Search results for "axis"

showing 10 items of 751 documents

Phenotypic Heterogeneity of the Insect Pathogen Photorhabdus luminescens: Insights into the Fate of Secondary Cells

2019

Photorhabdus luminescens is a Gram-negative bacterium that lives in symbiosis with soil nematodes and is simultaneously highly pathogenic toward insects. The bacteria exist in two phenotypically different forms, designated primary (1°) and secondary (2°) cells. Yet unknown environmental stimuli as well as global stress conditions induce phenotypic switching of up to 50% of 1° cells to 2° cells. An important difference between the two phenotypic forms is that 2° cells are unable to live in symbiosis with nematodes and are therefore believed to remain in the soil after a successful infection cycle. In this work, we performed a transcriptomic analysis to highlight and better understand the rol…

InsectaPhenotypic switchingCellMothsBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyTranscriptome03 medical and health sciencesBacterial ProteinsPhotorhabdus luminescensEnvironmental MicrobiologymedicineAnimalsSymbiosisGene030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesRhizosphereEcology030306 microbiologyGene Expression ProfilingComputational BiologyChemotaxisbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeCell biologyPhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structureLarvaRhizosphereBiological AssayPhotorhabdusFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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α5β1 integrin-mediated adhesion to fibronectin is required for axis elongation and somitogenesis in mice.

2011

The arginine-glycine-aspartate (RGD) motif in fibronectin (FN) represents the major binding site for α5β1 and αvβ3 integrins. Mice lacking a functional RGD motif in FN (FN(RGE/RGE)) or α5 integrin develop identical phenotypes characterized by embryonic lethality and a severely shortened posterior trunk with kinked neural tubes. Here we show that the FN(RGE/RGE) embryos arrest both segmentation and axis elongation. The arrest is evident at about E9.0, corresponding to a stage when gastrulation ceases and the tail bud-derived presomitic mesoderm (PSM) induces α5 integrin expression and assumes axis elongation. At this stage cells of the posterior part of the PSM in wild type embryos are tight…

IntegrinsMesodermIntegrinEmbryonic Developmentlcsh:MedicineApoptosisBiochemistryMiceSomitogenesisMolecular Cell BiologyCell AdhesionParaxial mesodermmedicineAnimalsSignaling in Cellular ProcessesReceptors VitronectinCell adhesionlcsh:ScienceBiologyAxis elongationCell ProliferationRGD motifMultidisciplinarybiologyGastrulationlcsh:RGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell DifferentiationMolecular DevelopmentFibronectinsExtracellular MatrixCell biologyFibronectinmedicine.anatomical_structureSomitesCytochemistrybiology.proteinlcsh:QOligopeptidesCell Movement SignalingProtein BindingResearch ArticleDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionPLoS ONE
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Preliminary data revealing efficacy of Streptococcus salivarius K12 (SSK12) in Periodic Fever, Aphthous stomatitis, Pharyngitis, and cervical Adeniti…

2023

ObjectiveTo evaluate the potential role of Streptococcus salivarius K12 (SSK12) in controlling febrile flares in patients with Periodic Fever, Aphthous stomatitis, Pharyngitis, and cervical Adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome. Further aims were to assess the impact of SSK12 on (i) flare duration, (ii) variation in the degree of the highest body temperature during flares, (iii) steroid-sparing effect, and (iv) change of PFAPA accompanying symptoms before and after SSK12 introduction.Patients and methodsThe medical charts from 85 pediatric patients with PFAPA syndrome (49 males and 36 females) enrolled in the AIDA registry and treated with SSK12 for a median period of 6.00 ± 7.00 months in the period b…

International Registry PFAPA syndrome Streptococcus salivarius K12 autoinflammatory disease probiotic prophylaxis tonsillitisSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaAutoinflammationGeneral MedicineHuman medicinePFAPA syndromeFrontiers in Medicine
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Cultural sport psychology as a pathway to advances in identity and settlement research to practice

