62 research outputs found

    Differentiated effects of glucosaminylmuramildipeptide on the non-transformed and experimentally transformed phenotype of CD62L + CD63 + CD66d + neutrophilic granulocytes in conventionally healthy people [Дифференцированные влияния глюкозаминилмурамилдипептида на нетрансформированный и экспериментально трансформированный фенотип субпопуляции CD62L + CD63 + CD66d + нейтрофильных гранулоцитов условно здоровых лиц]

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    Modern studies have shown a high plasticity and phenotypic diversity of neutrophilic granulocytes (NG) provided by different receptors, which are diagnostic markers for the functional capacity of the cell in the course of their activities. We investigated NG from peripheral blood, obtained from healthy people of both sexes aged from 26 to 66 years. Evaluation of the neutrophil membrane receptor expression was carried out by flow cytometry. The relative amount of neutrophilic granulocytes expressing membrane CD62L, CD63, CD66d receptors and the intensity of their expression were determined according to their fluorescence intensities. The surface NG membrane receptors, i.e., CD62L, CD63, CD66d were studied upon the in vitro experimental influence of the following bacterial peptides: N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP, model 1); glucosaminylmuramyldipeptide (GMDP, model 2), and simultaneous incubation of NG blood with fMLP and GMDP (model 3). The in vitro treatment with fMLP in the in vitro model was used to transform the NG phenotype of conventionally healthy subjects, expressing CD62, CD63, CD66d molecules. The treatment caused a significantly decrease in both CD62L and the CD62L expression in relative amounts of neutrophilic granulocytes with a parallel increase of CD63 expression density. The effect of GMDP on the NG phenotype of conditionally healthy subjects did not change the amount of CD62L + NG and CD63 + NG, and did not affect CD62L and CD63 expression density on the surface of NG. However, the amount of CD66d + NG was significantly increased with the unchanged expression of CD66d molecules. GMDP introduced together with the bacterial fMLP peptide was shown to neutralize some features of the NG phenotype transformation caused by fMLP, i.e., the amount of CD62L + NG was restored by 22 % and the CD62L expression density increased significantly. At the same time, GMDP did not correct the negative effect of fMLP upon the number of CD63 + NG and CD66d + NG, and on the CD63 and CD66d expression. Simultaneous addition of fMLP and GMDP did significantly increase the amount of CD66d + NG and expression density of CD63 molecules on the CD63 + NG membrane as compared to intact NG of conditionally healthy subjects. The obtained data are important in order to justify some new immunotherapeutic strategies aimed at correction of the negatively transformed NG phenotype, which accompanies some infectious and inflammatory diseases of bacterial etiology with atypical clinical course. © 2018, SPb RAACI

    The bovine genome map

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    The Genome Sequence of Taurine Cattle:A Window to Ruminant Biology and Evolution

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    To understand the biology and evolution of ruminants, the cattle genome was sequenced to about sevenfold coverage. The cattle genome contains a minimum of 22,000 genes, with a core set of 14,345 orthologs shared among seven mammalian species of which 1217 are absent or undetected in noneutherian (marsupial or monotreme) genomes. Cattle-specific evolutionary breakpoint regions in chromosomes have a higher density of segmental duplications, enrichment of repetitive elements, and species-specific variations in genes associated with lactation and immune responsiveness. Genes involved in metabolism are generally highly conserved, although five metabolic genes are deleted or extensively diverged from their human orthologs. The cattle genome sequence thus provides a resource for understanding mammalian evolution and accelerating livestock genetic improvement for milk and meat production.Fil: Bovine Genome Sequencing and Analysis Consortium. Bovine Genome Sequencing And Analysis Consortium; Estados UnidosFil: Amadio, Ariel Fernando. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria. Centro Regional Santa Fe. Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Rafaela; ArgentinaFil: Poli, Mario Andres. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria. Centro de Investigación en Ciencias Veterinarias y Agronómicas. Instituto de Genética; Argentin

    ALICE: Physics performance report, volume I

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    ALICE is a general-purpose heavy-ion experiment designed to study the physics of strongly interacting matter and the quark-gluon plasma in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC. It currently includes more than 900 physicists and senior engineers, from both nuclear and high-energy physics, from about 80 institutions in 28 countries. The experimentwas approved in February 1997. The detailed design of the different detector systems has been laid down in a number of Technical Design Reports issued between mid-1998 and the end of 2001 and construction has started for most detectors. Since the last comprehensive information on detector and physics performance was published in the ALICE Technical Proposal in 1996, the detector as well as simulation, reconstruction and analysis software have undergone significant development. The Physics Performance Report (PPR) will give an updated and comprehensive summary of the current status and performance of the various ALICE subsystems, including updates to the Technical Design Reports, where appropriate, as well as a description of systems which have not been published in a Technical Design Report. The PPR will be published in two volumes. The currentVolume I contains: 1. a short theoretical overview and an extensive reference list concerning the physics topics of interest to ALICE, 2. relevant experimental conditions at the LHC, 3. a short summary and update of the subsystem designs, and 4. a description of the offline framework and Monte Carlo generators. Volume II, which will be published separately, will contain detailed simulations of combined detector performance, event reconstruction, and analysis of a representative sample of relevant physics observables from global event characteristics to hard processes. © 2004 IOP Publishing Ltd

    ALICE addentum to the Technical Design Report of the time of flight system (TOF)

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