79 research outputs found

    Evidence for True Fall-mating in Japanese Newt Cynops pyrrhogaster

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    The mating season of Japanese newt Cynops pyrrhogaster is generally thought to occur once a year in spring to early summer, during the months of April to June, as in many other Japanese amphibians. However, in fall, from September to October, we often observed breeding colored males demonstrating a mating behavior with females in the field. In this study, in order to identify their true mating season, we anatomically and histologically investigated the annual maturation cycle of gonads and reproductive organs, including cloacal spermathecae in females, and, using a molecular marker, identified the seasonal origins of sperm, which are released in spring to perform insemination. We found that, in fall, ovaries are somewhat immature, while the testes were mature and the sperm already stored in the deferent ducts. Females stored a significant amount of sperm in around 80% of the spermatechae examined in October and 100% in December. When artificially ovulated in March before contact with male partners after hibernation, the females spawned fertilized eggs and these developed normally. Finally, we identified heterozygous genotypes of the visual pigment gene for the two different population types in the embryos, which were derived from a female who established contact with males of the same population in fall and then switched to males from another population until oviposition in spring. We therefore, conclude that the true mating season of this species occurs from fall to early summer, interrupted only by winter, and lasts six months longer (from October to June) than generally believed

    Characterization of a sperm factor for egg activation at fertilization of the newt Cynops pyrrhogaster

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    AbstractEggs of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, arrested at the second meiotic metaphase are activated by sperm at fertilization and then complete meiosis to initiate development. We highly purified a sperm factor for egg activation from a sperm extract with several chromatographies. The purified fraction containing only a 45 kDa protein induced egg activation accompanied by an intracellular Ca2+ increase when injected into unfertilized eggs. Although injection of mouse phospholipase C (PLC) ζ-mRNA caused a Ca2+ increase and egg activation, partial amino acid sequences of the 45 kDa protein were homologous to those of Xenopus citrate synthase, but not to PLCs. An anti-porcine citrate synthase antibody recognized the 45 kDa protein both in the purified fraction and in the sperm extract. Treatment with the anti-citrate synthase antibody reduced the egg-activation activity in the sperm extract. Injection of porcine citrate synthase or mRNA of Xenopus citrate synthase induced a Ca2+ increase and caused egg activation. A large amount of the 45 kDa protein was localized in two lines elongated from the neck to the middle piece of sperm. These results indicate that the 45 kDa protein is a major component of the sperm factor for egg activation at newt fertilization

    Evidence for the Involvement of a Src-Related Tyrosine Kinase inXenopusEgg Activation

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    AbstractRecently, we have purified a Src-related tyrosine kinase, namedXenopustyrosine kinase (Xyk), from oocytes ofXenopus laevisand found that the enzyme is activated within 1 min following fertilization [Satoet al.(1996)J. Biol. Chem.271, 13250–13257]. A concomitant translocation of a part of the activated enzyme from the membrane fraction to the cytosolic fraction was also observed. In the present study, we show that parthenogenetic egg activation by a synthetic RGDS peptide [Y. Iwao and T. Fujimura, T. (1996)Dev. Biol.177, 558–567], an integrin-interacting peptide, but not by electrical shock or the calcium ionophore A23187 causes the kinase activation, tyrosine phosphorylation, and translocation of Xyk. A synthetic tyrosine kinase-specific inhibitor peptide was employed to analyze the importance of the Xyk activity in egg activation. We found that the peptide inhibits the kinase activity of purified Xyk at IC50of 8 μM. Further, egg activation induced by sperm or RGDS peptide but not by A23187 was inhibited by microinjection of the peptide. In the peptide-microinjected eggs, penetration of the sperm nucleus into the egg cytoplasm and meiotic resumption in the egg were blocked. Indirect immunofluorescence study demonstrates that Xyk is exclusively localized to the cortex ofXenopuseggs, indicating that Xyk can function in close proximity to the sperm–egg or RGDS peptide–egg interaction site. Taken together, these data suggest that the tyrosine kinase Xyk plays an important role in the early events ofXenopusegg activation in a manner independent or upstream of calcium signaling

    Pathobiological implications of mucin (MUC) expression in the outcome of small bowel cancer.

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    Mucins have been associated with survival in various cancer patients, but there have been no studies of mucins in small bowel carcinoma (SBC). In this study, we investigated the relationships between mucin expression and clinicopathologic factors in 60 SBC cases, in which expression profiles of MUC1, MUC2, MUC3, MUC4, MUC5AC, MUC6 and MUC16 in cancer and normal tissues were examined by immunohistochemistry. MUC1, MUC5AC and MUC16 expression was increased in SBC lesions compared to the normal epithelium, and expression of these mucins was related to clinicopathologic factors, as follows: MUC1 [tumor location (p = 0.019), depth (p = 0.017) and curability (p = 0.007)], MUC5AC [tumor location (p = 0.063) and lymph node metastasis (p = 0.059)], and MUC16 [venous invasion (p = 0.016) and curability (p = 0.016)]. Analysis of 58 cases with survival data revealed five factors associated with a poor prognosis: poorly-differentiated or neuroendocrine histological type (

    Study of covalent spin interactions in Cd1-xMnxSe by cryobaric magnetophotoluminescence

