Search results for "RATS"

showing 10 items of 3537 documents

Oxygen uptake, heart rate and blood lactate levels in female horseback riders during the obstacle test track

2020

The purpose of this study was to examine endurance performance by recording oxygen uptake, heart rate and blood lactate during the obstacle test track, equivalent to competitive performance in female horseback riders. In total 42 female riders participated in the study (show jumping, SJ n = 16, eventing, E n = 26). Age, height and weight of the total group were 29.0(9.2) yrs, 1.68(0.06) m, and 68.1(10.3) kg, respectively. Participants rode a minimum of 4 times per/week, and the riding level was from national to international. VO2peak/VO2mean and HRpeak/HRmean of the total group during the obstacle test track (OTT) were 34.4(5.0)/26.4(4.0) ml/kg/min and 184.4(9.6)/178.1(10.2) bpm. BLa concen…

Show jumpingmedicine.medical_specialtysykePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitationesteratsastusendurance performance050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineratsastajateventinghevosurheiluInternal medicineHeart rateequestrian sportsBlood lactatemaksimaalinen hapenottoMedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOrthopedics and Sports Medicineshow jumpingsuorituskykybusiness.industryTrack (disk drive)05 social sciences030229 sport sciencesOxygen uptakeObstacleCardiologybusinesshuman activities
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The membrane anchor of microsomal epoxide hydrolase from human, rat, and rabbit displays an unexpected membrane topology.

1997

The microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH) and cytochrome P450s catalyze the sequential formation of carcinogenic metabolites. According to one algorithm for predicting the membrane topology of proteins, the human, the rabbit, and the rat mEH should adopt a type II topology. The type II topology is also predicted by a recently established neuronal network which is trained to recognize signal peptides with very high accuracy. In contrast to these predictions we find, based on N-glycosylation analysis in a cell-free and in a cellular system, that the membrane anchor of human, rat, and rabbit mEH displays a type I topology. This result is correctly predicted by the positive inside rule in which ne…

Signal peptide1303 BiochemistryGlycosylationGlycosylationCytochromeStereochemistryRecombinant Fusion ProteinsImmunoblottingMolecular Sequence DataBiophysics10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology610 Medicine & healthProtein Sorting SignalsTransfectionBiochemistry1307 Cell BiologyCell membranechemistry.chemical_compoundSpecies Specificity1312 Molecular BiologymedicineElectrochemistryAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceEpoxide HydrolasesbiologyCell MembraneCell BiologyRatsmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryMutagenesisMicrosomal epoxide hydrolaseMembrane topologyEpoxide HydrolasesCOS Cellsbiology.protein570 Life sciences; biologyRabbits1304 BiophysicsBiochemical and biophysical research communications
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The microsomal epoxide hydrolase has a single membrane signal anchor sequence which is dispensable for the catalytic activity of this protein

1994

The microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH) catalyses the hydrolysis of reactive epoxides which are formed by the action of cytochromes P-450 from xenobiotics. In addition it has been suggested that mEH might mediate the transport of bile acids. For the mEH it has been shown that it is co-translationally inserted into the endoplasmic reticulum. Here we demonstrate that the N-terminal 20 amino acid residues of this protein serve as its single membrane anchor signal sequence and that the function of this sequence can also be supplied by a cytochrome P-450 (CYP2B1) anchor signal sequence. The evidence supporting this conclusion is as follows: (i) the rat mEH and a CYP2B1-mEH fusion protein, in whic…

Signal peptideDNA ComplementaryCytochromeMolecular Sequence DataProtein Sorting SignalsBiochemistryCatalysisDogsMicrosomesAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceEpoxide hydrolasePancreasMolecular BiologyEpoxide HydrolasesBase SequenceCell-Free SystembiologyChemistryEndoplasmic reticulumCell MembraneTemplates GeneticCell BiologyFusion proteinRatsMembraneBiochemistryProtein BiosynthesisMicrosomal epoxide hydrolaseMicrosomebiology.proteinResearch ArticleBiochemical Journal
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A mathematical approach to predicting the percutaneous absorption enhancing effect of sodium lauryl sulphate.

