Search results for "PRINTING"

showing 10 items of 532 documents

Sub-Cellular Scale Compartments: Printing Life-Inspired Subcellular Scale Compartments with Autonomous Molecularly Crowded Confinement (Adv. Biosys. …

2019

BiomaterialsScale (ratio)Biomedical EngineeringEnvironmental scienceNanotechnologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyInkjet printingAdvanced Biosystems
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3D bioprinting of tissue units with mesenchymal stem cells, retaining their proliferative and differentiating potential, in polyphosphate-containing …

2021

Abstract The three-dimensional (3D)-printing processes reach increasing recognition as important fabrication techniques to meet the growing demands in tissue engineering. However, it is imperative to fabricate 3D tissue units, which contain cells that have the property to be regeneratively active. In most bio-inks, a metabolic energy-providing component is missing. Here a formulation of a bio-ink is described, which is enriched with polyphosphate (polyP), a metabolic energy providing physiological polymer. The bio-ink composed of a scaffold (N,O-carboxymethyl chitosan), a hydrogel (alginate) and a cell adhesion matrix (gelatin) as well as polyP substantially increases the viability and the …

Biomedical EngineeringBioengineeringMatrix (biology)Biochemistrylaw.inventionBiomaterialsSOX2Tissue engineeringPolyphosphateslawCell adhesion3D bioprintingTissue EngineeringTissue ScaffoldsChemistryMesenchymal stem cellBioprintingMesenchymal Stem CellsGeneral MedicineCell biologybody regionsRUNX2Printing Three-DimensionalAlkaline phosphataseInkcirculatory and respiratory physiologyBiotechnologyBiofabrication
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Regulation of IL-12 p40 Promoter Activity in Primary Human Monocytes: Roles of NF-κB, CCAAT/Enhancer-Binding Protein β, and PU.1 and Identification o…

2001

Abstract Appropriate regulation of IL-12 expression is critical for cell-mediated immune responses. In the present study, we have analyzed the regulation of IL-12 p40 promoter activity in primary human monocytes in vivo. Accordingly, we analyzed the p40 promoter by in vivo footprinting in resting and activated primary human blood CD14+ monocytes. Interestingly, footprints at binding sites for trans-activating proteins such as C/EBP, NF-κB, and ETS were only found upon stimulation with LPS and IFN-γ. In contrast, a footprint over a purine-rich sequence at −155, termed GA-12 (GATA sequence in the IL-12 promoter), was observed in resting, but not activated, cells. Further characterization of t…

CD14ImmunologyDNA FootprintingLipopolysaccharide ReceptorsRepressorBiologyDinoprostoneMonocytesCell LineMicechemistry.chemical_compoundProto-Oncogene ProteinsGene expressionAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergyBinding sitePromoter Regions GeneticPsychological repressionCells CulturedDNA PrimersBase SequenceCcaat-enhancer-binding proteinsCCAAT-Enhancer-Binding Protein-betaBinding proteinNF-kappa BNuclear ProteinsNF-κBInterleukin-12Molecular biologychemistryMutagenesis Site-DirectedTrans-ActivatorsInterleukin-4The Journal of Immunology
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The role of trapped fluids during the development and deformation of a carbonate/shale intra-wedge tectonic mélange (Mt. Massico, Southern Apennines,…

2020

Abstract Numerous studies exist on exhumed tectonic melanges along subduction channels whereas, in accretionary wedge interiors, deformation mechanisms and related fluid circulation in tectonic melanges are still underexplored. We combine structural and microstructural observations with geochemical (stable and clumped isotopes and isotope composition of noble gases in fluid inclusions of calcite veins) and U-Pb geochronological data to define deformation mechanisms and syn-tectonic fluid circulation within the Mt. Massico intra-wedge tectonic melange, located in the inner part of the central-southern Apennines accretionary wedge, Italy. This melange developed by shear deformation at the bas…

CalciteDécollementAccretionary wedge010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSubductionStable and clumped isotopestable and clumped isotopesGeochemistryGeologyCrustMélange010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOverprinting01 natural sciencesFold and thrust beltTectonic mélangechemistry.chemical_compoundNoble gasechemistrytectonic mélange; fluid-rock interaction; stable and clumped isotopes; noble gases; fold and thrust beltnoble gasesFluid inclusionsFluid-rock interactionGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Chemometrics as a Tool of Origin Determination of Polish Monofloral and Multifloral Honeys

2014

The aim of this study was to evaluate the application of chemometrics studies to determine the botanical origin of Polish monofloral honeys using NMR spectroscopy. Aqueous extracts of six kinds of honeys, namely, heather (Calluna vulgaris L.), buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum L), lime (Tilia L), rape (Brassica napus L. var. napus), acacia (Acacia Mill.), and multifloral ones, were analyzed. Multivariate chemometric data analysis was performed using principal component analysis (PCA) and orthogonal partial least-squares discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA). Chemometric analysis supported by pollen analysis revealed the incorrect classification of acacia honeys by the producers. Characteristic moti…

CallunaMagnetic Resonance Spectroscopychemical profilefloral markersAcaciaFlowersmedicine.disease_causechemical fingerprintingChemometricsTiliaPollenBotanymedicine1H NMR spectroscopyorigin of honeyPrincipal Component AnalysisPCAbiologyChemistryDiscriminant AnalysisHoneyGeneral Chemistrychemometricsbiology.organism_classificationOPLS-DAPrincipal component analysisPolandGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesChemical fingerprintingFagopyrumJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Mid-region parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) binds chromatin of MDA-MB231 breast cancer cells and isolated oligonucleotides “in vitro”

