54 research outputs found
The high resolution G- and R-banding pattern in chromosomes of river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis L.).
High resolution G- and R-banding patterns in chromosomes of river buffalo (Bubalus bubalis L.) were obtained by using early (G-bands) and late (R-bands) BrdU-incorporation in synchronized cell cultures. To better characterize the river buffalo chromosomes, GTG-, GBG-, and RBG-techniques were used. The total number of bands achieved were 490 (207 G-positive, 207 R-positive, 45 variable, and 31 centromeric regions). Only one common G- and R-banding nomenclature was reported. The number, position and intensity of G bands were highly similar by the structural GTC and the replicating GBG-techniques. However, the replicating G- and R-bands appeared to be more distinct and reproducible than the structural G-bands. Some changes in chromosome nomenclature (chromosomes lp, 2p, 5p, and 21) were made when referred to the cattle homologues
A new centric fusion translocation in cattle, rob(16;18).
A Barrosã bull (Portugal) has been found to carry a new Robertsonian translocation involving chromosomes 16 and 18 of standard cattle karyotype, as demonstrated by GBG- and RBG-banding techniques. C-banding patterns revealed the dicentric nature of this translocation. A comparison between normal cattle chromosome 16 and the q-arms of translocation chromosome and river buffalo chromosome 5 revealed the same G- and R-banding patterns, with only exception of a pericentromeric G-positive band which has been lost in river buffalo 5q and conserved in normal cattle chromosome 16 and rob(16;18) q-arms
Constitutive heterochromatin distribution in pig (Sus scrofa) chromosomes
Summary Constitutive heterochromatin (HC = C-banding) distribution was studied in pig (Sus 5crofa) chromosomes from 20 animals belonging to Cinta Senese and Calabrese breeds raised in southern Italy. The use of CBG-banding, sequential GBG/CBA-banding and sequential GBGA/g- NOR/CBA-banding techniques allowed more detailed characterization of C-banding patterns in pig chromosomes (SSC). The following features were noticed: (a) all autosomes and the X-chromosome showed centromeric C-positive bands; (b) the entire q-arm and proximal part of the p-arm y chromosome were C-positive: (c) clear interstitial C-positive bands were noticed in SSC1q17, SSC3p14 and SSC16q21; (d) the nucleolus organizer (NO) chromosome 10 showed two distinct HC-blocks very far apart in both arms with large, polymorphic (different size) NORs between the chromosome pair, while NO-chromosome 8 showed only one C-positive band (the smallest) in the q-arms; (e) C-band polymorphism was observed between and within chromosome pairs also in relat..
centromeric loss in translocations of centric fusion type in cattle and water buffalo
Iannuzzi, L., Di Berardino, D., Gustavsson, I., Ferrara, L. and Di Meo, G. P. 1987. Centromeric loss in translocations of centric fusion type in cattle and water buffalo. - Hereditas 106: 73–81. Lund, Sweden. ISSN 0018–0661. Received March 15, 1986 Robertsonian translocations in Podolian and Romagna cattle (Bos taurus L.) and Asiatic river buffaloes (Bubulus bubalis L.) were studied with C, G + C, and R-banding techniques. The investigation demonstrated: (a) presence of one block of constitutive heterochromatin in the q-arm of the cattle translocation chromosome; (b) chromosomes identified as 1 and 25 according to the system used - but presumptively 1 and 29 as earlier described - being involved in the cattle centric fusions, with the centromere region of chromosome 25(29) being lost and that of chromosome 1 being retained; (c) no constitutive heterochromatin in the q-chromosome arm of the bi-armed chromosomes 1 and 5 in the water huffaloes (with retention of the constitutive heterochromatin in their p-arms) and partial losses of centromeric heterochromatin in both arms of chromosomes 2, 3 and 4; (d) presence of a C-positive segment in the telomere region of the p-arm of chromosome 4 in the water buffalo; (e) no bi-armed chromosome common for the two species. Karyotype evolution is discussed and the urgency of an appropriate nomenclature system for cattle and buffalo chromosomes is briefly stressed
fluorescent g and c bands in mammalian chromosomes by using early brd u incorporation simultaneous to methotrexate treatment
Fluorescent G- and C-bands were obtained in human and cattle chromosomes of lymphocytes grown at 37.5D for 72–76 hours. 24 hours before the completion of the culture, 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) in a final concentration of 20 μg/ml and increasing doses of methotrexate (MTX) were added. After 17 hours the cells were washed and allowed to recover for 6 hours in a medium containing thymidine. Colcemid treatment lasted 1.5 hours. The air dried slides were stained with acridine orange and observed under fluorescence microscopy. Compared to the control (without MTX), it was possible by increasing the MTX doses to increase the number of cells in the first cycle of replication in the presence of BrdU (G-bands in both chromatids) with a concomitant reduction of the number of cells in the second cycle of replication (G-bands in one chromatid), which also allows demonstration of SCEs. The advantages of this technique and the different cellular responses between the two species are discussed
Assessment of anti-diabetic activity of a novel hydrazine-thiazole derivative: in vitro and in vivo method
Diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease resulting in oxidative stress that promotes tissue damage. The appearance of this disease is highly related to lifestyle and food of the population, being of great interest to search for a dietary supplement that can also act by reducing oxidative alterations. Based on the broad range of biological activity of thiazole derivatives, this work aimed to evaluate the in vitro antioxidant activity of a novel hydrazine-thiazole derivative and studies in vivo. In in vivo experiments, the liver extracts of healthy and diabetic Wistar rats were used, with analysis to determine the enzymatic activity of SOD, CAT, GPx, and GR, and determination of lipid peroxidation. Finally, in the blood of these animals, biochemical parameters were evaluated. Statistical evidence of changes caused in liver enzymes and liquid peroxidation was not detected; however, these parameters were also not changed between control groups with and without diabetes. On the other hand, concerning biochemical parameters, significant differences were detected in uric acid, alkaline phosphatase, ALT, and urea, indicating a possible antioxidant protective role of such substances in the liver and kidney of diabetic animals that could be acting by means other than that commonly reported in the literature
Integrated analytical approach in veal calvesadministered the anabolic androgenic steroidsboldenone and boldione: urine and plasma kineticprofile and changes in plasma protein expression
Surveillance of illegal use of steroids hormones in cattle breeding is a key issue to preserve human
health. To this purpose, an integrated approach has been developed for the analysis of plasma and
urine from calves treated orally with a single dose of a combination of the androgenic steroids boldenone
and boldione. A quantitative estimation of steroid hormones was obtained by LC-APCI-QMS/
MS analysis of plasma and urine samples obtained at various times up to 36 and 24 h after
treatment, respectively. These experiments demonstrated that boldione was never found, while
boldenone a- and b-epimers were detected in plasma and urine only within 2 and 24 h after drug
administration, respectively. Parallel proteomic analysis of plasma samples was obtained by combined
2-DE,MALDI-TOF-MS and mLC-ESI-IT-MS/MS procedures. A specific protein, poorly represented
in normal plasmasamples collected before treatment,was found upregulated even 36 h after
hormone treatment.Extensivemassmapping experiments proved this component as an N-terminal
truncated form of apolipoprotein A1 (ApoA1), a protein involved in cholesterol transport. The
expression profile of ApoA1 analysed byWestern blot analysis confirmed a significant and time dependent
increase of thisApoA1 fragment. Then, provided that further experiments performed with
a growth-promoting schedule will confirm these preliminary findings, truncated ApoA1 may be
proposed as a candidate biomarker for steroid boldenone and possibly other anabolic androgens
misuse in cattle veal calves, when no traces of hormones are detectable in plasma or urine
Sleep in the Human Hippocampus: A Stereo-EEG Study
Background. There is compelling evidence indicating that sleep plays a crucial role in the consolidation of new declarative, hippocampus-dependent memories. Given the increasing interest in the spatiotemporal relationships between cortical and hippocampal activity during sleep, this study aimed to shed more light on the basic features of human sleep in the hippocampus. Methodology/Principal Findings. We recorded intracerebral stereo-EEG directly from the hippocampus and neocortical sites in five epileptic patients undergoing presurgical evaluations. The time course of classical EEG frequency bands during the first three NREM-REM sleep cycles of the night was evaluated. We found that delta power shows, also in the hippocampus, the progressive decrease across sleep cycles, indicating that a form of homeostatic regulation of delta activity is present also in this subcortical structure. Hippocampal sleep was also characterized by: i) a lower relative power in the slow oscillation range during NREM sleep compared to the scalp EEG; ii) a flattening of the time course of the very low frequencies (up to 1 Hz) across sleep cycles, with relatively high levels of power even during REM sleep; iii) a decrease of power in the beta band during REM sleep, at odds with the typical increase of power in the cortical recordings. Conclusions/Significance. Our data imply that cortical slow oscillation is attenuated in the hippocampal structures during NREM sleep. The most peculiar feature of hippocampal sleep is the increased synchronization of the EEG rhythms during REM periods. This state of resonanc
The NANOGrav 15-year Data Set: Evidence for a Gravitational-Wave Background
We report multiple lines of evidence for a stochastic signal that is
correlated among 67 pulsars from the 15-year pulsar-timing data set collected
by the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves. The
correlations follow the Hellings-Downs pattern expected for a stochastic
gravitational-wave background. The presence of such a gravitational-wave
background with a power-law-spectrum is favored over a model with only
independent pulsar noises with a Bayes factor in excess of , and this
same model is favored over an uncorrelated common power-law-spectrum model with
Bayes factors of 200-1000, depending on spectral modeling choices. We have
built a statistical background distribution for these latter Bayes factors
using a method that removes inter-pulsar correlations from our data set,
finding (approx. ) for the observed Bayes factors in the
null no-correlation scenario. A frequentist test statistic built directly as a
weighted sum of inter-pulsar correlations yields (approx. ). Assuming a fiducial
characteristic-strain spectrum, as appropriate for an ensemble of binary
supermassive black-hole inspirals, the strain amplitude is (median + 90% credible interval) at a reference frequency of
1/(1 yr). The inferred gravitational-wave background amplitude and spectrum are
consistent with astrophysical expectations for a signal from a population of
supermassive black-hole binaries, although more exotic cosmological and
astrophysical sources cannot be excluded. The observation of Hellings-Downs
correlations points to the gravitational-wave origin of this signal.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figures. Published in Astrophysical Journal Letters as
part of Focus on NANOGrav's 15-year Data Set and the Gravitational Wave
Background. For questions or comments, please email [email protected]
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