Search results for "Sial"

showing 10 items of 626 documents

Interaction of Bacillus thuringiensis Toxins with Larval Midgut Binding Sites of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)

2004

ABSTRACT In 1996, Bt-cotton (cotton expressing a Bacillus thuringiensis toxin gene) expressing the Cry1Ac protein was commercially introduced to control cotton pests. A threat to this first generation of transgenic cotton is the evolution of resistance by the insects. Second-generation Bt-cotton has been developed with either new B. thuringiensis genes or with a combination of cry genes. However, one requirement for the “stacked” gene strategy to work is that the stacked toxins bind to different binding sites. In the present study, the binding of 125 I-labeled Cry1Ab protein ( 125 I-Cry1Ab) and 125 I-Cry1Ac to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) of Helicoverpa armigera was analyzed in com…

Bacterial ToxinsPopulationBacillus thuringiensisCarbohydratesDrug ResistanceHelicoverpa armigeraModels BiologicalApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyHemolysin Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundBacterial ProteinsLectinsBacillus thuringiensisInvertebrate MicrobiologyAnimalsBinding siteSoybean agglutininPest Control BiologicaleducationGossypiumeducation.field_of_studyBinding SitesBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsEcologybiologyfungifood and beveragesPlants Genetically Modifiedbiology.organism_classificationSialic acidEndotoxinsLepidopteraKineticsCry1AcchemistryBiochemistryGenes BacterialLarvaNoctuidaeDigestive SystemFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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Det vanskelige foreldreskapet : en studie av foreldre som har deltatt på kurs til foreldre med barn i fosterhjem : deres egenopplevelse av sitt forel…

2007

Regionalt Fosterhjemsarbeid avd. Kristiansand, Barne-, ungdoms- og familieetaten i region Sør arrangerte et kurs til foreldre med barn i fosterhjem vinteren 2006. Studien Det vanskelige foreldreskapet er blitt til ved at Regionalt fosterhjemsarbeid i Bufetat, avd. Kristiansand henvendte seg til PRAXIS – Sør/ Høgskolen i Agder v/ Institutt for sosiologi, sosialt arbeid og velferdsfag og ba om bistand til en oppsummering av foreldrenes opplevelse av egensituasjon og hvordan de har opplevd å delta på kurset. Studiens problemstillinger er, Hvordan presenterer foreldre som har deltatt på kurs til foreldre med barn i fosterhjem sin situasjon? Hvordan presenterer foreldre med barn i fosterhjem sit…

BarnevernForeldreomsorgVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Psykologi: 260::Sosial-og arbeidspsykologi: 263ParentingParent-child relationsForeldreskapVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Sosialt arbeid: 360VDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Sosiologi: 220
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Effect of simulated gastrointestinal digestion on sialic acid and gangliosides present in human milk and infant formulas.

2011

The effects of simulated gastrointestinal digestion upon sialic acid and gangliosides in infant and follow-on formulas and human milk, as well as their bioaccessibility, have been evaluated. The gastric stage is the step that causes a greater decrease in sialic acid and ganglioside contents. The intestinal stage only decreases the total and individual contents of gangliosides. After gastrointestinal digestion, neither sialic acid nor gangliosides were found in the nonbioaccessible fraction. The highest bioaccessibility (100 × content in soluble fraction after gastrointestinal digestion/total content) of sialic acid is found in human milk (87%), followed by infant formula (77%) and follow-on…

Biological AvailabilityBiologyModels BiologicalGastrointestinal digestionchemistry.chemical_compoundGangliosidesmedicineHumansFood scienceGangliosideMilk HumanStomachStage onlyInfantGeneral ChemistryInfant FormulaN-Acetylneuraminic AcidSialic acidBioavailabilityGastrointestinal Tractmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryInfant formulaDigestionGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDigestionJournal of agricultural and food chemistry
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Gangliosides and sialic acid effects upon newborn pathogenic bacteria adhesion: An in vitro study