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    Pressure dependence of exchange interactions among small Mn clusters scattered throughout the network of sp3 covalent bonds in a diluted magnetic semiconductor Cd1-xMnxSe has been studied by a cryobaric measurement of the exciton magnetophotoluminescence. The pressure is generated up to 2 GPa with a diamond anvil cell, being subjected at low temperatures to the static magnetic field up to 23 T generated with a hybrid magnet. The observed specific spin temperature T0 of the clusters gives the effective internal exchange constant J*/k≡J2/k +(10/3)J3/k +2J4/k to be –2.0±0.4 K at 1 atm, where Jn denotes nth-neighbor exchange constant. The nearest-neighbor interaction constant is obtained to be J1/k = -7.4±0.4 K at 1 atm from an analysis of the effect of the stepwise magnetization of Mn pairs. J*, as well as J1, increases rapidly with increasing pressure. The pressure coefficient dln|J*|/dP = 0.2-0.4 GPa-1 agrees with dln|J1|/dP = 0.25±0.05 GPa-1 within experimental errors. This result supports Larson\u27s covalent spin interaction picture that the exchange interactions between the scattered, localized spins are determined by kinetic exchanges mediated by the extended p orbitals making the valence band of the host II-VI semiconductor

    Ethnic comparison in takotsubo syndrome : novel insights from the International Takotsubo Registry

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    © The Author(s) 2021. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.Background: Ethnic disparities have been reported in cardiovascular disease. However, ethnic disparities in takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remain elusive. This study assessed differences in clinical characteristics between Japanese and European TTS patients and determined the impact of ethnicity on in-hospital outcomes. Methods: TTS patients in Japan were enrolled from 10 hospitals and TTS patients in Europe were enrolled from 32 hospitals participating in the International Takotsubo Registry. Clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes were compared between Japanese and European patients. Results: A total of 503 Japanese and 1670 European patients were included. Japanese patients were older (72.6 ± 11.4 years vs. 68.0 ± 12.0 years; p < 0.001) and more likely to be male (18.5 vs. 8.4%; p < 0.001) than European TTS patients. Physical triggering factors were more common (45.5 vs. 32.0%; p < 0.001), and emotional triggers less common (17.5 vs. 31.5%; p < 0.001), in Japanese patients than in European patients. Japanese patients were more likely to experience cardiogenic shock during the acute phase (15.5 vs. 9.0%; p < 0.001) and had a higher in-hospital mortality (8.2 vs. 3.2%; p < 0.001). However, ethnicity itself did not appear to have an impact on in-hospital mortality. Machine learning approach revealed that the presence of physical stressors was the most important prognostic factor in both Japanese and European TTS patients. Conclusion: Differences in clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes between Japanese and European TTS patients exist. Ethnicity does not impact the outcome in TTS patients. The worse in-hospital outcome in Japanese patients, is mainly driven by the higher prevalence of physical triggers.Open Access funding provided by Universität Zürich. CT has been supported by the H.H. Sheikh Khalifa bin Hamad Al-Thani Research Programme and the Swiss Heart Foundation. L.S.M. has been supported by EU HORIZON 2020 (SILICOFCM ID777204). J.R.G has received a grant “Filling the gap” from the University of Zurich. The InterTAK Registry is supported by The Biss Davies Charitable Trust.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Ethnic comparison in takotsubo syndrome: novel insights from the International Takotsubo Registry

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    Background Ethnic disparities have been reported in cardiovascular disease. However, ethnic disparities in takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remain elusive. This study assessed differences in clinical characteristics between Japanese and European TTS patients and determined the impact of ethnicity on in-hospital outcomes.Methods TTS patients in Japan were enrolled from 10 hospitals and TTS patients in Europe were enrolled from 32 hospitals participating in the International Takotsubo Registry. Clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes were compared between Japanese and European patients.Results A total of 503 Japanese and 1670 European patients were included. Japanese patients were older (72.6 +/- 11.4 years vs. 68.0 +/- 12.0 years; p Conclusion Differences in clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes between Japanese and European TTS patients exist. Ethnicity does not impact the outcome in TTS patients. The worse in-hospital outcome in Japanese patients, is mainly driven by the higher prevalence of physical triggers.</p

    Preparations of some 1,2- and 1,4-disubstituted adamantanes

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    Activation of Xenopus Eggs by Cynops Sperm Extract is Dependent upon Both Extra-and Intra-Cellular Ca Activities

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    When unfertilized Xenopus eggs were treated by Cynops sperm extract in 10% Steinberg's solution (SB), egg's membranes hyperpolarized to about −37 mV and then depolarized to elicit a positive-going potential amounting to about +34 mV. The eggs underwent cortical contraction and resumption of meiosis. Activation of eggs in various external solutions indicates that the hyperpolarization is due mainly to opening of Na channels, but the positive-going potential is due to Cl channels on the egg's plasma membranes. Since the activation was inhibited by CdCl_[2], CoCl_[2], or NiCl_[2] as well as by amiloride, Ca influx through Ca channels is necessary for the activation by the sperm extract. A propagative intracellular Ca release was induced not only by Cynops sperm, but also by their sperm extract. Injection of BAPTA or heparin into the eggs completely inhibited activation, indicating that egg activation requires an intracellular Ca release dependent upon receptors for inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate
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