1,876 research outputs found

    Changes in sulfhydryl groups of honeybee glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase associated with generation of the intermediate plateau in its saturation kinetics

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    Honeybee and rabbit muscle GPDH were studied to obtain information at the chemical level regarding anomolous saturation kinetics of the honeybee enzyme. Results demonstrate that the enzyme's sulfhydryl groups are implicated in the process. Measured by DTNB titration, native honeybee GPDH has one less active SH than the native rabbit muscle enzyme and displays changes in overall sulfhydryl reactivity after preincubation with G-3-P or G-3-P plus NAD+. The total DTNB reactive sulfhydryls of rabbit muscle GPDH are not changed by preincubation with NAD+ or G-3-P; honeybee GPDH, under certain conductions of preincubation with these ligands, shows a decrease of two total DTNB reactive SH groups. This difference has been confirmed by an independent experiment in which the two enzymes were carboxymethylated with C-14 bromoacetic acid

    18F-FDG PET/CT as a potential valuable adjunct to MRI in characterising the Brodie’s abscess

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    Chronic osteomyelitis (Brodie’s abscess) is essentially a problem of diagnosis, and there may be considerable difficulty in distinguishing it from other benign and malignant bone lesions. Early diagnosis of Brodie’s abscess is deemed important as the disease has a good curative potential following an appropriate antibiotic treatment. Of late, PET/CT using 18F-FDG is taking a centre stage in the imaging of bone infection though documentation on its role in characterising the feature of Brodie’s abscess is exceedingly scarce. On the other hand, it is well known that MRI imaging plays a very important role in distinguishing abscess loculation from malignancy. The authors present the case of a 13-year-old boy with pain in the right heel for few months. Radiograph of the right foot revealed a lucent focus with sclerotic margin in the right calcaneum. MRI T1-weighted images were inconclusive of penumbra sign to characterise abscess cavity due to the small volume lesion. Whole-body 18F-FDG PET/CT scan showed multiple small avid lesions at the margin of the sclerotic rim in the right calcaneum. Final diagnosis of Brodie’s abscess with Klebsiella culture was confirmed via bone debridement

    Microflora of Ciku (Achras sapota L.) of Variety Jantung

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    The overall microbial count of ciku is law and predominantly )'east. which peaks at day three after haverst. Washing reduced the microbial counts of the fruits, retarding the yeast population by 89% and bacteria by 75 %. During injury, the dominant flora is bacteria which is replaced later by fungi as the storage time progeressed. Normal microbial flora of aim consists of bacteria, yeasl and moulds. Spoilage during cold storage is associated with new strains of,yeast and moulds. Proper sanitation and post harvest handling treatments are important in controlling fruit losses associated with microorganisms

    EuroSpine Task Force on Research: support for spine researchers

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    In recognition of the value of research to the practice of spine care, Federico Balagué and Ferran Pellisé, at the time President and Secretary for EuroSpine, asked Margareta Nordin to set up a Task Force on Research (TFR) for EuroSpine during summer 2011. The concept was to stimulate and facilitate a research community within the society, through two main functions: (1) distribution of EuroSpine funds to researchers; (2) develop and deliver research training/education courses. What has the EuroSpine TFR accomplished since its inception

    Extraction and identification of the main compound present in Elaeis guineensis flower volatiles

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    The main compound contained in the volatile oils of the oil palm flowers was identified as l-methoxy-4 (2-propenyl) benzene or estragole. The same compound was extracted from the anthesizing male and female flowers of the oil palm (Elaeis guineensis). The newly identified compound is believed to be responsible for attracting the adults of the oil palm pollinating weevil, Elaeidobius kemerunicus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). Steam distillation of1 kg of fresh male and female flowers yielded O.7g and O.2g of volatile oils. The chemical structure and characteristics were confirmed by mass spectromeric analysis, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis, and the infrared spectra analysis. The possible usage of the compound in ecological research on the weevil and in the industry' are discussed

    Detection and quantification of probiotic bacteria using optimized DNA extraction, traditional and real-time PCR methods in complex microbial communities

