Search results for "filaments"

showing 10 items of 45 documents

Ultrastructure of one Ewing's sarcoma of bone with endothelial character and a comparative review of the vessels in 27 cases of typical Ewing's sarco…

1980

An atypical variant of Ewing's sarcoma, located in the left hip of a nine-year-old girl, is discussed at optical, histochemical and electron microscopical level. The endothelial appearing cells seem to play a main role in its histogenesis. Tumoral cells of an undifferentiated blastemic nature show round nuclei and bright lucent cytoplasm, being organized in solid sheets or vascular-like profiles. Alkaline and acid phosphatases are very prominent in all tumoral cells, and some of them also show PAS positive material. Its ultrastructure demonstrates an active pinocytic capacity, cytoplasmic filaments and Weibel-Palade bodies. Simultaneously a review is performed on 27 cases of typical Ewing's…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAcid PhosphataseBone NeoplasmsSarcoma EwingBiologyHistogenesisPathology and Forensic MedicineHemangioendotheliomamedicineHumansEndotheliumChildHipEwing's sarcomaCell BiologyAnatomymedicine.diseaseCytoplasmic filamentsAlkaline PhosphataseMicroscopy ElectronCytoplasmUltrastructureBlood VesselsPinocytosisFemaleSarcomaDifferential diagnosisPathology, research and practice
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Cytokeratin 8 immunostaining pattern and E-cadherin expression distinguish lobular from ductal breast carcinoma.

2000

Immunohistochemistry using antibodies to cytokeratin 8 can serve as a valuable diagnostic tool for the differentiation of lobular from ductal carcinomas of the breast. In contrast with ductal carcinomas, which exhibit a peripheral-predominant immunostaining pattern, adjacent tumor cells “molding” to each other, lobular carcinomas exhibit a ring-like perinuclear immunostaining pattern, creating a “bag of marbles” appearance with neighboring tumor cells. This immunostaining pattern is stable even in the tumors that otherwise do not exhibit characteristic histomorphologic features (ie, solid or pleomorphic type of a lobular carcinoma) and tumors that mimic growth patterns characteristic of the…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyLobular carcinomaIntermediate FilamentsBreast NeoplasmsBiologyDiagnosis DifferentialImmunoenzyme TechniquesCytokeratinBreast cancerCarcinomamedicineHumansskin and connective tissue diseasesCell NucleusCarcinoma Ductal BreastGeneral MedicineDuctal carcinomamedicine.diseaseCadherinsDuctal Breast CarcinomaCarcinoma LobularInvasive lobular carcinomaKeratin 8KeratinsFemaleAmerican journal of clinical pathology
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Neuropathologic and morphometric studies in hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type II with neurofilament accumulation.

1986

Histological, electron microscopic and morphometric data on sural nerve, muscle, and skin biopsies of three patients affected by autosomal dominant hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type II with neurofilament accumulation, whose neurological, cardiological and electrophysiological data have been provided in a previous paper disclosed focally enlarged myelinated axons, due to aggregation of neurofilaments in sural nerves of all 3 biopsied patients, as well as densely packed clusters of filaments in occasional non-myelinated axons without axonal enlargement, in several fibroblasts and endothelial cells in muscle and particularly in skin. This accumulation of filaments was less pronounce…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNeurofilamentNeurologyIntermediate FilamentsSural nerveDermatologyBiologylaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSural NervelawCharcot-Marie-Tooth DiseasemedicineHumansHereditary Sensory and Autonomic NeuropathiesIntermediate filamentCytoskeletonMyelin Sheath030304 developmental biologySkinMotor Neurons0303 health sciencesGeneral NeuroscienceMusclesGeneral MedicineAnatomymedicine.diseaseAxonsPsychiatry and Mental healthElectrophysiologyMicroscopy ElectronMuscular Atrophynervous systemUltrastructureNeurology (clinical)Electron microscopeHereditary motor and sensory neuropathy030217 neurology & neurosurgeryItalian journal of neurological sciences
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Desmin-related neuromuscular disorders