2019

Abstract Objectives To situate mostly European cultural sport psychology scholarship in a historical backdrop and then to draw on two recent examples from such scholarship to propose future prospects. Design A review of literature is utilized to situate the recent prominence of cultural sport psychology. This review is written temporally from past, to present, to future prospects. Method A presentation of scholarship is presented temporally relating to the following: (a) gender scholarship, (b) cross cultural voids in race and ethnicity, (c) situating of cultural sport psychology in present day, with the emergence of European scholars, (d) the topics of intersectionality of identity and acc…

IntersectionalityPraxismedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesEthnic groupIdentity (social science)Gender studies030229 sport sciencesSport psychology050105 experimental psychologyAcculturation03 medical and health sciencesScholarship0302 clinical medicineCross-cultural0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyApplied Psychologymedia_commonPsychology of Sport and Exercise
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Presence of Blastocystis in gut microbiota is associated with cognitive traits and decreased executive function.

2022

Growing evidence implicates the gut microbiome in cognition. Blastocystis is a common gut single-cell eukaryote parasite frequently detected in humans but its potential involvement in human pathophysiology has been poorly characterized. Here we describe how the presence of Blastocystis in the gut microbiome was associated with deficits in executive function and altered gut bacterial composition in a discovery (n = 114) and replication cohorts (n = 942). We also found that Blastocystis was linked to bacterial functions related to aromatic amino acids metabolism and folate-mediated pyrimidine and one-carbon metabolism. Blastocystis-associated shifts in bacterial functionality translated into …

Intestins--MicrobiologiaMicrobiologiaPathogenesisBlastocystis InfectionsMicrobiologyMETAGENOMICSMEMBERExecutive FunctionMicegut microbiota ; Blastocystis ; executive function ; gut microbiome-brain axis.CognitionAparell digestiuDiagnosisAnimalsHumansEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBlastocistMEMORYDNAGastrointestinal MicrobiomeCognicióBlastocystisBlastocist -- InfeccióMicrobiomaBiomarkersThe ISME journal
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Inactivation and tachyphylaxis of heat-evoked inward currents in nociceptive primary sensory neurones of rats.

2000

In contrast to other sensory modalities, pain does not decrease when a noxious stimulus is applied at constant intensity (Greene & Hardy, 1962). From this lack of adaptation on the perceptive level it has traditionally been implied that primary nociceptive afferents also do not adapt upon constant stimulation. This is in contrast to the results of recordings from these afferents, which exhibit pronounced adaptation for physical as well as chemical stimuli (Meyer et al. 1994). Peripheral adaptation of nociceptive nerve endings is compensated by central summation (Mendell & Wall, 1965; Price et al. 1977); this slow summation process of small fibre input to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord i…

Intracellular FluidMaleHot TemperatureTime FactorsPhysiologyStimulationTachyphylaxisStimulus (physiology)Rats Sprague-Dawley03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineGanglia SpinalNoxious stimulusAnimalsNeurons AfferentTachyphylaxisCells Cultured030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesChemistryElectric ConductivityNociceptorsOriginal ArticlesRatsNociceptionNociceptorCalciumFemaleCapsazepineExtracellular SpaceNeuroscienceFree nerve ending030217 neurology & neurosurgeryThe Journal of physiology
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European expert opinion on the management of invasive candidiasis in adults

2011

Item does not contain fulltext This report discusses the present status of antifungal therapy and treatment options for candidaemia, considered by experts in the field in Europe. A conference of 26 experts from 13 European countries was held to discuss strategies for the treatment and prevention of invasive candidiasis, with the aim of providing a review on optimal management strategies. Published and unpublished comparative trials on antifungal therapy were analysed and discussed. Commonly asked questions about the management of candidaemia were selected, and possible responses to these questions were discussed. Panellists were then asked to respond to each question by using a touchpad ans…

Invasive mycoses and compromised host Translational research [N4i 2]AdultMicrobiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyAntifungal Agentsmedicine.medical_treatmentPlacebo-controlled studyMEDLINEInvasive mycoses and compromised host Infection and autoimmunity [N4i 2]MicrobiologyMedicineHumanscandidaemiaCandidiasis InvasiveguidelinesIntensive care medicineWatchful Waitingtherapybusiness.industryTreatment optionsPathogenesis and modulation of inflammation Infection and autoimmunity [N4i 1]General MedicineInvasive candidiasisComparative trialAntibiotic Prophylaxismedicine.diseaseOptimal managementEuropeIntensive Care UnitsInfectious DiseasesconsensusExpert opinioncandidabusinessWatchful waitingClinical Microbiology and Infection
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Delayed healing of chronic leg ulcers can result from impaired trafficking of bone marrow-derived precursors of keratinocytes to the skin