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    The aim of this study is to optimize molecular detection and quantification methods of probiotic bacteria in complex microbial communities that have long been difficult for traditional culture-based methods. Traditional and real-time PCR were optimized to detect and quantify Lactobacillus spp. and Bifidobacterium spp. in complex microbial community. Fish and shrimp sauce were used as a model for complex microbial community. Directly form samples, 4 DNA extraction methods, primers specificity, PCR, and real-time PCR procedures were optimized, tested in comparison with samples, enriched bacteria and related standard bacterial strains, E. coli, Bacteroides, Enterococcus and Salmonella. Results showed that extracted genomic DNA using Wizard® Genomic DNA Purification Kit showed the highest yield, quality and performance. Moreover, the specificity of the primer set specific for Lactobacillus spp. and Bifidobacterium spp. was checked and found highly specific. The sensitivity of real-time PCR was higher than the conventional PCR and its quantifying potential is very precise for the detection and quantification of Lactobacillus spp. but not Bifidobacterium spp. which was absent in the tested samples. In conclusion, PCR and real-time PCR assays could be used very efficiently in quantifying and detecting Lactobacillus spp. that are present in very PCR-suppressive and complex microbial environment

    Chemotaxonomy of the Lauraceae: N-Methyl-2,3,6 trimethoxymorphinandien- 7-one, the Major Alkaloid from Alseodaphne perakens'is

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    The leaves of Alseodaphne perakensis contain one major and a complex mixture of minor alkaloids. The major component was identified as N-methyl-2,3, 6-trimethoxymorphinandien-7-one by spectroscopic analyses of the parent compound, its methiodide salt and sodium borohydride reduction products

    The universe dynamics in the tachyon cosmology with non-minimal coupling to matter

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    Recently, the tachyon cosmology has been represented as dark energy model to support the current acceleration of the universe without phantom crossing. In this paper, we study the dynamics of the tachyon cosmology in which the field plays the role of tachyon field and also non--minimally coupled to the matter lagrangian. The model shows current universe acceleration and also phantom crossing in the future. Two cosmological tests are also performed to validate the model; the difference in the distance modulus and the model independent Cosmological Redshift Drift (CRD) test.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure

    Role of autoimmunity in patients transplanted for acute liver failure of unknown origin: a clinical and graft-biopsy analysis

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    Abstract Background The etiology and prognosis of acute liver failure (ALF) remains unknown in a significant proportion of cases. Signs of autoimmunity may be present, but no consistent pattern has been observed. We aimed to analyse if pretransplant immunological findings, HLA haplotypes and clinical features among patients with unknown etiology differ from those of autoimmune or other known etiology. We also analysed whether such signs impact post-transplant biopsy findings or complications. Methods All adult ALF patients undergoing liver transplantation (LT) in Finland during 1987-2015 were followed to 2016. Data were from the LT registry, pathology database and patient records. 124 patients were included in the analysis. Study subgroups were acute autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) (n=25), known non-AIH etiology (n=54), and unknown etiology (n=45). Results The unknown etiology group differed from the known non-AIH group with regard to the following pretransplant autoimmunity-associated features: positive pANCA (35% vs 8%; P=0.02), higher mean IgA (3.2±1.7 vs 2.1±1.4, P=0.006) and IgG (12.7±4.3 vs 8.5±3.6, P=0.001). AIH-associated HLA haplotypes B8, DR3 and B8DR3 were more common in the AIH group (40%, 44% and 36%) and in the unknown group (29%, 33% and 29%) than in the known non-AIH group (11%, 17% and 11%) or in the Finnish general population (17%, 18% and 8%). However, these findings had no association with protocol biopsies, extrahepatic autoimmune diseases or survival. Patients with ≥1 rejection episode had higher pretransplant IgA (3.7±2.3 vs 2.6±1.2, P=0.02) and IgG (16.4±10.2 vs 12.4±6.8, P=0.03) than those without rejections. Conclusions Autoimmunity-associated pretransplant laboratory findings and HLA haplotypes were common in ALF of unknown etiology, but showed minimal predictive value for post-transplant biopsy findings, clinical complications or survival.Peer reviewe
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