2003

A study has been made of the effect of sodium lauryl sulphate (SLS) at several concentrations from 0.24 to 5% (w/w) on skin permeability. Seven model drugs were selected for this study on the basis of their lipophilicity as represented by their logP(oct) values (from -0.95 to 4.2). Skin pre-treatment with aqueous solutions of SLS does not increase the permeability coefficient of the most lipophilic compounds (logP(oct)> or =3). For the other compounds assayed the increase in the permeability coefficients depends on the concentration of SLS used in the skin pre-treatment, and on the lipophilicity of the compounds tested.The correlation between the inverse of SLS efficacy as an enhancer (1/ER…

Skin AbsorptionPharmaceutical ScienceAbsorption (skin)In Vitro TechniquesAdministration CutaneousModels Biologicalchemistry.chemical_compoundSurface-Active AgentsPharmacokineticsAnimalsPharmacokineticsSodium dodecyl sulfateRats WistarMathematical ComputingAqueous solutionChromatographyintegumentary systemChemistrySodium lauryl sulphateSodium Dodecyl SulfateRatsPharmaceutical PreparationsPermeability (electromagnetism)LipophilicityFemaleAzoneAlgorithmsInternational journal of pharmaceutics
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Biological tolerance of different materials in bulk and nanoparticulate form in a rat model: sarcoma development by nanoparticles

2006

In order to study the pathobiological impact of the nanometre-scale of materials, we evaluated the effects of five different materials as nanoparticulate biomaterials in comparison with bulk samples in contact with living tissues. Five groups out of 10 rats were implanted bilaterally for up to 12 months with materials of the same type, namely TiO 2 , SiO 2 , Ni, Co and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), subcutaneously with bulk material on one side of the vertebral column and intramuscularly with nanoparticulate material on the contralateral side. At the end of each implantation time, the site was macroscopically examined, followed by histological processing according to standard techniques. Malign…

Skin NeoplasmsSilicon dioxideBiological; tolerance; different; materials; bulk; nanoparticulate; rat model; sarcoma; development; nanoparticlesRat modelBiomedical EngineeringBiophysicsNanoparticleMetal NanoparticlesBioengineeringBiocompatible MaterialsBiochemistryPreneoplastic lesionBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundNickelBulk samplesMaterials TestingmedicineAnimalsPolyvinyl ChlorideTitaniumSarcomaCobaltmedicine.diseaseSilicon DioxideRatsPolyvinyl chloridechemistrySarcomaImplantation timeBiotechnologyBiomedical engineeringResearch Article
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proTRAC - a software for probabilistic piRNA cluster detection, visualization and analysis

2012

Abstract Background Throughout the metazoan lineage, typically gonadal expressed Piwi proteins and their guiding piRNAs (~26-32nt in length) form a protective mechanism of RNA interference directed against the propagation of transposable elements (TEs). Most piRNAs are generated from genomic piRNA clusters. Annotation of experimentally obtained piRNAs from small RNA/cDNA-libraries and detection of genomic piRNA clusters are crucial for a thorough understanding of the still enigmatic piRNA pathway, especially in an evolutionary context. Currently, detection of piRNA clusters relies on bioinformatics rather than detection and sequencing of primary piRNA cluster transcripts and the stringency …

Small RNAendocrine systemLineage (evolution)Piwi-interacting RNAGenomicsContext (language use)Computational biologyBiologylcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticsBiochemistryMiceStructural BiologyCluster (physics)AnimalsHumansGenomic libraryRNA Small InterferingMolecular Biologylcsh:QH301-705.5Gene LibraryGeneticsurogenital systemApplied MathematicsGenomicsComputer Science ApplicationsRatslcsh:Biology (General)DNA Transposable Elementslcsh:R858-859.7RNA InterferenceDNA microarraySoftwareBMC Bioinformatics
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Dye selection for live cell imaging of intact siRNA