1995

Desmin, the intermediate filament protein of skeletal muscle fibers, cardiac myocytes, and certain smooth muscle cells, is a member of the cytoskeleton linking Z-bands with the plasmalemma and the nucleus. The pathology of desmin in human neuromuscular disorders is always marked by increased amounts, diffusely or focally. Desmin is highly expressed in immature muscle fibers, both during fetal life and regeneration as well as in certain congenital myopathies, together with vimentin. Desmin is also enriched in neonatal myotonic dystrophy and small fibers in infantile spinal muscular atrophy. Focal accretion of desmin may be twofold, in conjunction with certain inclusion bodies, cytoplasmic an…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyIntermediate FilamentsMuscle ProteinsVimentinmacromolecular substancesDesminCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceMuscular DiseasesPhysiology (medical)medicineHumansMyocyteIntermediate Filament ProteinMuscle SkeletalMyopathyIntermediate filamentActinInclusion BodiesbiologyNeuromuscular Diseasesbiology.proteinDesminNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomDystrophinMuscle & Nerve
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Primary desminopathies.

2007

•  Introduction •  Desmin is an essential component of the extrasarcomeric cytoskeleton in striated muscle cells •  Distal myopathy,cardiac arrhythmias,cardiomyopathy:classical criteria of primary desminopathies •  Sub-sarcolemmal and cytoplasmic desmin-positive protein aggregates:the morphological hallmark of primary and secondary desminopathies •  The spectrum of pathogenic desmin gene mutations •  The molecular pathogenesis of primary desminopathies: some answers gained,but even more questions raised •  Diagnostic work-up to distinguish primary from secondary desminopathies •  Treatment and clinical management of primary desminopathy patients Abstract Mutations of the human desmin gene o…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyintermediate filamentsCardiomyopathyReviewsgranulofilamentous materialdesmininclusion bodiesmacromolecular substancesBiologymyofibrillar myopathyprotein aggregationdesmin-related myopathySarcolemmaMuscular DiseasesmedicineMyocyteAnimalsHumansIntermediate filamentMyopathyMuscle SkeletalCytoskeletonGenetic heterogeneityCardiac muscleCell Biologymedicine.diseasemusculoskeletal systemmutationsmedicine.anatomical_structuredesminopathyMutationMolecular MedicineDesminmedicine.symptomMyofibrilJournal of cellular and molecular medicine
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The mathematical modeling of the single and ensemble dynamics of magnetic filaments

2016

Biomimētisku sistēmu izmantošana mikrodzinēju un šķidrumu maisītāju izveidei ir aktuāls izpētes objekts mīksto materiālu nozarē. Šiem mērķiem iespējams izmantot magnētiskas stīgas, ko ir viegli kontrolēt mainot ārēja magnētiskā lauka parametrus. Šajā darbā ir izveidots magnētisku stīgu matemātisks modelis, kas ietver gan vērp es, gan hidrodinamisko mijiedarbību ietekmi dažādos tuvinājumos un izveidota praktiska implementācija divu programmatūras bibliotēku formā. Ar izveidotā modeļa palīdzību iegūti rezultāti, kas raksturo individuālu stīgu un stīgu ansambļu dinamika plašā kustību kontrolējošo parametru diapazonā un iegūti jauni rezultāti, kas raksturo feromagnētisku un superparamagnētisku …

Stoksa hidrodinamikamagnētiski mikropeldētājimagnetic microswimmersPhysicsmagnetic filamentsFizikamagnētiskas stīgasmagnētiskas cīlijasStokesian hydrodynamicsmagnetic cilia
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Morphometry and comparative histology of sinus and atrioventricular nodes in humans and pigs and their relevance in the prevention of nodal arrhythmi…

2019

The cardiac conduction system is a network structure that allows the initiation and fast propagation of electrical impulses that trigger the electrical depolarization of the myocardial tissue. The purpose of this work is to study the histological and morphometric characteristics of the different components of the sinus and atrioventricular nodes in humans and pigs and their relationship with supraventricular arrhythmias. In this study, we describe the morphometry of the sinus and atrioventricular nodes of 10 adult humans and 10 pig hearts. A computerized morphometric study has been carried out, where we determined the number of cells that compose the nodes as well as different parameters re…

Swine040301 veterinary sciencesBiology0403 veterinary science03 medical and health sciencesHeart Conduction SystemmedicineAnimalsHumansdiameter [Area]Intermediate filamentsHeart AtriaHistology Comparativecardiovascular diseasesSinus (anatomy)Sinoatrial Node030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesSupraventricular arrhythmiaGeneral VeterinaryT cellArrhythmias CardiacHistologyDepolarization04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAnatomyAtrioventricular nodemedicine.anatomical_structureConduction systemAtrioventricular NodeP cellcardiovascular systemDesminElectrical conduction system of the heartNODALResearch in Veterinary Science
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Focal adhesions are hotspots for keratin filament precursor formation

