Search results for "nuclei"

showing 10 items of 1273 documents

Circulating, cell-free DNA as a marker for exercise load in intermittent sports

2017

Background Attempts to establish a biomarker reflecting individual player load in intermittent sports such as football have failed so far. Increases in circulating DNA (cfDNA) have been demonstrated in various endurance sports settings. While it has been proposed that cfDNA could be a suitable marker for player load in intermittent sports, the effects on cfDNA of repeated sprinting as an essential feature in intermittent sports are unknown. For the first time, we assessed both alterations of cfDNA due to repeated maximal sprints and due to a professional football game. Methods Nine participants were subjected to a standardised sprint training session with cross-over design of five maximal s…

MalePhysiologylcsh:MedicineBiochemistryBlood Plasma796 Athletic and outdoor sports and gamesRunningMedicine and Health SciencesHumansPublic and Occupational HealthSports and Exercise Medicinelcsh:ScienceExerciseBehavior796 SportBiological Locomotionlcsh:RBiology and Life SciencesPhysical ActivitySports ScienceBody FluidsCapillariesBloodPhysical FitnessCardiovascular AnatomyRecreationBlood VesselsFemalelcsh:QAnatomyGamesCell-Free Nucleic Acidshuman activitiesBiomarkersSportsResearch Article
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INTACT vs. FANS for Cell-Type-Specific Nuclei Sorting: A Comprehensive Qualitative and Quantitative Comparison

2021

Increasing numbers of studies seek to characterize the different cellular sub-populations present in mammalian tissues. The techniques “Isolation of Nuclei Tagged in Specific Cell Types” (INTACT) or “Fluorescence-Activated Nuclei Sorting” (FANS) are frequently used for isolating nuclei of specific cellular subtypes. These nuclei are then used for molecular characterization of the cellular sub-populations. Despite the increasing popularity of both techniques, little is known about their isolation efficiency, advantages, and disadvantages or downstream molecular effects. In our study, we compared the physical and molecular attributes of sfGFP+ nuclei isolated by the two methods—INTACT and FAN…

MaleQH301-705.5Cell type specificATAC-seqATAC-SeqComputational biologyCell SeparationBiologyCatalysisFluorescenceArticleInorganic ChemistryMiceINTACTAnimalsRNA-SeqBiology (General)Physical and Theoretical Chemistryneuronal nucleiQD1-999Molecular BiologySpectroscopyCell specificCell NucleusOrganic ChemistrySortingGeneral MedicineFlow CytometryChromatinComputer Science ApplicationsChromatinChemistryProtein Transportnuclei sortingNeuronal nucleiFemaleFANSInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Amelogenin test: From forensics to quality control in clinical and biochemical genomics.

2007

Abstract Background The increasing number of samples from the biomedical genetic studies and the number of centers participating in the same involves increasing risk of mistakes in the different sample handling stages. We have evaluated the usefulness of the amelogenin test for quality control in sample identification. Methods Amelogenin test (frequently used in forensics) was undertaken on 1224 individuals participating in a biomedical study. Concordance between referred sex in the database and amelogenin test was estimated. Additional sex-error genetic detecting systems were developed. Results The overall concordance rate was 99.84% (1222/1224). Two samples showed a female amelogenin test…

MaleQuality ControlSex Determination AnalysisConcordancemedia_common.quotation_subjectClinical BiochemistryMale sex determinationGenomicsBiologyBioinformaticsBiochemistrystomatognathic systemHumansQuality (business)media_commonRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicAmelogeninBiochemistry (medical)Reproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineDNAGenomicsForensic MedicineDNA extractionTest (assessment)MicrosatelliteElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelFemaleAmelogeninDatabases Nucleic AcidClinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry
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Exosomal and Plasma Non-Coding RNA Signature Associated with Urinary Albumin Excretion in Hypertension

2022

Non-coding RNA (ncRNA), released into circulation or packaged into exosomes, plays important roles in many biological processes in the kidney. The purpose of the present study is to identify a common ncRNA signature associated with early renal damage and its related molecular pathways. Three individual libraries (plasma and urinary exosomes, and total plasma) were prepared from each hypertensive patient (with or without albuminuria) for ncRNA sequencing analysis. Next, an RNA-based transcriptional regulatory network was constructed. The three RNA biotypes with the greatest number of differentially expressed transcripts were long-ncRNA (lncRNA), microRNA (miRNA) and piwi-interacting RNA (piR…

