Search results for "TACE"

showing 10 items of 739 documents

Cetacean Morbillivirus: Current Knowledge and Future Directions

2014

We review the molecular and epidemiological characteristics of cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV) and the diagnosis and pathogenesis of associated disease, with six different strains detected in cetaceans worldwide. CeMV has caused epidemics with high mortality in odontocetes in Europe, the USAand Australia. It represents a distinct species within the Morbillivirusgenus. Although most CeMV strains are phylogenetically closely related, recent data indicate that morbilliviruses recovered from Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus), from Western Australia, and a Guiana dolphin (Sotalia guianensis), from Brazil, are divergent. The signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) cell rec…

diagnosisSotalia guianensisSecondary infectionQH301 Biologylcsh:QR1-502ReviewPathogenesisphylogenyendemic infectionsVirusepidemicslcsh:MicrobiologyQH301Dolphin MorbillivirusMorbillivirusmass strandingVirologyDiagnosismedicineAnimalsTursiops aduncusCD150/SLAMMorillivirusEpidemicsPhylogenyQR355CetaceansbiologyTransmission (medicine)Dolphin Morbillivirus; immunity; Pathogenesis; CD150/SLAM; CetaceanspathogenesisCetacean MorbillivirusCetacean morbillivirusbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyimmunityMass strandingCetacean morbillivirusEndemic infectionsInfectious DiseasesMorbillivirusSLAMCetaceaQR355 VirologyMorbillivirus InfectionsEncephalitisMorillivirus; Cetacean Morbillivirus; Cetaceans
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Native and subunit molecular mass and quarternary structure of the hemoglobin from the primitive branchiopod crustacean Triops cancriformis

2006

Many branchiopod crustaceans are endowed with extracellular, high-molecular-weight hemoglobins whose exact structural characteristics have remained a matter of conjecture. By using a broad spectrum of techniques, we provide precise and coherent information on the hemoglobin of one of the phylogenetically ‘oldest’ extant branchiopods, the tadpole shrimp Triops cancriformis. The hemoglobin dissociated under reducing conditions into two subunits, designated TcHbA and TcHbB, with masses of 35 775 ± 4 and 36 055 ± 4 Da, respectively, determined by ESI-MS. Nonreducing conditions showed only two disulfide-bridged dimers, a homodimer of TcHbA, designated D1 (71 548 ± 5 Da), and the heterodimer D2 (…

education.field_of_studyMolecular massProtein subunitPopulationCell BiologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryCrustaceanTriops cancriformisBiochemistryProtein quaternary structureHemoglobinUltracentrifugeeducationMolecular BiologyFEBS Journal
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Growth and production of three macrozoobenthic species in the Gulf of Riga, including comparisons with other areas

1999

Three soft-bottom stations in the southern part of the Gulf of Riga were studied during the period December 1993 to January 1995. The amphipods, Monoporeia affinis and Pontoporeia femorata, and the poychaete Marenzelleria viridis, were analysed for production, using the cohort growth method. Animals were also analysed for carbon and nitrogen content in a CHN-analyser. Based on size measurements, the quantitative data were divided into age-classes and the growth of each cohort was calculated first as wet weight and then converted into carbon and nitrogen content. Total annual production of each species was calculated as well as turnover ratios. The turnover ratio for Monoporeia affinis was e…

education.field_of_studyPontoporeiaAmphipodabiologyEcologyPopulationSeasonalitybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseCrustaceanOceanographyDry weightProductivity (ecology)medicineEnvironmental scienceMonoporeiaeducation
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Supplementary data for: Improved camouflage through ontogenetic colour change confers reduced detection risk in shore crabs

2019

Many animals change appearance with age but the reasons why are rarely tested. Common shore crabs (Carcinus maenas), for example, are known for their ability to change colour over time. Young crabs show remarkable variation in coloration and it has been suggested that their variable appearance may help them to hide from predators in the habitats they use. However, as crabs grow they become more mobile and adult crabs, in contrast, are known to possess a more uniform coloration. This creates a problem: how to remain hidden in habitats that are variable and very different in appearance? To answer this, we first reared young shore crabs of two shades, pale or dark, on two background types rese…

evolutionary developmental biologycamouflageecologycrustaceancrabs
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Exosome release by crustacean hyaline haemocytes in vitro

2010

Exosomes are small microvesicles (40–100 nm) that are formed from the endosome to generate multi-vesicular bodies (MBVs). In mammals, exosomes play a significant role in cellular communication. Exosomes have also been reported for salmon and fruit fly but have not previously been studied in crustaceans. Therefore we undertook to study them in decapods. We chose the hyaline haemocytes of brachyuran crabs, Carcinus maenas and Hyas araneus, because these cells are abundant in haemolymph, are phagocytic and can be cultured on glass or plastic surfaces. Furthermore these cells have been observed to contain MVB-like structures that bear some resemblance to those in mammals that produce exosomes. …

exosomecrustaceanimmunity
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Correlated response of in vitro regeneration capacity from different source of explants inCucumis melo.

