116 research outputs found

    Scapular kinematic alterations during arm elevation with decrease in pectoralis minor stiffness after stretching in healthy individuals

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    Background: Pectoralis minor tightness may be seen in individuals with scapular dyskinesis, and stretching is used for the treatment of altered scapular motion in sports and clinical fields. However, few researchers have reported on the effects of pectoralis minor stiffness on scapular motion during arm elevation. This study investigated whether an acute decrease of pectoralis minor stiffness after stretching changes the scapular motion during arm elevation. Methods: The study allocated 15 dominant and 15 nondominant upper limbs in healthy men as control and interventional limbs, respectively. In the intervention limb group, the shoulder was passively and horizontally abducted at 150Ā° of elevation for 5 minutes to stretch the pectoralis minor muscle. Before and after stretching, an electromagnetic sensor was used to examine 3-dimensional scapular motion during abduction and scaption. Ultrasonic shear wave elastography was used to measure pectoralis minor stiffness before and immediately after stretching and after arm elevation. Results: In the interventional limb, pectoralis minor stiffness decreased by 3.2ā€‰kPa immediately after stretching and by 2.5ā€‰kPa after arm elevation. The maximal changes in scapular kinematics after stretching were 4.8Ā° of external rotation and 3.3Ā° of posterior tilt in abduction, and 4.5Ā° of external rotation and 3.7Ā° of posterior tilt in scaption. Upward rotation in abduction or scaption did not change. Conclusions: Stretching for the pectoralis minor muscle increases external rotation and posterior tilt of the scapula during arm elevation

    Synthesis and Characterization of Rotaxane Closslinked Polyurethanes

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    Three polyurethanes (PU0, PU11 and PU33) where azobis(dibenzo-24-crown-8 ether) 1 acts as a crosslink point with a [3]rotaxane structure except PU0 were synthesized and characterized by H^^1 NMR and ATR-FT-IR spectroscopies, and DSC.Nagasaki Symposium on Nano-Dynamics 2008 (NSND2008) å¹³ęˆ20幓1꜈29ę—„(ē«)ę–¼é•·å“Žå¤§å­¦ Poster Presentatio

    A novel superior factor widely controlling the rice grain quality

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    Synthesis of storage starch and protein accumulation is the main action of endosperm organogenesis in term of the economic importance of rice. This event is strongly disturbed by abiotic stresses such as high temperature; thus, the upcoming global warming will cause a crisis with a great impact on food production^1,2^. The enzymes for the protein storage and starch synthesis pathway should work in concert to carry out the organogenesis of rice endosperm^3-5^, but the regulatory mechanism is largely unknown. Here we show that a novel regulatory factor, named OsCEO1, acts as the conductor of endosperm organogenesis during the rice grain filling stage. The physiological properties of _floury-endosperm-2_ (_flo2_) mutants showed many similarities to symptoms of grains developed under high-temperature conditions, suggesting important roles of the responsible gene in sensitivity to high-temperature stress. Our map-based cloning identified the responsible gene for the _flo2_ mutant, _OsCEO1_, which has no homology to any genes of known function. The _OsCEO1_ belongs to a novel conserved gene family and encodes a protein composed of 1,720 amino acid residues containing a TPR (tetratricopeptide repeat) motif, which is considered to mediate a protein-protein interaction. The yeast two-hybrid analysis raised an unknown protein showing homology to a late embryogenesis abundant protein and a putative basic helix-loop-helix protein as candidates for the direct interactor for _OsCEO1_, whereas no enzyme genes for the synthesis of storage substances were detected. The _flo2_ mutant exhibited reduced expression of several genes for putative regulatory proteins as well as many enzymes involved in storage starch and proteins. These results suggest that _OsCEO1_ is a superior conductor of the novel regulatory cascade of endosperm organogenesis and may have important roles in the response to high-temperature stress

    Shoulder horizontal abduction stretching effectively increases shear elastic modulus of pectoralis minor muscle