MaleRNA UntranslatedhypertensionQH301-705.5non-coding RNABlood PressureexosomesArticleCatalysisInorganic ChemistryAlbuminuriaHumansGene Regulatory NetworksPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryBiology (General)Molecular BiologyQD1-999Spectroscopyplasmaurinary albumin excretion; hypertension; exosomes; plasma; non-coding RNAGene Expression ProfilingOrganic ChemistryLiquid BiopsyGeneral MedicineComputer Science ApplicationsChemistryGene Expression Regulationurinary albumin excretionFemaleDisease SusceptibilityTranscriptomeCell-Free Nucleic AcidsBiomarkersInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Neuroprotective effects of antibodies on retinal ganglion cells in an adolescent retina organ culture

2016

Glaucoma, a neurodegenerative disease, is characterized by a progressive loss of retinal ganglion cells (rgc). Up- and down-regulated autoantibody immunoreactivities in glaucoma patients have been demonstrated. Previous studies showed protective effects of down-regulated antibodies [gamma (γ)-synuclein and glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP]) on neuroretinal cells. The aim of this study was to test these protective antibody effects on rgc in an organ culture model and to get a better understanding of cell-cell interactions of the retina in the context of the protective effect. We used an adolescent retinal organ culture (pig) with an incubation time of up to 4 days. Retinal explants were…

MaleRetinal Ganglion Cells0301 basic medicinePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentgenetic structuresSwineNerve Tissue ProteinsContext (language use)Organ cultureBiochemistryRetinal ganglionAntibodies03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundOrgan Culture TechniquesGlutamate-Ammonia LigaseGlutamine synthetaseGlial Fibrillary Acidic ProteinmedicineAnimalsHumansRetinaGlial fibrillary acidic proteinbiologyMyoglobinGlaucomaRetinalEndoplasmic Reticulum StressImmunohistochemistryMolecular biologyeye diseasesNeuroprotective Agents030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryalpha-Synucleinbiology.proteinImmunohistochemistryFemalesense organsJournal of Neurochemistry
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Lateral habenula and hippocampal units: electrophysiological and iontophoretic study

1995

In previous works we studied, on cats, the effects of lateral habenula (LH) stimulation on hippocampal units. In particular, the results showed an excitation or an inhibition in relation to the stimulation frequency (0.5-3.0 Hz or 5.0-20 Hz, respectively). All the LH stimulation effects were antagonised by iontophoretic intrahippocampal application of methysergide (MS). In this series of experiments it was possible to demonstrate, on rats, that LH stimulation causes an excitatory effect in a major number of hippocampal units in relation to the frequency increase. The inhibitory effect by iontophoretic serotonine application and the reversible blockade of habenular modulation after iontophor…

MaleSerotoninN-MethylaspartateMethysergideStimulationHippocampal formationHippocampusMicromanipulationDorsal raphe nucleusThalamusmedicineAnimalsRats WistarNeuronsAnalysis of VarianceRapheMethysergideChemistryGeneral NeuroscienceIontophoresisElectric StimulationRatsHabenulaExcitatory postsynaptic potentialRaphe NucleiRaphe nucleiNeurosciencemedicine.drugBrain Research Bulletin
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Electrophysiological and Iontophoretic Aspects of the Habenular Influence on Hippocampal Neurones

1995

In previous experimental studies, carried out on cats, we demonstrated that electrical stimulation of lateral habenula (LH) at 0.5-3.0 Hz or 5-20 Hz had a double effect (low frequency-excitation; high frequency-inhibition) on the spontaneous firing rate of single hippocampal neurones. Our results, in agreement with similar case studies, allowed us to hypothesise that in the habenular modulation of the hippocampus the raphe nucleus is probably involved. In fact, all the effects of LH stimulation were antagonised by the iontophoretic intrahippocampal application of methysergide. In the present series of experiments, performed on rats, it was possible to demonstrate that LH stimulation at 1-10…

MaleSerotoninN-MethylaspartatePhysiologyMethysergideHippocampusStimulationHippocampal formationHippocampusPhysiology (medical)medicineAnimalsRats WistarNeuronsIontophoresisMethysergideChemistryGeneral MedicineIontophoresisElectric StimulationCochleaRatsElectrophysiologyElectrophysiologyRaphe NucleiNMDA receptorRaphe nucleiNeurosciencemedicine.drugArchives of Physiology and Biochemistry
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Effect of chronic citalopram on serotonin-related and stress-regulated genes in the dorsal raphe nucleus of the rat

