166 research outputs found

    The complete Tirant transposable element in Drososphila melanogaster shows a structural relationship with retrovirus-like retrotransposons

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    Abstract We have determined the structure and organization of Tirant, a retrotransposon of Drosophila melanogaster reported in literature to be responsible for four independent mutations. Tirant is a long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposon 8527 bp long. It possesses three open reading frames (ORF ) encoding Gag, Pol and Env proteins with a strong similarity with ZAM, a recently identified member of the gypsy class of retrovirus-like mobile elements. Molecular analysis of the Tirant genomic copies present in four D. melanogaster strains revealed that most of them are defective, non-autonomous elements that differ in the position and extension of the conserved internal portion. Defective elements lacking the Gag ORF but retaining the Env ORF are abundant in heterochromatin. Four discrete Tirant transcripts are observed during embryogenesis in the strain Oregon-R, the smaller of which, 1.8 kb in size, originates from the splicing of a primary transcript and leads to a subgenomic RNA coding for the Env product

    Effectiveness of infection control measures in controlling a nosocomial outbreak of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis among HIV patients in Italy

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    SETTING: Between October 1992 and February 1994, 33 cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) were diagnosed among patients infected by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hospitalised in an HIV ward in Milan, Italy. This outbreak was part of a much larger outbreak, begun in another hospital and probably transferred through a patient. OBJECTIVE: TO evaluate risk factors for transmission and the effectiveness of infection control measures. DESIGN: 1) Active follow-up of exposed patients, 2) cohort study among HIV-infected patients exposed to MDR-TB cases before and after the implementation of control measures, 3) screening of close contacts of MDR-TB cases, and 1) molecular typing by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. RESULTS: The risk of MDR-TB was higher in patients with lower CD4+ lymphocyte percentages and longer duration of exposure. No difference in the daily risk was observed for in-patients vs day-hospital patients or by room distance from an infectious case. Of the 90 patients exposed before the implementation of infection control measures (i,e,, October 1992-June 1993) 26 (28.9%) developed MDR-TB, whereas none of the 44 patients exclusively exposed after implementation developed MDR-TB, despite the continuing presence of infectious MDR-TB cases in the ward. CONCLUSION: Simple control measures were effective in significantly reducing nosocomial transmission among patients

    Combination antiretroviral therapy and the risk of myocardial infarction

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    Drosophila Dynein Intermediate Chain Gene, Dic61B, Is Required for Spermatogenesis

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    This study reports the identification and characterization of a novel gene, Dic61B, required for male fertility in Drosophila. Complementation mapping of a novel male sterile mutation, ms21, isolated in our lab revealed it to be allelic to CG7051 at 61B1 cytogenetic region, since two piggyBac insertion alleles, CG7051c05439 and CG7051f07138 failed to complement. CG7051 putatively encodes a Dynein intermediate chain. All three mutants, ms21, CG7051c05439 and CG7051f07138, exhibited absolute recessive male sterility with abnormally coiled sperm axonemes causing faulty sperm individualization as revealed by Phalloidin staining in Don Juan-GFP background. Sequencing of PCR amplicons uncovered two point mutations in ms21 allele and confirmed the piggyBac insertions in CG7051c05439 and CG7051f07138 alleles to be in 5′UTR and 4th exon of CG7051 respectively, excision of which reverted the male sterility. In situ hybridization to polytene chromosomes demonstrated CG7051 to be a single copy gene. RT-PCR of testis RNA revealed defective splicing of the CG7051 transcripts in mutants. Interestingly, expression of cytoplasmic dynein intermediate chain, α, β, γ tubulins and α-spectrin was normal in mutants while ultra structural studies revealed defects in the assembly of sperm axonemes. Bioinformatics further highlighted the homology of CG7051 to axonemal dynein intermediate chain of various organisms, including DNAI1 of humans, mutations in which lead to male sterility due to immotile sperms. Based on these observations we conclude that CG7051 encodes a novel axonemal dynein intermediate chain essential for male fertility in Drosophila and rename it as Dic61B. This is the first axonemal Dic gene of Drosophila to be characterized at molecular level and shown to be required for spermatogenesis

    72nd Congress of the Italian Society of Pediatrics

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    Bari-1, a New Transposon-like Family in Drosophila Melanogaster with a Unique Heterochromatic Organization

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    We have identified a new middle repetitive DNA family in Drosophila melanogaster. This family is composed of a 1.7-kb element, called Bari-1, that shows common characteristics with many transposable elements. Bari-1 is present in a few euchromatic sites that vary in different stocks. However, it is peculiar in that most copies are homogeneously clustered with a unique location in a specific heterochromatic region close to the centromere of the second chromosome. The molecular analysis of different copies coming from the euchromatin and the heterochromatin has revealed that, independent of their location, all possess the same open reading frame. The putative protein encoded by Bari-1 shares similarity with the transposase of the Tc1 transposon of Caenorhabditis elegans. We compare the Bari-1 organization with other mobile DNA families and discuss the possibility of some functional role for the heterochromatic cluster
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