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    Background: Stretching maneuvers for the pectoralis minor muscle, which involve shoulder horizontal abduction or scapular retraction, are performed in clinical and sports settings because the tightness of this muscle may contribute to scapular dyskinesis. The effectiveness of stretching maneuvers for the pectoralis minor muscle is unclear in vivo. The purpose of this study was to verify the effectiveness of stretching maneuvers for the pectoralis minor muscle in vivo using ultrasonic shear wave elastography. Methods: Eighteen healthy men participated in this study. Elongation of the pectoralis minor muscle was measured for 3 stretching maneuvers (shoulder flexion, shoulder horizontal abduction, and scapular retraction) at 3 shoulder elevation angles (30Ā°, 90Ā°, and 150Ā°). The shear elastic modulus, used as the index of muscle elongation, was computed using ultrasonic shear wave elastography for the 9 aforementioned stretching maneuver-angle combinations. Results: The shear elastic modulus was highest in horizontal abduction at 150Ā°, followed by horizontal abduction at 90Ā°, horizontal abduction at 30Ā°, scapular retraction at 30Ā°, scapular retraction at 90Ā°, scapular retraction at 150Ā°, flexion at 150Ā°, flexion at 90Ā°, and flexion at 30Ā°. The shear elastic moduli of horizontal abduction at 90Ā° and horizontal abduction at 150Ā° were significantly higher than those of other stretching maneuvers. There was no significant difference between horizontal abduction at 90Ā° and horizontal abduction at 150Ā°. Conclusions: This study determined that shoulder horizontal abduction at an elevation of 90Ā° and horizontal abduction at an elevation of 150Ā° were the most effective stretching maneuvers for the pectoralis minor muscle in vivo

    Cleavage of a model DNA replication fork by a Type I restriction endonuclease

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    Cleavage of a DNA replication fork leads to fork restoration by recombination repair. In prokaryote cells carrying restrictionā€“modification systems, fork passage reduces genome methylation by the modification enzyme and exposes the chromosome to attack by the restriction enzyme. Various observations have suggested a relationship between the fork and Type I restriction enzymes, which cleave DNA at a distance from a recognition sequence. Here, we demonstrate that a Type I restriction enzyme preparation cleaves a model replication fork at its branch. The enzyme probably tracks along the DNA from an unmethylated recognition site on the daughter DNA and cuts the fork upon encountering the branch point. Our finding suggests that these restrictionā€“modification systems contribute to genome maintenance through cell death and indicates that DNA replication fork cleavage represents a critical point in genome maintenance to choose between the restoration pathway and the destruction pathway

    Clinical Aspect of Peripheral Cholangiocarcinoma: A Study of 7 Hepatectomy Cases

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    To clarify the features and problems presented by a peripheral cholangiocarcinoma (CCC), seven patients with hepatectomy from the First Department of Surgery, Nagasaki University School of Medicine (6 patients), and from Department of Surgery, National Ureshino Hospital (one patient) were reviewed. Men predominate with ratio of 5:2, and an average age was 65.4 years. Tumor location was left lateral segment in 4 patients, right lobe, middle lobe and posterior segment in one, respectively. Three patients were associated with hepatolithiasis. Underlying liver disease was found in 4 patients (57%); cirrhosis in 3 patients, and chronic hepatitis in one. Initial symptoms were abdominal pain, fever and palpable abdominal mass. In imaging modalities available, the detection rates of tumor were 100% in CT and 67% in US and angiography, respectively. Combination of MRI and CT clearly showed tumor characteristics. The serum CEA was slightly elevated in 5 patients (83%), but serum CA19-9 rose strikingly in 3 patients. Most tumors showed an infiltrating growth along intrahepatic bile duct, with a portal vein thrombus and/or satellite tumors frequently. In 3 patients, early recurrence with intrahepatic metastasis occured within the first 6 months. The patient of poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma containing a squamous or signet ring cell carinoma showed an extremely poor prognosis. This study suggests that early detection of small CCC and an extended resection are the most important factors for the survival of patient

    Cleavage of a model DNA replication fork by a methyl-specific endonuclease

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    Epigenetic DNA methylation is involved in many biological processes. An epigenetic status can be altered by gain or loss of a DNA methyltransferase gene or its activity. Repair of DNA damage can also remove DNA methylation. In response to such alterations, DNA endonucleases that sense DNA methylation can act and may cause cell death. Here, we explored the possibility that McrBC, a methylation-dependent DNase of Escherichia coli, cleaves DNA at a replication fork. First, we found that in vivo restriction by McrBC of bacteriophage carrying a foreign DNA methyltransferase gene is increased in the absence of homologous recombination. This suggests that some cleavage events are repaired by recombination and must take place during or after replication. Next, we demonstrated that the enzyme can cleave a model DNA replication fork in vitro. Cleavage of a fork required methylation on both arms and removed one, the other or both of the arms. Most cleavage events removed the methylated sites from the fork. This result suggests that acquisition of even rarely occurring modification patterns will be recognized and rejected efficiently by modification-dependent restriction systems that recognize two sites. This process might serve to maintain an epigenetic status along the genome through programmed cell death
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