2007

Using a model of depression in which chronic social stress induces depressive-like symptoms, we investigated effects of the selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) citalopram on gene expression in the dorsal raphe nucleus of male rats. Expression of tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH) protein was found to be upregulated by the stress and normalized by citalopram, while mRNAs for genes TPH 1 and 2 were differentially affected. Citalopram had no effect on serotonin transporter mRNA but reduced serotonin-1A autoreceptor mRNA in stressed animals. The SSRI prevented the stress-induced upregulation of mRNA for CREB binding protein, synaptic vesicle glycoprotein 2b and the glial N-myc downstream-re…

MaleSerotoninendocrine systemmedicine.medical_specialtyCitalopramTryptophan HydroxylaseBiologyCitalopramPolymerase Chain Reactionbehavioral disciplines and activitiesGene Expression Regulation Enzymologic03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineDorsal raphe nucleusStress PhysiologicalInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineAnimalsPharmacology (medical)Rats WistarSocial BehaviorNeurotransmitterBiological PsychiatrySerotonin transporter030304 developmental biologyPharmacology0303 health sciencesTryptophan hydroxylaseRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologyNeurologychemistryModels Animalbiology.proteinSynaptic vesicle glycoprotein 2BRNARaphe Nuclei5-HT1A receptorNeurology (clinical)SerotoninSelective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugEuropean Neuropsychopharmacology
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Repetitive DNAs in the slug Milax nigricans: association of ribosomal (18S–28S and 5S rDNA) and (TTAGGG)n telomeric sequences) in the slug M. nigrica…

2003

Spermatocyte chromosomes of the slug Milax nigricans (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Pulmonata) were studied using silver staining (Ag-NOR) and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) with four repetitive DNA probes [18S rDNA, 5S rDNA, (TTAGGG)n and (GATA)n]. Silver impregnation was inadequate to localize the chromosome sites of nucleolus organizer regions (NORs) since no silver dots occurred on the chromosomes at spermatogonial metaphase and a diffuse silver stainability could be observed on the bivalents at metaphase-I. Unlike silver staining, single-colour rDNA FISH consistently mapped major ribosomal sites (18S-28S rDNA) on two small-sized chromosomes in spermatogonial cells and on the correspo…

MaleSilverNucleolusGeneral Physics and AstronomyBiologyDNA RibosomalBivalent (genetics)Silver stainSpermatocytesStructural BiologyRNA Ribosomal 28SNucleolus Organizer RegionRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceRepeated sequenceMetaphaseIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidGeneticsBase SequenceStaining and LabelingRNA Ribosomal 5SChromosomeDNACell BiologyTelomereRibosomal RNAMolecular biologyMolluscaNucleolus organizer regionMicron
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Distribution and targets of the relaxin-3 innervation of the septal area in the rat.

2012

Neural tracing studies have revealed that the rat medial and lateral septum are targeted by ascending projections from the nucleus incertus, a population of tegmental GABA neurons. These neurons express the relaxin-family peptide, relaxin-3, and pharmacological modulation of relaxin-3 receptors in medial septum alters hippocampal theta rhythm and spatial memory. In an effort to better understand the basis of these interactions, we have characterized the distribution of relaxin-3 fibers/terminals in relation to different septal neuron populations identified using established protein markers. Dense relaxin-3 fiber plexuses were observed in regions of medial septum containing hippocampal-proje…

MaleStilbamidinesPopulationHippocampusNerve Tissue ProteinsNitric Oxide Synthase Type IBiologyHippocampal formationCholine O-AcetyltransferaseRats Sprague-DawleyRelaxin-3 like-immunoreactivityMicroscopy Electron TransmissionNeural PathwaysmedicineAnimalseducationNeuronseducation.field_of_studyBrain MappingGlutamate DecarboxylaseGeneral NeuroscienceHippocampal theta rhythmRelaxinSeptal nucleiAnatomyNucleus IncertusCholine acetyltransferaseRatsSeptohippocampal systemmedicine.anatomical_structureParvalbuminsnervous systemStress and emotionSeptum of BrainNeuronNucleus incertusNucleusNeurosciencehormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsThe Journal of comparative neurology
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