2012

The effect of the main gangliosides (GM(1), GM(3), GD(3)) and free sialic acid (Neu5Ac) upon the adhesion of pathogenic bacteria implicated in infant diarrhoea is assessed in vitro using the Caco-2 cell line. Concentrations of the bioactive compounds found in the bioaccessible (soluble) fraction of infant formula and human milk are employed. Bacterial adhesion behaviour included enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), enteropathogenic E.coli (EPEC), Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella entericaserovartyphi, Shigella sonnei, Campylobacter jejuni and Helicobacter pylori. Three different approaches were assayed: pre-incubation of bacteria and compounds before addition to cells (competition); pr…

Biologymedicine.disease_causeModels BiologicalCampylobacter jejuniBacterial AdhesionAnalytical ChemistryMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundListeria monocytogenesGangliosidesEnterotoxigenic Escherichia colimedicineHumansBacteriaInfant NewbornPathogenic bacteriaBacterial InfectionsGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationN-Acetylneuraminic AcidIn vitroSialic acidchemistryCell cultureDiarrhea InfantileCaco-2 CellsBacteriaFood ScienceFood Chemistry
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Exosome-associated polysialic acid modulates membrane potentials, membrane thermotropic properties, and raft-dependent interactions between vesicles.

2020

In mammals, polysialic acid (polySia) attached to a small number of transmembrane protein carriers occurs on the surface of plasma membranes of neural, cancer, immune, and placental trophoblast cells. Here, our goal was to demonstrate the presence of polySia on exosomes and its effect on membrane properties. We isolated exosomes and found that polysialylated exosomes in fetal bovine serum originate mostly from placental trophoblasts, while in calf bovine serum, they originate from immune cells. Enzymatic removal of polySia chains from the exosomal surface makes the membrane surface potential more positive, transmembrane potential more negative, and reduces the activation energy for membrane…

BiophysicsExosomesBiochemistryExosomeMembrane Potentials03 medical and health sciencesMembrane MicrodomainsStructural BiologyCell Line TumorGeneticsFluorescence Resonance Energy TransferHumansMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyMembrane potential0303 health sciencesPolysialic acidChemistryVesicle030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyTemperatureCell BiologyMicrovesiclesTransmembrane proteinCell biologyMembraneSialic AcidsAnisotropyanisotropy; exosomes; FRET; membrane potentials; polysialicacid; raftsFetal bovine serumFEBS lettersReferences
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Mucolipidosis I: increased sialic acid content and deficiency of an alpha-N-acetylneuraminidase in cultured fibroblasts.

1977

Abstract Extracts of fibroblasts derived from a patient with mucolipidosis I exhibited a fivefold increase in sialic acid content as compared to those of normal cells. About 80% of this sialic acid was linked to other molecules. Using neuraminlactose as a substrate, mucolipidosis I fibroblasts were found to be severely deficient in an “acid” α-N-acetylneuraminidase. Since other lysosomal hydrolase activities were normal, we hypothesize that the basic metabolic lesion in mucolipidosis I lies in a defective degradation of sialic acid-containing compounds due to the genetic deficiency of a neuraminidase.

BiophysicsNeuraminidaseBiochemistryLesionchemistry.chemical_compoundMucolipidosesMucolipidosis IHydrolasemedicineHumansSialidosisMolecular BiologyCells CulturedSkinbiologyMucolipidosesSubstrate (chemistry)Cell BiologyFibroblastsmedicine.diseaseSialic acidBiochemistrychemistrybiology.proteinSialic Acidsmedicine.symptomNeuraminidaseBiochemical and biophysical research communications
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Amelioration of spinal cord compressive injury by pharmacological preconditioning with erythropoietin and a nonerythropoietic erythropoietin derivati…

2006

Object Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating clinical syndrome for which no truly efficacious therapy has yet been identified. In preclinical studies, erythropoietin (EPO) and its nonerythropoietic derivatives asialoEPO and carbamylated EPO have markedly improved functional outcome when administered after compressive SCI. However, an optimum treatment paradigm is currently unknown. Because the uninjured spinal cord expresses a high density of EPO receptor (EPOR) in the basal state, signaling through these existing receptors in advance of injury (pharmacological preconditioning) might confer neuroprotection and therefore be potentially useful in situations of anticipated damage. Methods…

Blotting WesternAsialoglycoproteinsPharmacologyNeuroprotectionCentral nervous system diseaseImmunoenzyme TechniquesRats Sprague-DawleySpinal cord compressionReceptors ErythropoietinMedicineAnimalsReceptorSpinal cord injuryErythropoietinSpinal Cord InjuriesAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryGeneral MedicineSpinal cordmedicine.diseaseErythropoietin receptorRatsDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroprotective AgentsErythropoietinImmunologybusinessmedicine.drugJournal of neurosurgery. Spine
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Silica as a morphogenetically active inorganic polymer.

