Search results for "EOs"
showing 10 items of 2714 documents
Absolute and relative quantification of RNA modifications via biosynthetic isotopomers
2014
In the resurging field of RNA modifications, quantification is a bottleneck blocking many exciting avenues. With currently over 150 known nucleoside alterations, detection and quantification methods must encompass multiple modifications for a comprehensive profile. LC-MS/MS approaches offer a perspective for comprehensive parallel quantification of all the various modifications found in total RNA of a given organism. By feeding (13)C-glucose as sole carbon source, we have generated a stable isotope-labeled internal standard (SIL-IS) for bacterial RNA, which facilitates relative comparison of all modifications. While conventional SIL-IS approaches require the chemical synthesis of single mod…
Dificultad en el tratamiento del hipertiroidismo por amiodarona: Presentación de un caso
2007
La amiodarona puede alterar la función tiroidea en un 15-20% de los pacientes que la toman, dando lugar a hipotiroidismo o hipertiroidismo. La sobrecarga de yodo y la toxicidad directa sobre el tiroides inducida por amiodarona pueden provocar hipertiroidismo. Describimos un caso de tirotoxicosis grave por amiodarona que se diagnosticó buscando la causa que descompensó la cardiopatía de base del paciente, condicionando ésta el pronóstico y el manejo terapéutico. El tratamiento precisó un estrecho seguimiento y se basó en dosis elevadas de propiltiouracilo y dexametasona que no controlaron las consecuencias del hipertiroidismo a nivel cardiaco necesitando la tiroidectomia total. Creemos, con …
The Downside of an Effective cART: The Immune Restoration Disease
2013
The prognosis of patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 has dramatically improved since the advent of the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), which have enabled sustained suppression of HIV replication and recovery of CD4+ T cells count [1-3]. However, many patients in resource-poor settings still start HAART at a late stage of HIV infection when they already have advanced immunodeficien‐ cy [4,5]. Immune reconstitution in HIV infected patients is characterized by replenishment of immune cells depleted directly or indirectly by HIV infection, by regeneration of primary and secondary lymphoid organs, by restoration of pathogen-specific T, B and NK cells an…
Computed tomography detects changes in contrast agent diffusion after collagen cross-linking typical to natural aging of articular cartilage
2011
SummaryObjectiveThe effect of threose-induced collagen cross-linking on the mechanical and diffusive properties of cartilage was investigated in vitro. In particular, we investigated the potential of Contrast Enhanced Computed Tomography (CECT) to detect changes in articular cartilage after increased collagen cross-linking, which is an age-related phenomenon.MethodsOsteochondral plugs (Ø=6.0mm, n=28) were prepared from intact bovine patellae (n=7). Two of the four adjacent samples, prepared from each patella, were treated with threose to increase the collagen cross-linking, while the other two specimen served as paired controls. One sample pair was mechanically tested and then mechanically …
Nondestructive fluorescence-based quantification of threose-induced collagen cross-linking in bovine articular cartilage.
2012
Extensive collagen cross-linking affects the mechanical competence of articular cartilage: it can make the cartilage stiffer and more brittle. The concentrations of the best known cross-links, pyridinoline and pentosidine, can be accurately determined by destructive high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). We explore a nondestructive evaluation of cross-linking by using the intrinsic fluorescence of the intact cartilage. Articular cartilage samples from bovine knee joints were incubated in threose solution for 40 and 100 h to increase the collagen cross-linking. Control samples without threose were also prepared. Excitation-emission matrices at wavelengths of 220 to 950 nm were acquir…
2020
Cilia are cellular organelles that project from the cell. They occur in nearly all non-hematopoietic tissues and have different functions in different tissues. In mesenchymal tissues primary cilia play a crucial role in the adequate morphogenesis during embryological development. In mature articular cartilage, primary cilia fulfil chemo- and mechanosensitive functions to adapt the cellular mechanisms on extracellular changes and thus, maintain tissue homeostasis and morphometry. Ciliary abnormalities in osteoarthritic cartilage could represent pathophysiological relationships between ciliary dysfunction and tissue deformation. Nevertheless, the molecular and pathophysiological relationships…
Stereoselective construction of the tetracyclic scalarane skeleton from carvone
1999
The tetracyclic scalarane skeleton 22 has been constructed from (S)-(+)-carvone using two intramolecular Diels–Alder reactions as key synthetic steps. Abad Somovilla, Antonio, Antonio.Abad@uv.es ; Agullo Blanes, M Consuelo, Consuelo.Agullo@uv.es ; Cuñat Romero, Ana Carmen, Ana.Cunat@uv.es ; Llosa Blasco, Maria Carmen, Carmen.Llosa@uv.es
ChemInform Abstract: Gold Catalyzed Stereoselective Tandem Hydroamination-Formal Aza-Diels-Alder Reaction of Propargylic Amino Esters.
2013
The overall sequence of the tandem reaction presented here leads to nitrogen-containing tetracycles under formation of 4 bonds and five stereocenters, in most cases as single diastereoisomers.
Chromatin Domains and Regulation of Transcription
2007
Compartmentalization and compaction of DNA in the nucleus is the characteristic feature of eukaryotic cells. A fully extended DNA molecule has to be compacted 100,000 times to fit within the nucleus. At the same time it is critical that various DNA regions remain accessible for interaction with regulatory factors and transcription/replication factories. This puzzle is solved at the level of DNA packaging in chromatin that occurs in several steps: rolling of DNA onto nucleosomes, compaction of nucleosome fiber with formation of the so-called 30 nm fiber, and folding of the latter into the giant (50-200 kbp) loops, fixed onto the protein skeleton, the nuclear matrix. The general assumption is…
Subcellular localization and nucleosome specificity of yeast histone acetyltransferases
1991
We have previously reported [López-Rodas et al. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 19028-19033] that the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains four histone acetyltransferases, which can be resolved by ion-exchange chromatography, and their specificity toward yeast free histones was studied. In the present contribution we show that three of the enzymes are nuclear, type A histone acetyltransferases and they are able to acetylate nucleosome-bound histones. They differ in their histone specificity. Enzyme A1 acetylates H2A in chicken nucleosomes, although it is specific for yeast free H2B; histone acetyltransferase A2 is highly specific for H3, and histone acetyltransferase A3 preparations acetylate…