Search results for "Embryonic Structures"

showing 10 items of 623 documents

Tenascin gene expression in rat liver and in rat liver cells. In vivo and in vitro studies.

1991

Tenascin is a major glycoprotein constituent of the extracellular matrix with a strong affinity to fibronectin; its distribution is believed to be temporarily and spatially limited. Tenascin gene expression is increased during wound healing processes. As repair mechanisms in chronic liver diseases resemble wound healing we studied tenascin gene expression in rat liver and in isolated rat liver cells. In normal rat liver a tenascin specific antiserum stains sinusoidal cells with fiber-like prolongations, which at the same time are desmin-positive (ITO-cells). In the CCl4-acutely-damaged liver a strong tenascin staining is detected in cells located among the mononuclear cells of the inflammat…

endocrine systemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyanimal structuresKupffer CellsCell Adhesion Molecules NeuronalTenascinConnective tissueFluorescent Antibody TechniqueGene ExpressionLiver Cirrhosis Experimentaldigestive systemDesminmedicineAnimalsEndotheliumCarbon TetrachlorideCells CulturedExtracellular Matrix ProteinsbiologyTenascin CMuscle SmoothRats Inbred StrainsTenascinFibroblastsmusculoskeletal systemMolecular biologyRatsFibronectinEndothelial stem cellmedicine.anatomical_structureLiverCell cultureembryonic structuresbiology.proteinHepatic stellate cellWound healingVirchows Archiv. B, Cell pathology including molecular pathology
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Expression of tenascin in human cervical cancer--association of tenascin expression with clinicopathological parameters.

1999

Tenascin is an extracellular matrix glycoprotein, relevant for embryonal and fetal development, which is reexpressed in the stroma of benign and malignant tumors. Little is known about the molecular interaction of tenascin during neoplastic transformation and tumor progression in cervical cancer.We studied the expression of tenascin in normal tissue of the cervix uteri, cervical carcinoma in situ, and invasive cervical carcinoma in paraffin sections by immunohistochemistry using a monoclonal antibody. Tenascin immunoreactivity was compared with various prognostic parameters.In normal cervical tissue (n = 5) and in cervical carcinoma in situ (n = 10) only vessel walls showed a weak tenascin …

endocrine systemPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyanimal structuresStromal cellConnective tissueTenascinUterine Cervical NeoplasmsMalignant transformationmedicineHumansNeoplastic transformationCervixRetrospective Studiesbiologybusiness.industryObstetrics and GynecologyTenascinmusculoskeletal systemPrognosisImmunohistochemistrySurvival Ratemedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyTumor progressionembryonic structuresbiology.proteinDisease ProgressionImmunohistochemistryFemalebusinessCarcinoma in SituGynecologic oncology
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Additional file 6: of NOTCH3 expression is linked to breast cancer seeding and distant metastasis

2018

Figure S6. NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 expression in patient-derived TNBC cells. a Immunoblot assay showing NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 expression in MDA-MB-231 and patient-derived TNBC-M25 cells. b Densitometric analysis showing the percentage of NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 protein levels in TNBC-M25 cells relative to MDA-MB-231 cells. Graph showing the average from three independent experiments (Âąâ SD). (TIFF 6168 kb)

endocrine systemendocrine system diseasesembryonic structures
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Additional file 5: of NOTCH3 expression is linked to breast cancer seeding and distant metastasis

2018

Figure S5. NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 expression in TNBC cells. a Immunofluorescence analysis showing representative images of MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-231 LM TNBC cells stained in green with NOTCH1 and NOTCH2 polyclonal antibodies. Nuclei were stained in blue with DAPI. b Graphs showing the average number of NOTCH1- and NOTCH2-expressing cells from three independent experiments (Âąâ SD). (TIFF 6168 kb)

endocrine systemendocrine system diseasesembryonic structurescardiovascular systemsense organs
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Development of day-night rhythmicity in "synaptic" ribbon numbers in the pinealocytes of posthatch chicks kept under either natural photoperiodic con…

1991

: Pineal synaptic ribbons (SR) undergo characteristic changes over a period of 24 hr under natural photoperiodic conditions in various vertebrates, being low in number during daytime and elevated at night. During posthatch development of chicks, the rhythmicity of SR numbers is reported to appear at the age of about 2 weeks. Because the influence of external light during the growth phase of chicks on the development of day-night rhythmicity in SR numbers is unknown, we studied day-night differences in SR numbers in the pinealocytes of chicks at the posthatch ages of 15, 17, and 19 days; chicks had previously been kept under natural photoperiodic conditions or continuous illumination. Under …

endocrine systemmedicine.medical_specialtyanimal structuresOntogenyPeriod (gene)Cell CountBiologyNocturnalPineal GlandPinealocyteMelatoninEndocrinologyInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsCircadian rhythmLightingphotoperiodismSynaptic ribbonCircadian RhythmEndocrinologyembryonic structuresSynaptic VesiclesChickensPhotic Stimulationmedicine.drugJournal of Pineal Research
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Caracterización de complejos enzimáticos histona acetiltransferasa en Saccharomyces cerevisiae mediante el uso de mutantes en genes implicados en la …