2013

At present the scaffolds used for bioprinting of cells do not elicit morphogenetic responses in the cells. In the present study we approached a solution by studying the effect of an inorganic silica supplement added to an Na-alginate matrix. Bone- and osteoblast-like SaOS-2 cells were embedded into this organic polymeric matrix which was additionally enriched with 400 μM prehydrolyzed TEOS [tetra-ethoxy-silane], a source of ortho-silicate. In this silica-based matrix the cells synthesized hydroxyapatite crystallites after exposure to a mineralization activation cocktail composed of β-glycerophosphate, ascorbic acid and dexamethasone. The degree of hydroxyapatite synthesis, determined by sta…

Bone sialoprotein0303 health sciencesbiologyChemistryBiomedical Engineering02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyAscorbic acidMineralization (biology)03 medical and health sciencesstomatognathic systemBiochemistrybiology.proteinOsteocalcinAlkaline phosphataseGeneral Materials ScienceOsteopontinOsteonectin0210 nano-technologyType I collagen030304 developmental biologyBiomaterials science
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Immunohistochemical Evaluation of Periodontal Regeneration Using a Porous Collagen Scaffold.

2021

(1) Aim: To immunohistochemically evaluate the effect of a volume-stable collagen scaffold (VCMX) on periodontal regeneration. (2) Methods: In eight beagle dogs, acute two-wall intrabony defects were treated with open flap debridement either with VCMX (test) or without (control). After 12 weeks, eight defects out of four animals were processed for paraffin histology and immunohistochemistry. (3) Results: All defects (four test + four control) revealed periodontal regeneration with cementum and bone formation. VCMX remnants were integrated in bone, periodontal ligament (PDL), and cementum. No differences in immunohistochemical labeling patterns were observed between test and control sites. N…

Bone sialoproteinPathologyBone RegenerationBiology (General)610 Medicine & healthSpectroscopyDental CementumbiologyTissue ScaffoldsChemistrybiomaterialGeneral MedicineEpithelial cell rests of MalassezComputer Science ApplicationsChemistrymedicine.anatomical_structureimmunohistochemistryKeratinsCollagenPorosityBlood vesselmedicine.medical_specialtyPeriodontal DebridementQH301-705.5Periodontal Ligament610 Medicine & healthvolume-stable collagen matrixCatalysisCollagen Type IArticleInorganic ChemistryhistologyDogsstomatognathic systemProliferating Cell Nuclear Antigenperiodontal regenerationmedicinePeriodontal fiberAnimalsIntegrin-Binding SialoproteinCementumPhysical and Theoretical Chemistryintrabony defectMolecular BiologyQD1-999Regeneration (biology)Organic ChemistryOpen flap debridementcollagen scaffoldHistologybiology.proteinGuided Tissue Regeneration PeriodontalCell Adhesion MoleculesInternational journal of molecular sciences
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Salivary gland application of botulinum toxin for the treatment of sialorrhea

2007

Sialorrhea or excessive salivation, and drooling, are common and disabling manifestations in different neurological disorders. A review is made of the literature, based on a PubMed search, selecting those articles describing clinical trials involving the injection of botulinum toxin A in the salivary glands of patients with different diseases characterized by sialorrhea. The most frequently treated diseases were infant cerebral palsy (30%), Parkinson’s disease (20%) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (15%). Over half of the authors injected the product into the parotid glands, 9.5% into the submaxillary glands, and 38% into both. The total doses of toxin injected varied from 10-100 units of …

Botulinum toxinsalivary glandsToxina botulínicaUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASsialorreaglándulas salivales:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]sialorrheaneurological diseasesenfermedades neurológicas
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