Search results for "lineage"

showing 10 items of 331 documents

Expression and function of micro-RNAs in immune cells during normal or disease state.

2008

Micro-RNAs (miRNAs) are 19-24 nucleotide long non-coding RNAs that posttranscriptionally modulate gene expression. They are found in almost all species: viruses, plants, nematodes, fly, fish, mouse, human, and are implicated in a wide array of cellular and developmental processes. Microarray-based miRNA profiling brought to the discovery of miRNAs specific to different hematopoietic lineages. Furthermore, the functional assays performed in tissue cultures to discover miRNAs involved in immune responses in combination with the reports of miRNA-transgenic or miRNA -knockout mouse models has helped elucidating the miRNA roles in the development and function of immune system. Abnormal patterns …

Innate immune responseAcquired immune responseMicroarrayCellular differentiationHematopoietic SystemComputational biologyReviewBiologyImmune systemNeoplasmsmicroRNAGene expressionGene silencingAnimalsHumansCell LineageHematopoietic lineageTNF-α.CancerGeneticsInnate immune systemDrug discoveryCell DifferentiationGeneral MedicineGenetic TherapyMicroRNAsImmune SystemCytokinesFunction (biology)International journal of medical sciences
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Molecular evolution of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily.

2001

Arthropod hemocyanins are members of a protein superfamily that also comprises the arthropod phenoloxidases (tyrosinases), crustacean pseudohemocyanins (cryptocyanins), and insect storage hexamerins. The evolution of these proteins was inferred by neighbor-joining, maximum-parsimony, and maximum-likelihood methods. Monte Carlo shuffling approaches provided evidence against a discernible relationship of the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily and molluscan hemocyanins or nonarthropodan tyrosinases. Within the arthropod hemocyanin superfamily, the phenoloxidase probably emerged early in the (eu-)arthropod stemline and thus form the most likely outgroup. The respiratory hemocyanins evolved from t…

InsectaTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.medical_treatmentLineage (evolution)Sequence alignmentInsectMolecular evolutionGeneticsmedicineAnimalsMolecular clockMolecular BiologyArthropodsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonbiologyHemocyaninbiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanBiological EvolutionEvolutionary biologyMolluscaMultigene FamilyHemocyaninsArthropodSequence AlignmentMolecular biology and evolution
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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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Multicolor fate mapping of Langerhans cell homeostasis

2013

The adult epidermal Langerhans cell network is formed by adjacent proliferative units composed of dividing cells and their terminally differentiated daughter cells.

Langerhans cellCell divisionImmunologyPopulationCellCytological TechniquesColorMice TransgenicBiology03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineImmune systemImaging Three-DimensionalFate mappingmedicineImmunology and AllergyAnimalsHomeostasisCell Lineageeducation030304 developmental biologyInflammation0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEpidermis (botany)integumentary systemBrief Definitive ReportCell biologyMice Inbred C57BLmedicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisLangerhans CellsImmunologyStem cellJournal of Experimental Medicine
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Species cohesion despite extreme inbreeding in a social spider.

2011

Colonial social spiders experience extreme inbreeding and highly restricted gene flow between colonies; processes that question the genetic cohesion of geographically separated populations and which could imply multiple origins from predecessors with limited gene flow. We analysed species cohesion and the potential for long-distance dispersal in the social spider Stegodyphus dumicola by studying colony structure in eastern South Africa and the cohesion between this population and Namibian populations previously published. Data from both areas were (re)analysed for historic demographic parameters. Eastern South African S. dumicola were closely related to an east Namibian lineage, showing coh…

Lineage (evolution)PopulationMolecular Sequence DataPopulation DynamicsColonialismDNA MitochondrialGene flowSouth AfricaSpecies SpecificityCohesion (geology)AnimalsCluster AnalysisInbreedingeducationSocial BehaviorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyeducation.field_of_studyLikelihood FunctionsbiologyBase SequenceModels GeneticEcologyGenetic VariationSpidersSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationNamibiaGenetics PopulationHaplotypesBiological dispersalInbreedingSocial spiderJournal of evolutionary biology
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Molecular phylogeny of the Notostraca

2012

Abstract We used a combined analysis of one nuclear (28S rDNA) and three mitochondrial markers (COI, 12S rDNA, 16S rDNA) to infer the molecular phylogeny of the Notostraca, represented by samples from the six continents that are inhabited by this group of branchiopod crustaceans. Our results confirm the monophyly of both extant notostracan genera Triops and Lepidurus with good support in model based and maximum parsimony analyses. We used branchiopod fossils as a calibration to infer divergence times among notostracan lineages and accounted for rate heterogeneity among lineages by applying relaxed-clock models. Our divergence date estimates indicate an initial diversification into the gener…