1994

The variation among and within different populations of the regeneration ability from leaf, cotyledon and hypocotyl explants has been studied. A control population and two lines selected by their regeneration capacity from leaf explants were used. Significant differences among the plants of the control population,for the organogenic response, were detected. The regeneration capacity varies depending on the type of explant. Selection in order to improve the regeneration frequency from leaf explants also raises the organogenic response in the other explant types. This result suggests the presence of a partial common genetic system controlling the regeneration frequency of the diverse types of…

food.ingredientintegumentary systemRegeneration (biology)fungifood and beveragesOrganogenesisPlant ScienceGeneral MedicineBiologyHypocotylTissue culturefoodCallusBotanyAgronomy and Crop ScienceCucurbitaceaeCotyledonExplant culturePlant cell reports
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Timing and Evolution of Cretaceous Island Arc Magmatism in Central Cuba: Implications for the History of Arc Systems in the Northwestern Caribbean

2011

AbstractSHRIMP and conventional zircon dating place temporal constraints on the evolution of the Cretaceous Volcanic Arc system in central Cuba. The arc has a consistent stratigraphy across strike, with the oldest and deepest rocks in the south (in tectonic contact with the ∼5–10-km-wide Mabujina Amphibolite Complex [MAC]) and younger rocks in the north. The MAC is thought to represent the deepest exposed section of the Cretaceous Volcanic Arc and its oceanic basement in Cuba. We undertook a single zircon geochronological study of five gneisses and two amphibolites from the MAC and seven rocks from the Manicaragua Batholith, which intrudes both the MAC and the Cretaceous Volcanic Arc. A SHR…

geographyBasement (geology)geography.geographical_feature_categoryVolcanic arcBatholithMagmatismGeochemistryIsland arcGeologyGeologyCretaceousZirconGneissThe Journal of Geology
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The Leiza palaeo-fault: Role and importance in the Upper Cretaceous sedimentation and palaeogeography of the Basque Pyrenees (Spain)

1999

Abstract New analysis of the Upper Cretaceous deposits of the Central Depression, a syncline within the Basque Pyrenees, shows that this structure was a deep marine basin analogous to the regional flysch troughs. It was bounded by active faults, including the Leiza palaeo-fault, which sustained erosion of the partly subaerially exposed margins. The Leiza palaeo-fault and its western counterpart, the Kalamua palaeo-fault, are thought to constitute the former plate boundary between Iberia and Europe, and a westward continuation of the North Pyrenean Palaeo-Fault.

geographyFlyschgeography.geographical_feature_categoryOcean EngineeringActive faultFault (geology)CretaceousPlate tectonicsPaleontologySedimentary rockSynclinePalaeogeographyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyComptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences - Series IIA - Earth and Planetary Science
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Palaeomagnetism of the central Cuban Cretaceous Arc sequences and geodynamic implications

2009

Abstract A detailed palaeomagnetic study of Cretaceous age volcanic and sedimentary arc rocks from central Cuba has been carried out. Samples from 32 sites (12 localities) were subjected to detailed demagnetisation experiments. Nineteen sites from the Los Paso, Matagua, Provincial and Cabaiguan Formations yielded high unblocking temperature, dual polarity directions of magnetisation which pass the fold tests with confidence levels of 95% or more and are considered to be primary in origin. The palaeomagnetic inclinations are equivalent to palaeolatitudes of 9°N for the Aptian, 18°N for the Albian. A synfolding remanence identified in 5 sites from the younger Hilario Formation indicates a lat…

geographyPaleomagnetismgeography.geographical_feature_categoryAptianVolcanic arcNorth American PlateFold (geology)Strike-slip tectonicsCretaceousPaleontologyGeophysicsClockwiseGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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A terminal Cretaceous giant pterosaur from the French Pyrenees

1997

A very large pterosaur cervical vertebra is described from the Upper Maastrichtian deposits of Mérigon, in the foothills of the French Pyrenees. It resembles the vertebrae of Quetzalcoatlus, from the Maastrichtian of Texas, more than those of Arambourgiania, from the Maastrichtian of Jordan. The estimated wing span of the Mérigon pterosaur is close to 9 m, which makes it one of the largest known flying creatures. Giant pterosaurs still had a wide geographical distribution at the end of Maastrichtian time, which is not suggestive of a declining group, although it is difficult to obtain an accurate estimate of taxonomic diversity of terminal Cretaceous pterosaurs on the basis of available dat…

geographyQuetzalcoatlusgeography.geographical_feature_categoryCreaturesbiologyArambourgianiaGeologybiology.organism_classificationCretaceousPaleontologyGroup (stratigraphy)FoothillsGeologyAzhdarchidaeGeological Magazine
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