Search results for "Polarity"

showing 10 items of 196 documents

Adsorption Studies of Molecules on the Halloysite Surfaces: A Computational and Experimental Investigation

2017

We report the results of joint computational and experimental investigations on the adsorption capability of halloysite toward a set of common molecules (water, alcohols, halides, and carboxylic acids). The halloysite system has been modelized by means of a cluster approach choosing a portion of a spiral nanotube; it has a slight curvature, with a convex aluminic layer. The adsorption geometries are described in terms of hydrogen bond network structures; calculated interaction energies invariably indicate that the inner aluminic surface is the place for preferential adsorption of polar molecules. The presence of substitutional defects on the outer or inner surface of the halloysite model ca…

NanotubeHalideSurfaces Coatings and Film02 engineering and technologyengineering.material010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesHalloysiteCondensed Matter::Materials ScienceAdsorptionPhysics::Atomic and Molecular ClustersCluster (physics)Organic chemistryMoleculePhysics::Chemical PhysicsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryChemistryHydrogen bondChemical polarityElectronic Optical and Magnetic Material021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsGeneral EnergyEnergy (all)Chemical physicsengineering0210 nano-technology
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Analysis of neural elements in head-mutant Drosophila embryos suggests segmental origin of the optic lobes.

1995

We describe the development of 20 sensory organs in the embryonic Drosophila head, which give rise to 7 sensory nerves of the peripheral nervous system (PNS), and 4 ganglia of the stomatogastric nervous system (SNS). Using these neural elements and the optic lobes as well as expression domains of the segment polarity gene engrailed in the wild-type head of Drosophila embryos as markers we examined the phenotype of different mutants which lack various and distinct portions of the embryonic head. In the mutants, distinct neural elements and engrailed expression domains, serving as segmental markers, are deleted. These mutants also affect the optic lobes to various degrees. Our results suggest…

Nervous systemSensory systemAnatomyBiologyPhenotypeengrailedmedicine.anatomical_structureSegment polarity geneStomatogastric nervous systemPeripheral nervous systemGeneticsmedicineDevelopmental biologyDevelopmental BiologyRoux's archives of developmental biology : the official organ of the EDBO
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Netrins guide migration of distinct glial cells in the Drosophila embryo

2010

Development of the nervous system and establishment of complex neuronal networks require the concerted activity of different signalling events and guidance cues, which include Netrins and their receptors. In Drosophila, two Netrins are expressed during embryogenesis by cells of the ventral midline and serve as attractant or repellent cues for navigating axons. We asked whether glial cells, which are also motile, are guided by similar cues to axons, and analysed the influence of Netrins and their receptors on glial cell migration during embryonic development. We show that in Netrin mutants, two distinct populations of glial cells are affected: longitudinal glia (LG) fail to migrate medially …

Nervous systemanimal structuresCentral nervous systemBiologyNeuroblastCell MovementPrecursor cellGlial cell migrationNetrinmedicineAnimalsNerve Growth FactorsMolecular BiologyTumor Suppressor ProteinsfungiNeurogenesisCell PolarityExonsAnatomyNetrin-1ImmunohistochemistryEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyPhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemMutationDrosophilaCuesNeurogliaSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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Are dendrites in Drosophila homologous to vertebrate dendrites?

2005

AbstractDendrites represent arborising neurites in both vertebrates and invertebrates. However, in vertebrates, dendrites develop on neuronal cell bodies, whereas in higher invertebrates, they arise from very different neuronal structures, the primary neurites, which also form the axons. Is this anatomical difference paralleled by principal developmental and/or physiological differences? We address this question by focussing on one cellular model, motorneurons of Drosophila and characterise the compartmentalisation of these cells. We find that motorneuronal dendrites of Drosophila share with typical vertebrate dendrites that they lack presynaptic but harbour postsynaptic proteins, display c…

NeuriteCompartmentalisationDendriteDendriteAnimals Genetically ModifiedMicePostsynaptic potentialbiology.animalmedicineAnimalsUrbilaterianMolecular BiologyMosaic analysisCytoskeletonCells CulturedMotor NeuronsDendritic spikeTransmitter receptorsbiologyVertebrateCell PolarityCell DifferentiationCell BiologyAnatomyDendritesbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionCell biologyRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureDrosophila melanogasterDrosophilaSomaCalciumRabbitsCellular modelDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental biology
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A window amplitude discriminator with adjustable upper and lower thresholds

1976

An amplitude window discriminator is described which permits selection of spikes from a multi-unit recording, provided the signal-to-noise ratio is high enough. The device can be built at relatively low cost and time. The circuitry permits analysis of the positive or the negative deflections of the recorded signals. In Part One of the circuitry, the signals are pre-amplified and may be inverted in polarity. In Part Two, the pulses are compared to a variable lower threshold voltage, and low amplitude noise is eliminated. Part Three depicts a logic circuit for elimination of disturbing high-amplitude signals, whose output delivers digital pulses, each corresponding to an original signal (e.g.…

NeuronsPhysicsDiscriminatorAmplifiers ElectronicQuantitative Biology::Neurons and CognitionPhysiologyAcousticsAmplifierClinical BiochemistryWindow (computing)SignalElectrophysiologyAmplitudePhysiology (medical)Logic gateAnimalsRabbitsElectronicsPolarity (mutual inductance)VoltagePfl�gers Archiv European Journal of Physiology
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Loss of Dishevelleds disrupts planar polarity in ependymal motile cilia and results in hydrocephalus.