Lineage (evolution)Settore BIO/05 - ZoologiaZoologyDNA MitochondrialTriopsMonophylyNotostracaCrustaceaGeneticsAnimalsMolecular BiologyLepidurus apusPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLepidurusCell NucleusLikelihood FunctionsModels GeneticbiologyFossilsBayes TheoremSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionMaximum parsimonyMolecular phylogeneticsSequence AlignmentTriops Lepidurus Divergence dates Fossil calibration Relaxed molecular clock
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Analysis of Complete Neuroblast Cell Lineages in the Drosophila Embryonic Brain via DiI Labeling

2013

Proper functioning of the brain relies on an enormous diversity of neural cells generated by neural stem cell-like neuroblasts (NBs). Each of the about 100 NBs in each side of brain generates a nearly invariant and unique cell lineage, consisting of specific neural cell types that develop in defined time periods. In this chapter we describe a method that labels entire NB lineages in the embryonic brain. Clonal DiI labeling allows us to follow the development of an NB lineage starting from the neuroectodermal precursor cell up to the fully developed cell clone in the first larval instar brain. We also show how to ablate individual cells within an NB clone, which reveals information about the…

Lineage (genetic)Cell divisionNeuroblastPrecursor cellCell CloneBiologyClone (B-cell biology)Molecular biologyNeural cellNeural stem cellCell biology
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On the roles of Notch, Delta, kuzbanian, and inscuteable during the development of Drosophila embryonic neuroblast lineages

2009

AbstractThe generation of cellular diversity in the nervous system involves the mechanism of asymmetric cell division. Besides an array of molecules, including the Par protein cassette, a heterotrimeric G protein signalling complex, Inscuteable plays a major role in controlling asymmetric cell division, which ultimately leads to differential activation of the Notch signalling pathway and correct specification of the two daughter cells. In this context, Notch is required to be active in one sibling and inactive in the other. Here, we investigated the requirement of genes previously known to play key roles in sibling cell fate specification such as members of the Notch signalling pathway, e.g…

Lineage (genetic)Embryo NonmammalianNotchCell divisionCell fate specificationDisintegrinsNeurogenesisContext (language use)BiologyCell fate determinationPolymerase Chain Reaction03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNeuroblastAsymmetric cell divisionAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCell LineageMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyDNA PrimersGeneticsNeurons0303 health sciencesBase SequenceReceptors NotchNeurogenesisIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsMembrane ProteinsMetalloendopeptidasesCell BiologyEmbryonic stem cellImmunohistochemistryCytoskeletal ProteinsAsymmetric cell divisionDrosophilakuzbanian030217 neurology & neurosurgerySignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental Biology
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Signalling codes for the maintenance and lineage commitment of embryonic gastric epithelial progenitors

2020

The identity of embryonic gastric epithelial progenitors is unknown. We used single-cell RNA sequencing, genetic lineage tracing and organoid assays to assess whether Axin2 and Lgr5 expressing cells are gastric progenitors in the developing mouse stomach. We show that Axin2+ cells represent a transient population of embryonic epithelial cells in the forestomach. Lgr5+ cells generate both glandular corpus and squamous forestomach organoids ex vivo. Only Lgr5+ progenitors give rise to zymogenic cells in culture. Modulating the activity of the WNT, BMP and Notch pathways in vivo and ex vivo, we found that WNTs are essential for the maintenance of Lgr5+ epithelial cells. Notch prevents differen…

Lineage (genetic)PopulationCell fate determinationBiologyMice03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAnimalsCell LineageProgenitor celleducationMolecular Biology030304 developmental biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyStem CellsStomachLGR5Wnt signaling pathwayCell DifferentiationEpithelial CellsEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyOrganoidsGastric Mucosa030220 oncology & carcinogenesisFemaleEx vivoSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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Mapping genomic rearrangements in titi monkeys by chromosome flow sorting and multidirectional in-situ hybridization.

2004

We developed chromosome painting probes for Callicebus pallescens from flow-sorted chromosomes and used multidirectional chromosome painting to investigate the genomic rearrangements in C. cupreus and C. pallescens. Multidirectional painting provides information about chromosomal homologies at the subchromosomal level and rearrangement break points, allowing chromosomes to be used as cladistic markers. Chromosome paints of C. pallescens were hybridized to human metaphases and 43 signals were detected. Then, both human and C. pallescens probes were hybridized to the chromosomes of another titi monkey, C. cupreus. The human chromosome paints detected 45 segments in the haploid karyotype of C.…

Lineage (genetic)TitiSyntenyChromosome PaintingEvolution MolecularGeneticsAnimalsHumansIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceMetaphaseSyntenyComparative genomicsGeneticsGene RearrangementGenomebiologyChromosomeChromosome MappingKaryotypeCallicebus pallescensbiology.organism_classificationFlow CytometryChromosomes MammalianDiploidyCebidaeKaryotypingPloidyDNA ProbesChromosome research : an international journal on the molecular, supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology
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