1,359 research outputs found
The Hirsch Institute of Tropical Medicine
In 2013, the Hirsch Institute of Tropical Medicine was officially inaugurated as a branch of the Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Infectious Diseases at Heinrich Heine University Dßsseldorf under the direction of Professor Dieter Häussinger. The HITM serves as a place of scientific medical knowledge transfer, postgraduate medical training, and of conducting scientific projects relating to tropical medicine and infectious diseases
Onwards and upwards: European Journal of Medical Research continues as an open access publication
The well-established European Journal of Medical Research has joined BioMed Central's portfolio of journals in January 2012, converting to the open access publishing model. Since its launch in 1995 the journal has been a print-only publication; from now on, it continues as an open access, online-only journal. The conversion to open access opens up the potential for the journal to become a leading, globally visible title in the field of general medicine over the coming years
Design and applications of lanthanide chelating tags for pseudocontact shift NMR spectroscopy with biomacromolecules
In this review, lanthanide chelating tags and their applications to pseudocontact shift NMR spectroscopy as well as analysis of residual dipolar couplings are covered. A complete overview is presented of DOTA-derived and non-DOTA-derived lanthanide chelating tags, critical points in the design of lanthanide chelating tags as appropriate linker moieties, their stability under reductive conditions, e.g., for in-cell applications, the magnitude of the anisotropy transferred from the lanthanide chelating tag to the biomacromolecule under investigation and structural properties, as well as conformational bias of the lanthanide chelating tags are discussed. Furthermore, all DOTA-derived lanthanide chelating tags used for PCS NMR spectroscopy published to date are displayed in tabular form, including their anisotropy parameters, with all employed lanthanide ions, C; B; -Ln distances and tagging reaction conditions, i.e., the stoichiometry of lanthanide chelating tags, pH, buffer composition, temperature and reaction time. Additionally, applications of lanthanide chelating tags for pseudocontact shifts and residual dipolar couplings that have been reported for proteins, protein-protein and protein-ligand complexes, carbohydrates, carbohydrate-protein complexes, nucleic acids and nucleic acid-protein complexes are presented and critically reviewed. The vast and impressive range of applications of lanthanide chelating tags to structural investigations of biomacromolecules in solution clearly illustrates the significance of this particular field of research. The extension of the repertoire of lanthanide chelating tags from proteins to nucleic acids holds great promise for the determination of valuable structural parameters and further developments in characterizing intermolecular interactions
Charged acrylamide copolymer gels as media for weak alignment
The use of mechanically strained acrylamide/acrylate copolymers is reported as a new alignment medium for biomacromolecules. Compared to uncharged, strained polyacrylamide gels, the negative charges of the acrylamide/acrylate copolymer strongly alter the alignment tensor and lead to pronounced electroosmotic swelling. The swelling itself can be used to achieve anisotropic, mechanical strain. The method is demonstrated for the alignment of TipAS, a 17kDa antibiotic resistance protein, as well as for human ubiquitin, where alignment tensors with an AZZ,NH of up to 60Hz are achieved at a gel concentration of 2% (w/v). The alignment can be modulated by the variation of pH, ionic strength, and gel concentration. The high mechanical stability of the swollen gels makes it possible to obtain alignment at polymer concentrations of less than 1% (w/v
Intrahepatic type II gall bladder perforation by a gall stone in a CAPD patient
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Perforation of the gall bladder represents a rare, but life-threatening complication of cholecystitis. Clinical presentation may vary between severe peritonism in acute perforation and absence of symptoms in subacute or chronic progression of perforation. Abdominal imaging like ultrasound or CT-scan are important tools for immediate diagnose of gall bladder perforation.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We report a case of a 30-year old female patient with end-stage kidney disease treated by continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) who was admitted to the emergency room with fever and mild abdominal pain. A type II gall bladder perforation by a solitary gall stone with development of a liver abscess was detected by abdominal ultrasound.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Gall bladder perforations are rare but have to be considered in patients with abdominal pain and fever. Abdominal ultrasound is a reliable tool to establish diagnosis.</p
Das Hirsch Institut fĂźr Tropenmedizin Asella, Ăthiopien
Dieter Häussinger, geboren 1951, ist seit 1994 Lehrstuhlinhaber fĂźr Innere Medizin an der Heinrich-Heine-Universität DĂźsseldorf und Direktor der Medizinischen Klinik und Poliklinik fĂźr Gastroenterologie, Hepatologie und Infektiologie. Dieter Häussinger erhielt zahlreiche nationale und internationale Wissenschaftspreise, u. a. den Gottfried Wilhelm-Leibniz-Preis der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft. Er war Dekan der Medizinischen Fakultät und Vorstandsmitglied des Universitätsklinikums DĂźsseldorf (1998â2002), Mitglied im Medizinausschuss des Wissenschaftsrats
und ist Senator der Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft Leibniz, Mitglied der Nationalen Akademie der Wissenschaften Leopoldina und der Nordrhein Westfälischen Akademie der Wissenschaften und der KĂźnste. Er war Sprecher des Sonderforschungsbereichs (SFB) 575 âExperimentelle Hepatologieâ (2000â2011) und ist seit 2012 Sprecher der Klinischen Forschergruppe 217 âHepatobiliärer Transport und Lebererkrankungenâ und des SFB 974 âKommunikation und Systemrelevanz bei Leberschädigung und Regenerationâ. Neben seinen Aktivitäten im Bereich der klinischen und experimentellen Hepatologie und Gastroenterologie gilt sein Engagement dem Ausbau und der Weiterentwicklung
der klinischen Infektiologie. In diesem Zusammenhang erfolgte die Zertifizierung seiner Klinik als Zentrum fĂźr Infektiologie, der Aufbau einer tropenmedizinischen Ambulanz und Infektionssprechstunden, die Errichtung des Leber und Infektionszentrums mit der einzigen Sonderisoliereinheit in Nordrhein-Westfalen fĂźr hochinfektiĂśse Patienten sowie die GrĂźndung des Hirsch Instituts fĂźr Tropenmedizin, welches 2013 als AuĂenstelle der Klinik fĂźr Gastroenterologie, Hepatologie und Infektiologie erĂśffnet wurde
Application of Paramagnetic Lanthanoid Chelating Tags in NMR Spectroscopy and Their Use for the Localization of Ligands Within Biomacromolecules
The application of paramagnetic lanthanoid chelating tags for the localization of ligands within biomacromolecules enables the elucidation of binding pockets and positioning of ligands within given targets of interest, a crucial prerequisite for rational drug design. This case study consists of an overview about lanthanoid chelating tags, a description of their structural properties, the induced anisotropy as well as approaches for the localization of ligands within biomacromolecules. The localization of sulfonamide inhibitors within human carbonic anhydrase II with an accuracy of up to 0.8 Ă
over distances of 22â38 Ă
using 19F pseudocontact shift is presented as a practical example
Symmetry as a new element to control molecular switches
The isomerization properties of an azocarbazole macrocycle in solution were investigated utilizing NMR spectroscopy with in situ irradiation in combination with DFT calculations. It was demonstrated that the position of azo units in a rigid macrocyclic system influences the photoisomerization pathway even if the initial all-E isomer is highly symmetric. Furthermore, the effect of ring strain on lowering the rates of thermal isomerization was demonstrated and a mechanism via an inversion-rotation proposed. The herein presented results and methods give new insights into the general nature of the azobenzene unit. In particular we illustrate the effect of symmetry changes due to macrocyclic arrangement on the photochemical and thermal isomerization properties, which will stimulate future development towards multinary molecular switches
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