2006

In this paper, it is hypothesized that in chronic wounds the process of homing of bone marrow-derived precursors of keratinocytes is disturbed, and that the interaction between cutaneous T-cell attracting chemokine (CTACK/CCL27) and soluble P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) can be the cause of this impairment. Several studies have revealed that bone marrow-derived cells (BMDC) trans-differentiate into various cellular lineages, and probably they participate also in healing of wounded skin. Recent studies have demonstrated that BMDC can engraft into the epidermis, and probably they do not engraft into epidermis as keratinocyte stem cells, but rather as transient amplifying cells. So,…

KeratinocytesChemokineBone Marrow CellsModels BiologicalEpitheliumCell MovementmedicineAnimalsHumansCell LineageSkinWound Healingintegumentary systembiologyLeg UlcerCell DifferentiationChemotaxisGeneral MedicineColony-stimulating factorCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologybiology.proteinCCL27Bone marrowEpidermisStem cellKeratinocyteHoming (hematopoietic)Medical Hypotheses
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Different integrins mediate cell spreading, haptotaxis and lateral migration of HaCaT keratinocytes on fibronectin

2000

Collaborative role of various fibronectin-binding integrins (alpha5beta1, alphavbeta1 and alphavbeta6) as mediators of cell adhesion and migration on fibronectin was studied using cultured HaCaT keratinocytes. This cell line spontaneously expressed all three fibronectin-binding integrins. In addition, the expression of alphavbeta6 integrin was strongly and specifically upregulated by transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGFbeta1) whereas the amount of other integrins remained practically unchanged on the cell surface. Adhesion, spreading and motility of HaCaT keratinocytes on fibronectin were promoted by TGFbeta1. Based on antibody blocking experiments, both untreated and TGFbeta1-treated HaCa…

KeratinocytesIntegrinsImmunoblottingIntegrinHaptotaxisCell LineReceptors FibronectinAntigens NeoplasmCell MovementTransforming Growth Factor betaCell AdhesionmedicineHumansReceptors VitronectinCell adhesionDose-Response Relationship DrugbiologyChemistryCell migrationGeneral MedicineFlow CytometryPrecipitin TestsFibronectinsUp-RegulationCell biologyFibronectinHaCaTmedicine.anatomical_structureembryonic structuresbiology.proteinVitronectinKeratinocyteCell Adhesion and Communication
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The Ras/Raf-1/MEK1/ERK Signaling Pathway Coupled to Integrin Expression Mediates Cholinergic Regulation of Keratinocyte Directional Migration

2005

The physiologic mechanisms that determine directionality of lateral migration are a subject of intense research. Galvanotropism in a direct current (DC) electric field represents a natural model of cell re-orientation toward the direction of future migration. Keratinocyte migration is regulated through both the nicotinic and muscarinic classes of acetylcholine (ACh) receptors. We sought to identify the signaling pathway mediating the cholinergic regulation of chemotaxis and galvanotropism. The pharmacologic and molecular modifiers of the Ras/Raf-1/MEK1/ERK signaling pathway altered both chemotaxis toward choline and galvanotropism toward the cathode in a similar way, indicating that the sam…

KeratinocytesMAPK/ERK pathwayIntegrinsalpha7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine ReceptorMAP Kinase Signaling SystemIntegrinMAP Kinase Kinase 1Receptors NicotinicBiologyTransfectionBiochemistryMuscarinic acetylcholine receptormedicineHumansRNA Small InterferingKeratinocyte migrationExtracellular Signal-Regulated MAP KinasesMolecular BiologyCells CulturedChemotaxisReceptor Muscarinic M1ChemotaxisCell BiologyAcetylcholineUp-RegulationCell biologyElectrophysiologyras Proteinsbiology.proteinraf KinasesLamellipodiumSignal transductionAcetylcholineSignal Transductionmedicine.drugJournal of Biological Chemistry
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