Search results for "Vertebrate"

showing 10 items of 830 documents

Evaluating diagnostic indicators of urogenital Schistosoma haematobium infection in young women: A cross sectional study in rural South Africa

2018

BackgroundUrine microscopy is the standard diagnostic method for urogenital S. haematobium infection. However, this may lead to under-diagnosis of urogenital schistosomiasis, as the disease may present itself with genital symptoms in the absence of ova in the urine. Currently there is no single reliable and affordable diagnostic method to diagnose the full spectrum of urogenital S. haematobium infection. In this study we explore the classic indicators in the diagnosis of urogenital S. haematobium infection, with focus on young women.MethodsIn a cross-sectional study of 1237 sexually active young women in rural South Africa, we assessed four diagnostic indicators of urogenital S. haematobium…

Rural PopulationPhysiologyCross-sectional studylcsh:MedicineArtificial Gene Amplification and ExtensionUrineUrinePolymerase Chain ReactionGastroenterologySchistosomiasis haematobiaSouth Africa0302 clinical medicineMedicine and Health SciencesSchistosomiasis030212 general & internal medicinelcsh:Scienceqy_185Schistosoma haematobiumMultidisciplinarybiologyEukaryotawc_810Latent class modelBody Fluids3. Good healthHelminth Infectionsqx_355SchistosomaFemaleAnatomyResearch ArticleNeglected Tropical DiseasesAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentUrogenital SchistosomiasisImaging TechniquesUrology030231 tropical medicineImage AnalysisResearch and Analysis MethodsSensitivity and SpecificityYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesDiagnostic MedicineHelminthsInternal medicineparasitic diseasesParasitic DiseasesmedicineHumansAnimalsSex organMolecular Biology TechniquesMolecular BiologySchistosomaIncontinencebusiness.industryGenitourinary systemlcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesGold standard (test)Tropical Diseasesbiology.organism_classificationwj_20InvertebratesSchistosoma HaematobiumCross-Sectional Studieslcsh:QbusinessPLOS ONE
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Pleistocene allopatric differentiation followed by recent range expansion explains the distribution and molecular diversity of two congeneric crustac…

2021

AbstractPleistocene glaciations had a tremendous impact on the biota across the Palaearctic, resulting in strong phylogeographic signals of range contraction and rapid postglacial recolonization of the deglaciated areas. Here, we explore the diversity patterns and history of two sibling species of passively dispersing taxa typical of temporary ponds, fairy shrimps (Anostraca). We combine mitochondrial (COI) and nuclear (ITS2 and 18S) markers to conduct a range-wide phylogeographic study including 56 populations of Branchinecta ferox and Branchinecta orientalis in the Palaearctic. Specifically, we investigate whether their largely overlapping ranges in Europe resulted from allopatric differe…

SCALE DISPERSALPleistoceneRange (biology)LARGE BRANCHIOPODS CRUSTACEASciencePopulation DynamicsSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAllopatric speciationGENETIC CONSEQUENCESDNA MitochondrialArticleEvolution MolecularANOSTRACAN FAUNAAnimalsGlacial periodPondsEcosystemPhylogenyFAIRY SHRIMPStochastic ProcessesBranchiopodaScience & TechnologyMultidisciplinaryModels GeneticbiologyEcologyGenetic DriftQRGenetic VariationBranchinectaBiodiversityBAYESIAN PHYLOGENETIC INFERENCEFRESH-WATER INVERTEBRATESbiology.organism_classificationBRINE SHRIMPSPhylogeneticsMultidisciplinary SciencesGenetic divergencePhylogeographyPhylogeographyHaplotypesBiogeographyScience & Technology - Other TopicsMEDITERRANEAN BASINPASSIVE DISPERSALBiological dispersalMedicineAnostracaScientific Reports
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Home advantage? Decomposition across the freshwater-estuarine transition zone varies with litter origin and local salinity

2015

Expected increases in the frequency and intensity of storm surges and river flooding may greatly affect the relative salinity of estuarine environments over the coming decades. In this experiment we used detritus from three contrasting environments (marine Fucus vesiculosus; estuarine Spartina anglica; terrestrial Quercus robur) to test the prediction that the decomposition of the different types of litter would be highest in the environment with which they are associated. Patterns of decomposition broadly fitted our prediction: Quercus detritus decomposed more rapidly in freshwater compared with saline conditions while Fucus showed the opposite trend; Spartina showed an intermediate respon…

SalinityClimate ChangeAquatic ScienceOceanographyPoaceaeLitter bagsSpartina anglicaQuercusFloodingDecomposition; Flooding; Global change; Invertebrate assemblage; Litter bagsAnimalsEcosystemGlobal changeEcosystemAbiotic componentSpartinageographyDecompositionDetritusgeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologyEstuaryGeneral MedicineBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationPollutionInvertebratesSalinityInvertebrate assemblageEnglandFucusLitterEnvironmental scienceEstuaries
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Aquatic invertebrate assemblages in ponds from coastal Mediterranean wetlands

