5,915 research outputs found
Torsion and bending of nucleic acids studied by subnanosecond time-resolved fluorescence depolarization of intercalated dyes
Subnanosecond time‐resolved fluorescence depolarization has been used to monitor the reorientation of ethidium bromide intercalated in native DNA, synthetic polynucleotide complexes, and in supercoiled plasmid DNA. The fluorescence polarization anisotropy was successfully analyzed with an elastic model of DNA dynamics, including both torsion and bending, which yielded an accurate value for the torsional rigidity of the different DNA samples. The dependence of the torsional rigidity on the base sequence, helical structure, and tertiary structure was experimentally observed. The magnitude of the polyelectrolyte contribution to the torsional rigidity of DNA was measured over a wide range of ionic strength, and compared with polyelectrolyte theories for the persistence length. We also observed a rapid initial reorientation of the intercalated ethidium which had a much smaller amplitude in RNA than in DNA
Time-resolved spectroscopy of macromolecules: Effect of helical structure on the torsional dynamics of DNA and RNA
The torsional rigidity of DNA and RNA is measured via the fluorescence depolarization technique
Surgical Complications of Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) Infection in HIV infected children
Aim. Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) immunisation is well established as part of the South African national expanded programme for immunisation (EPI). The World Health Organization (WHO) currently recommends that BCG be given to all asymptomatic infants irrespective of HIV exposure at birth but does not recommend BCG vaccination for children with symptomatic HIV infection. This approach, however, has led to HIV-infected neonates
who are asymptomatic at birth, developing severe vaccinerelated complications. We present a surgical case series, representative of a minority of the cases in circulation, in support of a change to the timing of BCG administration to HIV-exposed neonates. Methods. A case series of 17 HIV-infected patients with surgical complications of BCG vaccination.
Results. Seventeen patients are presented. The first two illustrate disseminated systemic BCG infection, resulting in BCG infection of the lymph nodes, liver, spleen and tibia, and
the second with gastrointestinal involvement causing bowel obstruction. The other 15 patients represent a series of severe ulcerating lymphadenitis secondary to BCG.
Conclusion. The risks of BCG in HIV-infected infants are significant. Current recommendations are not satisfactory, and a change in policy is required to prevent the harmful effects of this vaccine in a high-risk group of patients. We believe that there is sufficient need to adequately stratify patients and vaccinate them according to a protocol that takes impaired immunity into consideration. South African Medical Journal Vol. 98 (10) 2008: pp. 801-80
The Effects of UV Continuum and Lyman alpha Radiation on the Chemical Equilibrium of T Tauri Disks
We show in this Letter that the spectral details of the FUV radiation fields
have a large impact on the chemistry of protoplanetary disks surrounding T
Tauri stars. We show that the strength of a realistic stellar FUV field is
significantly lower than typically assumed in chemical calculations and that
the radiation field is dominated by strong line emission, most notably Lyman
alpha radiation. The effects of the strong Lyman alpha emission on the chemical
equilibrium in protoplanetary disks has previously been unrecognized. We
discuss the impact of this radiation on molecular observations in the context
of a radiative transfer model that includes both direct attenuation and
scattering. In particular, Lyman alpha radiation will directly dissociate water
vapor and may contribute to the observed enhancements of CN/HCN in disks.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
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