235 research outputs found
Peroxynitrite stimulates vascular smooth muscle cell cyclic GMP synthesis
AbstractPeroxynitrite stimulated the synthesis of cyclic GMP by rat aortic smooth muscle in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Peak formation of cyclic GMP occurred at 1 min with 100 ÎĽM peroxynitrite and was inhibited by oxyhemoglobin. Peroxynitrite was less potent than nitric oxide in stimulating cyclic GMP synthesis. Peroxynitrite also enhanced endothelial-dependent cyclic GMP synthesis, via generation of a long-lived substance, which was prevented by inhibition of glutathione synthesis. These data show that peroxynitrite stimulates cyclic GMP synthesis, inferring production of low yields of nitric oxide or associated derivatives. Additionally, vascular exposure to peroxynitrite potentiates endothelial-dependent activation of guanylate cyclase
Peroxynitrite-Mediated Protein Nitration and Lipid Peroxidation in a Mouse Model of Traumatic Brain Injury
The role of reactive oxygen-induced oxidative damage to lipids (i.e., lipid peroxidation, LP) and proteins has been strongly supported in previous work. Most notably, a number of free radical scavengers and lipid antioxidants have been demonstated to be neuroprotective in traumatic brain injury (TBI) models. However, the specific sources of reactive oxygen species (ROS), the time course of oxidative damage and its relationship to post-traumatic neurodegeneration in the injured brain have been incompletely defined. The present study was directed at an investigation of the role of the ROS, peroxynitrite (PON), in the acute pathophysiology of TBI and its temporal relationship to neurodegeneration in the context of the mouse model of diffuse head injury model. Male CF-1 mice were subjected to a moderately severe head injury and assessed at 1-, 3-, 6-, 12-, 24-, 48-, 72, 96- and 120-h post-injury for neurodegeneration using quantitative image analysis of silver staining and semi-quantitative analysis of PON-mediated oxidative damage to proteins (3-nitrotyrosine, 3-NT) and lipids (4-hydroxynonenal, 4-HNE). Significant evidence of silver staining was not apparent until 24-h post-injury, with peak staining seen between 72- and 120-h. This time-course of neurodegeneration was preceded by intense immunostaining for 3-NT and 4-HNE, which occurred within the first hour post-injury. The time course and staining pattern for 3-NT and 4-HNE were similar, with the highest staining intensity noted within the first 48-h in areas surrounding trauma-induced contusions. In the case of 3-NT, neuronal perikarya and processes and microvessels displayed staining. The temporal and spatial coincidence of protein nitration and LP damage suggests that PON is involved in both. However, lipid-peroxidative (4-HNE) immunoreactivity was broader and more diffuse than 3-NT, suggesting that other reactive oxygen mechanisms, such as iron-dependent LP, may also contribute to the more widespread 4-HNE immunoreactivity. This indicates that optimal pharmacological inhibition of post-traumatic oxidative damage in TBI may need to combine two functionalities: one to scavenge PON or PON-derived radicals, and the second to inhibit LP caused by multiple ROS species.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63192/1/089771504772695904.pd
Entangling quantum measurement and its properties
We study the mathematical structure of superoperators describing quantum
measurements, including the \emph{entangling measurement}--the generalization
of the standard quantum measurement that results in entanglement between the
measurable system and apparatus. It is shown that the coherent information can
be effectively used for the analysis of such entangling measurements whose
possible applications are discussed as well.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Characterization and identification of dityrosine cross-linked peptides using tandem mass spectrometry
The use of mass spectrometry coupled with chemical cross-linking of proteins has become a powerful tool for proteins structure and interactions studies. Unlike structural analysis of proteins using chemical reagents specific for lysine or cysteine residues, identification of gas-phase fragmentation patterns of endogenous dityrosine cross-linked peptides have not been investigated. Dityrosine cross-linking in proteins and peptides are clinical markers of oxidative stress, aging, and neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease. In this study, we investigated and characterized the fragmentation pattern of a synthetically prepared dityrosine cross-linked dimer of Aβ(1–16) using ESI tandem mass spectrometry. We then detailed the fragmentation pattern of dityrosine cross-linked Aβ(1–16), using collision induced dissociation (CID), higher-energy collision induced dissociation (HCD), electron transfer dissociation (ETD), and electron capture dissociation (ECD). Application of these generic fragmentation rules of dityrosine cross-linked peptides allowed for the identification of dityrosine cross-links in peptides of Aβ and α-synuclein generated in vitro by enzymatic peroxidation. We report, for the first time, the dityrosine cross-linked residues in human hemoglobin and α-synuclein under oxidative conditions. Together these tools open up the potential for automated analysis of this naturally occurring post-translation modification in neurodegenerative diseases as well as other pathological conditions
Wholesale pricing in a small open economy
This paper addresses the empirical analysis of wholesale profit margins using data of the Dutch wholesale sector, 1986. At the heart of the analysis is the typical nature of wholesale production: wholesalers do not produce a tangible product, but offer a service capacity. This has an immediate impact on the identification, interprelation and measurement of determinants of profit variations. A model is set up to explain variations in wholesale profit margins, which is inspired by two widely applied approaches to industry pricing: the behavioural mark-up model and the marginalist price-cost model
Capabilities for Uniqueness and Borrowing
An important application of unique object references is safe and efficient message passing in concurrent object-oriented programming. However, to prevent the ill effects of aliasing, practical systems often severely restrict the shape of messages passed by reference. Moreover, the problematic interplay between destructive reads--often used to implement unique references--and temporary aliasing through "borrowed" references is exacerbated in a concurrent setting, increasing the potential for unpredictable run-time errors. This paper introduces a new approach to uniqueness. The idea is to use capabilities for enforcing both at-most-once consumption of unique references, and a flexible notion of uniqueness. The main novelty of our approach is a model of uniqueness and borrowing based on simple, unstructured capabilities. The advantages are: first, it provides simple foundations for uniqueness and borrowing. Second, it can be formalized using a relatively simple type system, for which we provide a complete soundness proof. Third, it avoids common problems involving borrowing and destructive reads, since unique references subsume borrowed references. We have implemented our type system as an extension to Scala. Practical experience suggests that our system allows type checking real-world actor-based concurrent programs with only a small number of additional type annotations
The Development of Language Learning Strategies
This article discusses the strategy repertoires and strategy development of six English children who learned foreign languages at primary school. My study differs from mainstream research in that it focuses on young children and on the development of their strategies, draws on sociocultural theory and uses ethnographic methods.
My findings show that the six children developed a range of strategies over the course of a calendar year in spite of receiving no direct strategy instruction. The primary classroom encouraged learner autonomy and stimulated children to reflect on their learning which, in turn, enabled them to refine their strategies
Untangling the effects of overexploration and overexploitation on organizational performance: The moderating role of environmental dynamism
Because a firm's optimal knowledge search behavior is determined by unique firm and industry conditions, organizational performance should be contingent oil the degree to which a firm's actual level of knowledge search deviates from the optimal level. It is thus hypothesized that deviation from the optimal search, in the form of either overexploitation or overexploration, is detrimental to organizational performance. Furthermore, the negative effect of search deviation oil organizational performance varies with environmental dynamism: that is, overexploitation is expected to become more harmful. whereas overexploration becomes less so with all increase in environmental dynamism. The empirical analyses yield results consistent with these arguments. Implications for research and practice are correspondingly discussed
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