2014

Invertebrate aquatic assemblages in ponds from Mediterranean wetlands are composed of organisms belonging to different taxonomic groups, which present a wide range of sizes (from small rotifers to large crustaceans or insects). Although they are often sampled and analyzed separately, the ecological links among these organisms should be considered, especially in very shallow waters. In our study, invertebrate assemblages (including micro-, macrozooplankton and macroinvertebrates) were characterized in eight shal- low lakes from Mediterranean wetlands in Southeastern Spain. A great spatial and temporal variability in the assemblages and in some environmental features was observed. The communi…

SalinityFisheryHabitatEcologySpecies richnessAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationZooplanktonCrustaceanInvertebrateTrophic levelMacrophyteAnnales de Limnologie - International Journal of Limnology
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Habitat degradation correlates with tolerance to climate-change related stressors in the green mussel Perna viridis from West Java, Indonesia

2013

It is unclear whether habitat degradation correlates with tolerance of marine invertebrates to abiotic stress. We therefore tested whether resistance to climate change-related stressors differs between populations of the green mussel Perna viridis from a heavily impacted and a mostly pristine site in West Java, Indonesia. In laboratory experiments, we compared their oxygen consumption and mortality under lowered salinity (-13 and -18 units, both responses), hypoxia (0.5 mg/l, mortality only) and thermal stress (+7 degrees C, mortality only). Mussels from the eutrophied and polluted Jakarta Bay showed a significantly smaller deviation from their normal oxygen consumption and higher survival …

SalinityPernaClimate ChangeAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographyStress PhysiologicalAnimalsSeawaterWater PollutantsEcosystemAbiotic stressEcologyWater PollutionfungiHypoxia (environmental)Marine invertebratesMusselEutrophicationbiology.organism_classificationPollutionHabitat destructionIndonesiaEutrophicationBayEnvironmental MonitoringPerna viridisMarine Pollution Bulletin
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A novel Usher protein network at the periciliary reloading point between molecular transport machineries in vertebrate photoreceptor cells.

2008

Contains fulltext : 69178.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) The human Usher syndrome (USH) is the most frequent cause of combined deaf-blindness. USH is genetically heterogeneous with at least 12 chromosomal loci assigned to three clinical types, USH1-3. Although these USH types exhibit similar phenotypes in human, the corresponding gene products belong to very different protein classes and families. The scaffold protein harmonin (USH1C) was shown to integrate all identified USH1 and USH2 molecules into protein networks. Here, we analyzed a protein network organized in the absence of harmonin by the scaffold proteins SANS (USH1G) and whirlin (USH2D). Immunoelectron microscopic anal…

Scaffold proteinGenetics and epigenetic pathways of disease [NCMLS 6]XenopusCell Cycle ProteinsNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyIn Vitro TechniquesNeuroinformatics [DCN 3]TransfectionModels BiologicalReceptors G-Protein-CoupledMiceChlorocebus aethiopsProtein Interaction MappingGeneticsPerception and Action [DCN 1]otorhinolaryngologic diseasesAnimalsHumansNeurosensory disorders [UMCN 3.3]Cell Cycle ProteinMicroscopy ImmunoelectronMolecular BiologyIntegral membrane proteinGenetics (clinical)Adaptor Proteins Signal TransducingRenal disorder [IGMD 9]GeneticsMice KnockoutExtracellular Matrix ProteinsCiliumSignal transducing adaptor proteinMembrane ProteinsGeneral MedicineTransmembrane proteinCell biologyMice Inbred C57BLCytoskeletal ProteinsEctodomainGenetic defects of metabolism [UMCN 5.1]COS CellsNIH 3T3 CellsCervical collarUsher SyndromesFunctional Neurogenomics [DCN 2]Photoreceptor Cells VertebrateSubcellular FractionsImmunity infection and tissue repair [NCMLS 1]
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Phosphorylation of the Usher syndrome 1G protein SANS controls Magi2-mediated endocytosis.

2014

Item does not contain fulltext The human Usher syndrome (USH) is a complex ciliopathy with at least 12 chromosomal loci assigned to three clinical subtypes, USH1-3. The heterogeneous USH proteins are organized into protein networks. Here, we identified Magi2 (membrane-associated guanylate kinase inverted-2) as a new component of the USH protein interactome, binding to the multifunctional scaffold protein SANS (USH1G). We showed that the SANS-Magi2 complex assembly is regulated by the phosphorylation of an internal PDZ-binding motif in the sterile alpha motif domain of SANS by the protein kinase CK2. We affirmed Magi2's role in receptor-mediated, clathrin-dependent endocytosis and showed tha…

Scaffold proteinGuanylate kinaseMolecular Sequence DataPrimary Cell CultureNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyEndocytosisPhotoreceptor cellExocytosisMiceCiliogenesisGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansProtein Interaction Domains and MotifsAmino Acid SequencePhosphorylationRNA Small InterferingSensory disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 12]Molecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)Adaptor Proteins Signal TransducingBinding SitesGeneral MedicineClathrinEndocytosisCell biologyMice Inbred C57BLRenal disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 11]medicine.anatomical_structureHEK293 CellsGene Expression RegulationCiliary pocketCarrier ProteinsSterile alpha motifGuanylate KinasesSequence AlignmentUsher SyndromesPhotoreceptor Cells VertebrateProtein BindingSignal TransductionHuman molecular genetics
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Evidence for synergistic and complementary roles of Bassoon and darkness in organizing the ribbon synapse

