153 research outputs found

    Origination of the Split Structure of Spliceosomal Genes from Random Genetic Sequences

    Get PDF
    The mechanism by which protein-coding portions of eukaryotic genes came to be separated by long non-coding stretches of DNA, and the purpose for this perplexing arrangement, have remained unresolved fundamental biological problems for three decades. We report here a plausible solution to this problem based on analysis of open reading frame (ORF) length constraints in the genomes of nine diverse species. If primordial nucleic acid sequences were random in sequence, functional proteins that are innately long would not be encoded due to the frequent occurrence of stop codons. The best possible way that a long protein-coding sequence could have been derived was by evolving a split-structure from the random DNA (or RNA) sequence. Results of the systematic analyses of nine complete genome sequences presented here suggests that perhaps the major underlying structural features of split-genes have evolved due to the indigenous occurrence of split protein-coding genes in primordial random nucleotide sequence. The results also suggest that intron-rich genes containing short exons may have been the original form of genes intrinsically occurring in random DNA, and that intron-poor genes containing long exons were perhaps derived from the original intron-rich genes

    Intercellular communication in spheroids

    Get PDF
    This chapter has shown that the response of spheroid cells to gap junctional communication may lead to certain metabolic and cell physiological changes. It has also become apparent that the functions of the gap junctions are very complex. They may, for example, be related to the fundamental effects of cAMP and/or Ca 2+. These lines of evidence should be pursued further. However, further insight into these functions may also be gained from a study of the structure and function of the gap-junctional proteins, as well as from a genetic approach (e.g., Willecke et al. 1982, 1983). In this context, the spheroids are of particular importance as test systems, since they perfectly simulate the three dimensional arrangement of cells encountered in a tissue. Indeed, the results presented in the sections "Biophysical and Biochemical Effects Associated with Intercellular Communications" and "Intercellular Communication and Radiosensitivity" have revealed clear cut differences between cells growing as spheroids or as monolayers in response to communication dependent processes, which indicate that the response of the monolayers could be somewhat trivial. The advantage of multicellular spheroid systems with three-dimensional growth over monolayer cultures is unquestionable. Cells growing in three-dimensional multicell spheroids may re-establish their regulatory activities and, therefore, match the in vivo conditions more closely. Multicell spheroids allow in vitro investigations on differentiating systems and on interactions between normal and malignant cells, thus substituting costly in vivo experiments

    Glucocortiocoid Treatment of MCMV Infected Newborn Mice Attenuates CNS Inflammation and Limits Deficits in Cerebellar Development

    Get PDF
    Infection of the developing fetus with human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a major cause of central nervous system disease in infants and children; however, mechanism(s) of disease associated with this intrauterine infection remain poorly understood. Utilizing a mouse model of HCMV infection of the developing CNS, we have shown that peripheral inoculation of newborn mice with murine CMV (MCMV) results in CNS infection and developmental abnormalities that recapitulate key features of the human infection. In this model, animals exhibit decreased granule neuron precursor cell (GNPC) proliferation and altered morphogenesis of the cerebellar cortex. Deficits in cerebellar cortical development are symmetric and global even though infection of the CNS results in a non-necrotizing encephalitis characterized by widely scattered foci of virus-infected cells with mononuclear cell infiltrates. These findings suggested that inflammation induced by MCMV infection could underlie deficits in CNS development. We investigated the contribution of host inflammatory responses to abnormal cerebellar development by modulating inflammatory responses in infected mice with glucocorticoids. Treatment of infected animals with glucocorticoids decreased activation of CNS mononuclear cells and expression of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IFN-β and IFNγ) in the CNS while minimally impacting CNS virus replication. Glucocorticoid treatment also limited morphogenic abnormalities and normalized the expression of developmentally regulated genes within the cerebellum. Importantly, GNPC proliferation deficits were normalized in MCMV infected mice following glucocorticoid treatment. Our findings argue that host inflammatory responses to MCMV infection contribute to deficits in CNS development in MCMV infected mice and suggest that similar mechanisms of disease could be responsible for the abnormal CNS development in human infants infected in-utero with HCMV

    The Mutability of Small-Plaque-Forming Encephalomyocarditis Virus

    No full text
    • …
    corecore