2011

Abstract Investigations into the fate of small interfering RNA (siRNA) after transfection may unravel new ways to improve RNA interference (RNAi) efficiency. Because intracellular degradation of RNA may prevent reliable observation of fluorescence-labeled siRNA, new tools for fluorescence microscopy are warranted to cover the considerable duration of the RNAi effect. Here, the characterization and application of new fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) dye pairs for sensing the integrity of duplex siRNA is reported, which allows an assessment of the degradation status of an siRNA cell population by live cell imaging. A panel of high-yield fluorescent dyes has been investigated for …

Small interfering RNACell SurvivalClinical BiochemistryPopulationBiologyBiochemistryLive cell imagingRNA interferenceFluorescence Resonance Energy TransferFluorescence microscopeAnimalsRNA Small InterferingeducationMolecular BiologyCells CulturedFluorescent Dyeseducation.field_of_studyMicroscopy ConfocalBrainEndothelial CellsRNATransfectionHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMolecular biologyRatsFörster resonance energy transferBiophysicsBiological Chemistry
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Interactions related to non-host snails in the host-finding process of Euparyphium albuferensis and Echinostoma friedi (Trematoda: Echinostomatidae) …

2003

In order to determine whether the miracidia of Euparyphium albuferensis and Echinostoma friedi are sensitive to their host snail (HS) and capable of discriminating between HS and non-host snails (NHS), or whether these NHS can interfere and thus reduce the infection rates (decoy effect), a total of three experiments were conducted with HS, NHS and snail-conditioned water (SCW). Gyraulus chinensis is the HS for E. albuferensis miracidia, while Physa acuta, Radix peregra and Lymnaea fuscus are considered NHS. For E. friedi miracidia R. peregra, G. chinensis and L. fuscus are the HS, while P. acuta is the NHS. The NHS R. peregra produces the greatest decoy effect on Euparyphium albuferensis mi…

SnailsRadix peregraZoologySnailDisease VectorsHost-Parasite InteractionsSpecies Specificitybiology.animalCricetinaeEchinostomaGastropodaAnimalsGyraulus chinensisEchinostomiasisGeneral VeterinarybiologyMesocricetusEcologyIntermediate hostWaterGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPhysaRatsInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceParasitologyTrematodaEchinostomaParasitology research
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Reservoir computing model of prefrontal cortex creates novel combinations of previous navigation sequences from hippocampal place-cell replay with sp…

2019

As rats learn to search for multiple sources of food or water in a complex environment, they generate increasingly efficient trajectories between reward sites. Such spatial navigation capacity involves the replay of hippocampal place-cells during awake states, generating small sequences of spatially related place-cell activity that we call “snippets”. These snippets occur primarily during sharp-wave-ripples (SWRs). Here we focus on the role of such replay events, as the animal is learning a traveling salesperson task (TSP) across multiple trials. We hypothesize that snippet replay generates synthetic data that can substantially expand and restructure the experience available and make learni…

Social SciencesNeocortexHippocampusLearning and MemoryAnimal CellsMedicine and Health SciencesPsychologyBiology (General)Problem SolvingProjectionsMammalsNeuronsBehavior AnimalApplied MathematicsSimulation and ModelingBrainEukaryotaAnimal ModelsReactivationExperimental Organism SystemsVertebratesPhysical Sciences[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]AnatomyCellular TypesAlgorithmsStateResearch ArticleMidline ThalamusReverse ReplayQH301-705.5Neural ComputationPrefrontal CortexResearch and Analysis MethodsRodentsModel OrganismsRewardAnimalsLearningComputer Simulation[SDV.NEU] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]ExperienceOrganismsCognitive PsychologySystemsBiology and Life SciencesCell BiologyRatsNeostriatumCellular NeuroscienceAmniotesAnimal StudiesCognitive ScienceMathematicsNeuroscience
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Behavioral changes in male rats exposed to repeated aggression

2001

Research conducted on animal models has obtained information about the behavioral, hormonal, autonomic, neurochemical and immunological response in animals that are exposed to acute aggression by another conspecific animal. Research has also provided information about the pattern of adaptation that occurs when animals are repeatedly exposed to the experience of being attacked and defeated (for a review see1)

Social defeatSocial stressNeurochemicalAggressionMale ratsmedicinePhysiologymedicine.symptomAdaptationPsychology
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