2014

Defects in ependymal (E) cells, which line the ventricle and generate cerebrospinal fluid flow through ciliary beating, can cause hydrocephalus. Dishevelled genes (Dvls) are essential for Wnt signaling, and Dvl2 has been shown to localize to the rootlet of motile cilia. Using the hGFAP-Cre;Dvl1(-/-);2(flox/flox);3(+/-) mouse, we show that compound genetic ablation of Dvls causes hydrocephalus. In hGFAP-Cre;Dvl1(-/-);2(flox/flox);3(+/-) mutants, E cells differentiated normally, but the intracellular and intercellular rotational alignments of ependymal motile cilia were disrupted. As a consequence, the fluid flow generated by the hGFAP-Cre;Dvl1(-/-);2(flox/flox);3(+/-) E cells was significant…

Neuroscience(all)Dishevelled ProteinsMice TransgenicBiologyTransgenicArticleMiceEpendymaCell polarityFLOXGeneticsmedicinePsychologyAnimalsCiliaAdaptor Proteins Signal Transducingchemistry.chemical_classificationNeurology & NeurosurgeryGeneral NeuroscienceCiliumSignal TransducingNeurosciencesWnt signaling pathwayAdaptor ProteinsCell PolarityPhosphoproteinsDishevelledCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryMotile ciliumCognitive SciencesEpendymaIntracellularHydrocephalusSignal TransductionNeuron
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Analysis of a solute polarity parameter in reversed-phase liquid chromatography on a linear solvation relationship basis

2004

Abstract A study was made to correlate an overall solute polarity descriptor ( p ) with several molecular parameters: excess molar refraction ( E ), dipolarity/polarizability ( S ), effective hydrogen-bond acidity ( A ) and basicity ( B ), and McGowan volume ( V ), through the linear solvation model ( p = c + eE + sS + aA + bB + vV ). The achieved values of p were introduced in a retention model developed previously for reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC), which describes the retention according to the polarity contributions of solute, mobile phase and stationary phase. The retention behaviour (log  k ) of a solute in a given chromatographic system (i.e. column/organic solvent) is a…

OctanolElutionPolarity (physics)SolvationAnalytical chemistryReversed-phase chromatographyBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryPartition coefficientchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPhase (matter)Environmental ChemistryAcetonitrileSpectroscopyAnalytica Chimica Acta
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New neurons follow the flow of cerebrospinal fluid in the adult brain

2006

Autores: Sawamoto, K. et al. .- PMID:16410488

Olfactory systemRecombinant Fusion ProteinsSubventricular zoneNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyCerebral VentriclesLateral ventriclesMiceCerebrospinal fluidNeuroblastCell MovementNeuroblast migrationEpendymamedicineAnimalsBrain Tissue TransplantationCiliaCerebrospinal FluidNeuronsMultidisciplinaryCell PolarityEpithelial CellsAnatomyOlfactory BulbOlfactory bulbmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemChoroid PlexusIntercellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsNeuronNeuroscience
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Signals involved in the early TH1/TH2 polarization of an immune response depending on the type of antigen.

1999

Abstract Background: The early production of distinct cytokines by epidermal cells (ECs) in response to antigen exposure may govern the development of T H1 -like immune responses, such as contact sensitivity, or T H2 -like immune responses, such as IgE-dependent allergies of the immediate type, depending on the type of antigen. Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the signals induced by protein allergens with those induced by haptens in ECs and subsequently in local draining lymph node cells (LNCs) or splenocytes. Methods: BALB/c mice were primed in vivo with the protein allergens ovalbumin or birch pollen or the haptens 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene or trinitrochlorbenzene, respectiv…

Ovalbuminmedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyImmunoglobulinsEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayPicryl ChlorideBiologyMiceImmune systemTh2 CellsAntigenmedicineDinitrochlorobenzeneImmunology and AllergyAnimalsRNA MessengerCells CulturedMice Inbred BALB CReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionCell PolarityEpithelial CellsT lymphocyteAllergensTh1 CellsInterleukin-10Interleukin 10OvalbuminBlotting SouthernKineticsCytokineImmunologybiology.proteinCytokinesPollenFemaleLymph NodesAntibodyHaptenHaptensSpleenSignal TransductionThe Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
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The expression level of the orphan nuclear receptor GCNF (germ cell nuclear factor) is critical for neuronal differentiation.

2004

The germ cell nuclear factor (GCNF) is essential for normal embryonic development and gametogenesis. To test the prediction that GCNF is additionally required for neuronal differentiation, we used the mouse embryonal carcinoma cell line PCC7-Mz1, which represents an advantageous model to study neuronal cells from the stage of fate choice until the acquirement of functional competence. We generated stable transfectants that express gcnf sense or antisense RNA under the control of a tetracycline-regulated promoter. After retinoic acid-induced withdrawal from the cell cycle, sense clones developed a neuron network with changed properties, and the time course of neuron maturation was shortened.…

Patch-Clamp TechniquesGerm cell nuclear factorSynaptophysinDown-RegulationGene ExpressionReceptors Cytoplasmic and NuclearNerve Tissue ProteinsTretinoinBiologyNestinMiceEndocrinologyGAP-43 ProteinIntermediate Filament ProteinsNuclear Receptor Subfamily 6 Group A Member 1AnimalsRNA AntisenseMolecular BiologyNeuronsCell CycleCell PolarityCell DifferentiationGeneral MedicineCell cycleNestinCell biologyUp-RegulationNeuroepithelial cellDNA-Binding Proteinsnervous systemNeuron maturationSynaptophysinbiology.proteinNeuron differentiationStem cellMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsMolecular endocrinology (Baltimore, Md.)
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