2012

Abstract Ribbon synapses are tonically active high-throughput synapses. The performance of the ribbon synapse is accomplished by a specialization of the cytomatrix at the active zone (CAZ) referred to as the synaptic ribbon (SR). Progress in our understanding of the structure–function relationship at the ribbon synapse has come from observations that, in photoreceptors lacking a full-size scaffolding protein Bassoon ( Bsn Δ Ex 4 / 5 ), dissociation of SRs coincides with perturbed signal transfer. The aim of the present study has been to elaborate the role of Bassoon as a structural organizer of the ribbon synapse and to differentiate it with regard to the ambient lighting conditions. The ul…

Scaffold proteinSynaptic ribbonRetinaGeneral NeuroscienceNerve Tissue ProteinsNanotechnologyDarknessRibbon synapseBiologyMice Mutant StrainsMice Inbred C57BLMicemedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy Electron TransmissionArciform densitySynapsesDarknessRibbonmedicineBiophysicsAnimalssense organsActive zonePhotoreceptor Cells VertebrateNeuroscience
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Direct interaction of the Usher syndrome 1G protein SANS and myomegalin in the retina

2011

Contains fulltext : 96822.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) The human Usher syndrome (USH) is the most frequent cause of combined hereditary deaf-blindness. USH is genetically heterogeneous with at least 11 chromosomal loci assigned to 3 clinical types, USH1-3. We have previously demonstrated that all USH1 and 2 proteins in the eye and the inner ear are organized into protein networks by scaffold proteins. This has contributed essentially to our current understanding of the function of USH proteins and explains why defects in proteins of different families cause very similar phenotypes. We have previously shown that the USH1G protein SANS (scaffold protein containing ankyrin repeat…

Scaffold proteinUsher syndromePhosphodiesterase 4D interacting protein (PDE4DIP)Muscle ProteinsPlasma protein bindingMice0302 clinical medicineYeastsChlorocebus aethiopsNuclear proteinCells CulturedGenetics0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyNuclear ProteinsCell biologyCOS CellssymbolsPhotoreceptor Cells VertebrateProtein BindingMicrotubule based transportNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyModels BiologicalRetina03 medical and health sciencessymbols.namesakemedicineAnimalsHumanseducationMolecular BiologyAdaptor Proteins Signal Transducing030304 developmental biologyCell BiologyGlycostation disorders [IGMD 4]Golgi apparatusmedicine.diseaseMacaca mulattaMice Inbred C57BLCytoskeletal ProteinsPhotoreceptor cell functionMyomegalinGenetics and epigenetic pathways of disease Functional Neurogenomics [NCMLS 6]CattleAnkyrin repeatCiliary baseIntracellular transport030217 neurology & neurosurgerySensorineuronal degeneration
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Frequency of exposure of endangered Caspian seals to Canine distemper virus, Leptospira interrogans, and Toxoplasma gondii

2017

Canine distemper virus (CDV), Leptospira interrogans, and Toxoplasma gondii are potentially lethal pathogens associated with decline in marine mammal populations. The Caspian Sea is home for the endangered Caspian seal (Pusa caspica). In the late 1990s and early 2000s, CDV caused a series of mortality events involving at least several thousand Caspian seals. To assess current infection status in Caspian seals, we surveyed for antibodies to three pathogens with potential to cause mortality in marine mammals. During 2015-2017, we tested serum samples from 36, apparently healthy, Caspian seals, accidentally caught in fishing nets in the Caspian Sea off Northern Iran, for antibodies to CDV, L. …

SerotypeAgingVeterinary medicineSeals EarlessPhysiologyanimal diseaseslcsh:MedicineAntibodies ProtozoanMarine and Aquatic SciencesAntibodies ViralPathology and Laboratory MedicineBiochemistryToxoplasma Gondii0403 veterinary science0302 clinical medicineImmune PhysiologyMedicine and Health Scienceslcsh:ScienceDistemper Virus CanineMammalsLeptospiraProtozoanseducation.field_of_studySealsImmune System ProteinsMultidisciplinarybiologyEukaryota04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAntibodies BacterialLeptospirosisBacterial PathogensLeptospira InterrogansMedical MicrobiologyVertebratesPathogensToxoplasmaLeptospira interrogansResearch Article040301 veterinary sciencesImmunology030231 tropical medicinePopulationMarine BiologyMicrobiologyAntibodies03 medical and health sciencesDogsLeptospiraparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsLeptospirosisDistemperMarine MammalseducationMicrobial PathogensPusaBacteriaCanine distemperlcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesProteinsToxoplasma gondiibiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseParasitic ProtozoansToxoplasmosis AnimalAmniotesEarth Scienceslcsh:QPLOS ONE
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