2006

We have previously shown that PTHrP(38-94)-amide restrains growth and invasion "in vitro", causes striking toxicity and accelerates death of some breast cancer cell lines, the most responsive being MDA-MB231 whose tumorigenesis was also attenuated "in vivo". PTHrP(38-94)-amide contains the domain implicated in the nuclear import of PTHrP. Although the nucleus was identified as a destination for mid-region PTHrP, evidence for direct DNA-binding capability is lacking to date. Here, we examined the localization of PTHrP(38-94)-amide within MDA-MB231 cells and within metaphase spread preparations and characterized its DNA-binding properties, employing a combination of immunocytochemical, cytoge…

Cancer ResearchBreast cancer DNA-binding PTHrPCellActive Transport Cell NucleusOligonucleotidesDNA footprintingBreast NeoplasmsBiologymedicine.disease_causeModels BiologicalMagneticsIn vivoCell Line TumormedicineHumansSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E Citologiaskin and connective tissue diseasesMetaphaseCell NucleusGenomeParathyroid hormone-related proteinParathyroid Hormone-Related ProteinDNAChromatinIn vitroChromatinCell biologySettore BIO/18 - Geneticamedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyCancer researchNuclear transportPeptidesCarcinogenesishormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsProtein Binding
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Aberrations of Genomic Imprinting in Glioblastoma Formation

2021

In human glioblastoma (GBM), the presence of a small population of cells with stem cell characteristics, the glioma stem cells (GSCs), has been described. These cells have GBM potential and are responsible for the origin of the tumors. However, whether GSCs originate from normal neural stem cells (NSCs) as a consequence of genetic and epigenetic changes and/or dedifferentiation from somatic cells remains to be investigated. Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic marking process that causes genes to be expressed depending on their parental origin. The dysregulation of the imprinting pattern or the loss of genomic imprinting (LOI) have been described in different tumors including GBM, being one …

Cancer ResearchGenomic imprintingSomatic cellSubventricular zonePopulationReviewBiologylcsh:RC254-282MethylationGliomamedicineEpigeneticsImprinting (psychology)educationneural stem cellsNeural stem cellseducation.field_of_studyglioblastomasubventricular zonelcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.diseaseNeural stem cellgenomic imprintingnervous system diseasesOncologyCancer researchmethylationStem cellGenomic imprintingGlioblastoma
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Stochastic Loss of Silencing of the Imprinted Ndn/NDN Allele, in a Mouse Model and Humans with Prader-Willi Syndrome, Has Functional Consequences

2013

Genomic imprinting is a process that causes genes to be expressed from one allele only according to parental origin, the other allele being silent. Diseases can arise when the normally active alleles are not expressed. In this context, low level of expression of the normally silent alleles has been considered as genetic noise although such expression has never been further studied. Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a neurodevelopmental disease involving imprinted genes, including NDN, which are only expressed from the paternally inherited allele, with the maternally inherited allele silent. We present the first in-depth study of the low expression of a normally silent imprinted allele, in path…

Cancer ResearchHeterozygotelcsh:QH426-470Apnea[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Nerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyEpigenesis Genetic03 medical and health sciencesGenomic ImprintingMice0302 clinical medicineGeneticsAnimalsHumansEpigeneticsAlleleImprinting (psychology)Promoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyGeneGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAlleles030304 developmental biologyGeneticsMice Knockout0303 health sciencesBrainNuclear ProteinsPhenotypeAllelic exclusionDisease Models Animallcsh:GeneticsGene Expression RegulationDNA methylationGenomic imprintingPrader-Willi Syndrome030217 neurology & neurosurgeryResearch Article
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Divergently Transcribed Overlapping Genes Expressed in Liver and Kidney and Located in the 11p15.5 Imprinted Domain

1998

Human chromosomal band 11p15.5 has been shown to contain genes involved in the development of several pediatric and adult tumors and in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS). Overlapping P1 artificial chromosome clones from this region have been used as templates for genomic sequencing in an effort to identify candidate genes for these disorders. PowerBLAST identified several matches with expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from fetal brain and liver cDNA libraries. Northern blot analysis indicated that two of the genes identified by these ESTs encode transcripts of 1-1.5 kb with predominant expression in fetal and adult liver and kidney. With RT-PCR and RACE, full-length transcripts were isolated f…

Candidate geneBeckwith-Wiedemann SyndromeDNA ComplementaryTranscription GeneticDNA Mutational AnalysisMolecular Sequence DataBiologyKidneyWilms TumorGenomic ImprintingMiceExonGene mappingGene expressionGenes OverlappingGeneticsAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceGeneGeneticsExpressed sequence tagBase SequencecDNA libraryChromosomes Human Pair 11Membrane ProteinsMolecular biologyLiverCarrier ProteinsGenomic imprintingGenomics
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κ-Carrageenan and PVA blends as bioinks to 3D print scaffolds for cartilage reconstruction.

2022

3D printing of polymeric scaffolds and autologous stem cells is a promising tool for damaged facial cartilage reconstruction surgeries. To this end, suitable bioinks are needed to generate scaffolds with the required morphological and functional features. We formulated hydrogel bioinks using k-Carrageen (kC) and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) in three different weight ratios. The kC gives the systems the ability to undergo rapid sol-to-gel transitions upon cooling from 60 °C and above to body temperature, while the PVA is used as rheology modifier and porogen. The latter is crosslinked after molding or printing by freeze-thaw cycling for 1 day (FT1) or 5 days (FT5). To select the most suitable f…

CartilageTissue ScaffoldsTissue EngineeringStructural BiologyPrinting Three-DimensionalHydrogelsGeneral MedicineCarrageenanMolecular BiologyBiochemistryspheroids from human adipose stem cells 3D printing hydrogel bioinksInternational journal of biological macromolecules
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