2006

Recent studies showed that keratin filament (KF) formation originates primarily from sites close to the actin-rich cell cortex. To further characterize these sites, we performed multicolor fluorescence imaging of living cells and found drastically increased KF assembly in regions of elevated actin turnover, i.e., in lamellipodia. Abundant KF precursors (KFPs) appeared within these areas at the distal tips of actin stress fibers, moving alongside the stress fibers until their integration into the peripheral KF network. The earliest KFPs were detected next to actin-anchoring focal adhesions (FAs) and were only seen after the establishment of FAs in emerging lamellipodia. Tight spatiotemporal …

TalinKeratin 14Intermediate Filamentsmacromolecular substancesBiologyTransfectionKeratin 18Cell LineFocal adhesionMiceReportStress FibersCell cortexMetalloproteinsAnimalsHumansRNA AntisensePseudopodiaCytoskeletonActinResearch ArticlesCell Line TransformedFocal AdhesionsKeratin FilamentKeratin-18Keratin-14Cell BiologyBridged Bicyclo Compounds HeterocyclicActinsZyxinCell biologyProtein TransportThiazolesBiochemistryEpidermolysis Bullosa SimplexMutationKeratinsThiazolidinesMarine ToxinsLamellipodiumPaxillinThe Journal of Cell Biology
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Combining in the melt physical and biological properties of poly(caprolactone) and chlorhexidine to obtain antimicrobial surgical monofilaments.

2012

Bacterial infections on a sutured wound represent a critical problem, and the preparation of suture threads possessing antimicrobial properties is valuable. In this work, poly(caprolactone) (PCL) monofilaments were compounded at the concentration of 1, 2 and 4 % (w/w), respectively, to the antiseptic chlorhexidine diacetate (CHX). The incorporation was carried out in the melt by a single-step methodology, i.e. “online” approach. Mechanical tests revealed that the incorporation of CHX does not significantly change tensile properties of PCL fibres as the thermal profile adopted to prepare the compounded fibres does not compromise the antibacterial activity of CHX. In fact, CHX confers to comp…

Thermoplasticmedicine.drug_classCell SurvivalPolyestersSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleApplied Microbiology and Biotechnologychemistry.chemical_compoundAntisepticTensile StrengthPolymer chemistryUltimate tensile strengthmedicineEscherichia coliHumanschemistry.chemical_classificationpoly(caprolactone)biologyChemistryChlorhexidinechlorhexidineChlorhexidineSuture TechniquesSpectrometry X-Ray EmissionGeneral MedicineFibroblastsbiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobialMicrococcus luteusSettore ING-IND/22 - Scienza E Tecnologia Dei MaterialiEquipment and Suppliessurgical monofilamentsAnti-Infective Agents LocalMicroscopy Electron ScanningMicrococcus luteusAntibacterial activityCaprolactoneBiotechnologyNuclear chemistrymedicine.drugBacillus subtilisApplied microbiology and biotechnology
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Induction of rapid and reversible cytokeratin filament network remodeling by inhibition of tyrosine phosphatases

2002

The cytokeratin filament network is intrinsically dynamic, continuously exchanging subunits over its entire surface, while conferring structural stability on epithelial cells. However, it is not known how cytokeratin filaments are remodeled in situations where the network is temporarily and spatially restricted. Using the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor orthovanadate we observed rapid and reversible restructuring in living cells, which may provide the basis for such dynamics. By examining cells stably expressing fluorescent cytokeratin chimeras, we found that cytokeratin filaments were broken down and then formed into granular aggregates within a few minutes of orthovanadate addition. After …

Tyrosine 3-MonooxygenaseRecombinant Fusion ProteinsGreen Fluorescent ProteinsIntermediate FilamentsFluorescent Antibody Techniquemacromolecular substancesBiologyCytoplasmic GranulesProtein filamentCytokeratinIntermediate Filament ProteinsKeratinTumor Cells CulturedEnzyme InhibitorsPhosphorylationCytoskeletonIntermediate filamentActinchemistry.chemical_classificationCell BiologyPlectinCell biologyLuminescent ProteinsMicroscopy ElectronEukaryotic Cells14-3-3 ProteinschemistryCytoplasmKeratinsPlectinTyrosineProtein Tyrosine PhosphatasesVanadatesJournal of Cell Science
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