger RNACell BiologyImmunogold labellingBiologyBiochemistryMolecular biologychemistry.chemical_compoundChitinchemistryRapid amplification of cDNA endsBiochemistryChitin bindingComplementary DNAMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceJournal of Biological Chemistry
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cDNA Synthesis and Cloning

1998

The isolation of intact messenger RNA and its conversion into cDNA copies by avian or Moloney murine reverse transcriptase, as well as subsequent amplification of gene transcripts by the PCR technique, are becoming increasingly important tools in molecular biology. At present, these techniques have been often necessary and widely used for the analysis of individual mRNA levels in cells and tissues by Northern blot analysis, nuclease protection analysis and in situ hybridization. Another important application of RNA templates is the construction of representa­tive cDNA libraries in order to clone genes, to investigate their molecular structure and to express them in prokaryotic and/or eukary…

CloningMessenger RNAcDNA libraryComplementary DNARNANorthern blotBiologyMolecular biologyGeneReverse transcriptase
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Receptor Tyrosine Kinase, an Autapomorphic Character of Metazoa: Identification in Marine Sponges

1999

In the present review we summarize sequence data obtained from cloning of sponge receptor tyrosine kinases [RTK]. The cDNA sequences were mainly obtained from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium. RTKs (i) with immunoglobulin [Ig]-like domains in the extracellular region, (ii) of the type of insulinlike receptors, as well as (iii) RTKs with one extracellular speract domain, have been identified. The analyses revealed that the RTK genes are constructed in blocks [domains], suggesting a blockwise evolution. The phylogenetic relationships of the sequences obtained revealed that all sponge sequences fall into one branch of the evolutionary tree, while related sequences from higher Metazoa, human, …

CloningbiologyPhylogenetic treeEcologyPhylumbiology.organism_classificationGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyReceptor tyrosine kinaseSpongeMonophylyNeurologyEvolutionary biologyComplementary DNAbiology.proteinGeneGeneral Environmental ScienceActa Biologica Hungarica
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Semmes surfaces and intrinsic Lipschitz graphs in the Heisenberg group

2018

A Semmes surface in the Heisenberg group is a closed set $S$ that is upper Ahlfors-regular with codimension one and satisfies the following condition, referred to as Condition B. Every ball $B(x,r)$ with $x \in S$ and $0 < r < \operatorname{diam} S$ contains two balls with radii comparable to $r$ which are contained in different connected components of the complement of $S$. Analogous sets in Euclidean spaces were introduced by Semmes in the late $80$'s. We prove that Semmes surfaces in the Heisenberg group are lower Ahlfors-regular with codimension one and have big pieces of intrinsic Lipschitz graphs. In particular, our result applies to the boundary of chord-arc domains and of redu…

Closed setApplied MathematicsGeneral Mathematics010102 general mathematicsBoundary (topology)Metric Geometry (math.MG)CodimensionLipschitz continuitySurface (topology)01 natural sciencesCombinatorics28A75 (Primary) 28A78 (Secondary)Mathematics - Metric GeometryMathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEsClassical Analysis and ODEs (math.CA)FOS: MathematicsHeisenberg groupMathematics::Metric Geometrymittateoria[MATH]Mathematics [math]0101 mathematicsIsoperimetric inequalityComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSMathematicsComplement (set theory)Transactions of the American Mathematical Society
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GenClust: A genetic algorithm for clustering gene expression data

2005

Abstract Background Clustering is a key step in the analysis of gene expression data, and in fact, many classical clustering algorithms are used, or more innovative ones have been designed and validated for the task. Despite the widespread use of artificial intelligence techniques in bioinformatics and, more generally, data analysis, there are very few clustering algorithms based on the genetic paradigm, yet that paradigm has great potential in finding good heuristic solutions to a difficult optimization problem such as clustering. Results GenClust is a new genetic algorithm for clustering gene expression data. It has two key features: (a) a novel coding of the search space that is simple, …

Clustering high-dimensional dataDNA ComplementaryComputer scienceRand indexCorrelation clusteringOligonucleotidesEvolutionary algorithmlcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticscomputer.software_genreBiochemistryPattern Recognition AutomatedBiclusteringOpen Reading FramesStructural BiologyCURE data clustering algorithmConsensus clusteringGenetic algorithmCluster AnalysisCluster analysislcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular BiologyGene expression data Clustering Evolutionary algorithmsOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisModels StatisticalBrown clusteringHeuristicGene Expression ProfilingApplied MathematicsComputational BiologyComputer Science Applicationslcsh:Biology (General)Gene Expression RegulationMutationlcsh:R858-859.7Data miningSequence AlignmentcomputerSoftwareAlgorithmsBMC Bioinformatics
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A musical reading of a contemporary installation and back: mathematical investigations of patterns in Qwalala

2021

Mathematical music theory helps us investigate musical compositions in mathematical terms. Some hints can be extended towards the visual arts. Mathematical approaches can also help formalize a "translation" from the visual domain to the auditory one and vice versa. Thus, a visual artwork can be mathematically investigated, then translated into music. The final, refined musical rendition can be compared to the initial visual idea. Can an artistic idea be preserved through these changes of media? Can a non-trivial pattern be envisaged in an artwork, and then still be identified after the change of medium? Here, we consider a contemporary installation and an ensemble musical piece derived from…

Cognitive scienceSettore INF/01 - InformaticaApplied Mathematicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectgesturescategory; contour; gestures; glass; patternMathematicsofComputing_GENERALComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMSMusicalSettore MAT/04 - Matematiche ComplementaripatternComputational MathematicsSettore MAT/02 - AlgebraMusic theorycategoryModeling and SimulationReading (process)contourPsychologyMusicGesturemedia_commonglass
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The Jordan-Hölder theorem and prefrattini subgroups of finite groups

1995

by A. BALLESTER-BOLINCHES and L. M. EZQUERRO(Received 26 January, 1994)Introduction. All groups considered are finite. In recent years a number ofgeneralizations of the classic Jordan-Holder Theorem have been obtained (see [7],Theorem A.9.13): in a finite group G a one-to-one correspondence as in the Jordan-Holder Theorem can be defined preserving not only G-isomorphic chief factors but eventheir property of being Frattini or non-Frattini chief factors. In [2] and [13] a newdirection of generalization is presented: the above correspondence can be defined in sucha way that the corresponding non-Frattini chief factors have the same complement(supplement).In this paper we present a necessary a…

CombinatoricsComplement (group theory)Finite groupConjugacy classGroup (mathematics)Locally finite groupComposition seriesGeneral MathematicsSylow theoremsOrder (group theory)MathematicsGlasgow Mathematical Journal
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Incomplete vertices in the prime graph on conjugacy class sizes of finite groups

2013

Abstract Given a finite group G, consider the prime graph built on the set of conjugacy class sizes of G. Denoting by π 0 the set of vertices of this graph that are not adjacent to at least one other vertex, we show that the Hall π 0 -subgroups of G (which do exist) are metabelian.

CombinatoricsDiscrete mathematicsMathematics::Group TheoryVertex-transitive graphAlgebra and Number TheoryCirculant graphGraph powerSymmetric graphNeighbourhood (graph theory)Wheel graphDistance-regular graphComplement graphMathematicsJournal of Algebra
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