1999

En la cromatina de los organismos eucariotas el DNA se organiza alrededor de octámeros de histonas, dando lugar a la estructura nucleosomal. Las histonas sufren una serie de modificaciones postraduccionales entre las que se encuentra la acetilación de residuos de lisina, situados en los extremos N-terminales de estas proteínas. Esta modificación reversible, catalizada in vivo por las histona desacetilasas (HD) y las histona acetiltransferasas (HAT), ha sido implicada durante muchos años en la regulación de diversos procesos celulares de gran importancia. Recientemente, el papel de la acetilación de histonas en la regulación de la transcripción ha cobrado gran importancia con el descubrimien…

enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates)animal diseasesembryonic structuresparasitic diseasesBioquímica. Biologia molecular. BiofísicaFacultat de Biològiques577environment and public health
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Maternal antibody transmission and breeding densities in the Black-headed Gull Larus ridibundus

2004

1. The offspring of avian species, especially those of colonial breeders, are exposed to a number of pathogens immediately after birth. The chick's immune system is, at that early stage still immature and inefficient. As a consequence, diseases can have a strong impact on chick survival.2. The ability of mothers to transmit passive immunity in terms of antibodies of their own acquired immunity to their chicks is probably an essential pathway to enhance the chick survival. Since the production of antibodies is costly, females are expected to adjust the transmission of passive immunity to the local disease environment.3. We found that in Black-headed Gulls (Larus ridibundus L.) yolk antibody …

food.ingredientOffspringmedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectCOLONIALITYZoologyPassive immunityBiologyPopulation densityfoodTESTOSTERONEYolkHirundomedicineFUSCUSCAROTENOIDSKITTIWAKE RISSA-TRIDACTYLAEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonBIRDSHIRUNDOHatchingEcologyMaternal effectbiology.organism_classificationpassive immunityESCHERICHIA-COLIcolonial breedinglaying orderembryonic structuresSURVIVALmaternal effectsSEXReproductionFunctional Ecology
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Transgenerational immunity in a bird-ectoparasite system: do maternally transferred antibodies affect parasite fecundity or the offspring's susceptib…

2009

During egg formation, female birds deposit antibodies against parasites and pathogens they were exposed to before egg laying into the yolk. In captive bird species, it has been shown that these maternal immunoglobulins (maternal yolk IgGs) can protect newly hatched offspring against infection. However, direct evidence for such benefits in wild birds is hitherto lacking. We investigated (1) if nestling Great Tits Parus major originating from eggs with naturally high levels of maternal yolk IgG are less susceptible to a common, nest-based ectoparasite, (2) if maternal yolk IgGs influence nestling development and in particular, their own immune defence, and (3) if there is a negative correlati…

food.ingredientReproductive successOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectMaternal effectZoologyBiologyFecundityfoodNestImmunityYolkembryonic structuresImmunologyAnimal Science and ZoologyReproductionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonIbis
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Primo ricerche sulla ultrastruttura dell'uovo delle Ascidie

1959

Summary The cytoplasmic constituents of the unfertilized eggs of Ciona intestinalis were separated by centrifugation and studied at the electron microscope, with the following results. Lipid droplets collect at the centripetal pole; they are boundered by a thin membrane. The yolk granules are homogeneous in appearance; a few have a granular structure. Mitochondria contain numerous cristae; they accumulate in two different layers centripetally and centrifugally to the yolk granules layer respectively. Basophilic material collects at both poles of the egg in two hyaline caps: a centripetal one constituted by small Vesicles and a centrifugal represented by dense clumps. The latter, as well as …

food.ingredientVesicleAnatomyBiologybiology.organism_classificationlaw.inventionBasophilicfoodlawLipid dropletYolkembryonic structuresBiophysicsAnimal Science and ZoologyCentrifugationCiona intestinalisElectron microscopeHyalineBolletino di zoologia
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A morphometric comparison of dissimilar early development in sibling species of Platynereis (Annelida, Polychaeta)

1992

Early development of Platynereis massiliensis was studied in serial sections of fixed embryos and in living or fixed embryos whose nuclei had been made visible with a fluorescent label. The unfertilized egg is an ellipsoid with three axes of differing length. The longest axis corresponds to the dorsoventral axis of the developing embryo. Egg volume is ten times that in the sibling species, P. dumerilii, mainly due to increased yolk content. The timing and spatial pattern of cleavage were observed from first cleavage to the 62-cell stage. Volumes of the blastomeres, their nuclei, their yolk-free cytoplasm and their yolk were determined from serial sections up to the 29-cell stage. In the P. …

food.ingredientZygoteEmbryogenesisEmbryoBlastomereAnatomyBiologyCleavage (embryo)biology.organism_classificationCell biologyfoodYolkembryonic structuresGeneticsDevelopmental biologyDevelopmental BiologyPlatynereisRoux's Archives of Developmental Biology
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