27 research outputs found

    Possible involvement of iron-induced oxidative insults in neurodegeneration.

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    Involvement of iron in the development of neurodegenerative disorders has long been suggested, and iron that cannot be stored properly is suggested to induce iron toxicity. To enhance iron uptake and suppress iron storage in neurons, we generated transgenic (Tg) mice expressing iron regulatory protein 2 (IRP2), a major regulator of iron metabolism, in a neuron-specific manner. Although very subtle, IRP2 was expressed in all regions of brain examined. In the Tg mice, mitochondrial oxidative insults were observed including generation of 4-hydroxynonenal modified proteins, which appeared to be removed by a mitochondrial quality control protein Parkin. Inter-crossing of the Tg mice to Parkin knockout mice perturbed the integrity of neurons in the substantia nigra and provoked motor symptoms. These results suggest that a subtle, but chronic increase in IRP2 induces mitochondrial oxidative insults and accelerates neurodegeneration in a mouse model of Parkinson's disease. Thus, the IRP2 Tg may be a useful tool to probe the roles of iron-induced mitochondrial damages in neurodegeraration research

    瀬戸内海におけるPseudodiaptomus marinus(橈脚亜綱: カラヌス目)の繁殖生態

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    The rates of daily egg production were estimated for the egg sac-carrying calanoid copepod Pseudodiaptomus marinus SATO by an integration of data from field and laboratory investigations. The brood size was positively related to the body size of adult females which was in turn negatively related to the environmental temperature. The development time of embryos (D in days) was a function of temperature (T in °C) as expressed by the equation: D=448 (T - 1.0)^. Under excess food conditions, the duration from the hatching of brood to the production of the successive one was generally short and constant (0.14 d) at different temperatures. Assuming sufficient food supply and continuous breeding, the daily reproductive rates of the natural population of P. marinus were high from May to October but much lower from January to March. The ratios of daily egg production: female body weight increased linearly with temperature

    Topotactic thermal-transformation of diaspore to corundum

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    (Appendix A) Radiolarian abundance in ODP Hole 202-1241A

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    A quantitative radiolarian study at Ocean Drilling Program Site 1241 in the eastern tropical Pacific enables us to reconstruct paleoceanographic changes that occurred since the latest middle Miocene. Today, this site is located just under the Eastern Pacific Warm Pool (EPWP). Based on the abundance variations of radiolarian characteristic species which are indicators of upwelling and thermocline changes, it is suggested that three notable changes occurred at 10.6, 9.8, and 4.2 Ma in the region. Four distinct periods of oceanographic conditions bounded by these notable changes were characterized on the basis of the following: (1) stratified seawater (12.0 to 10.6 Ma); (2) a shallowing of the thermocline and an increasing of upwelling (10.6 to 9.8 Ma); (3) significant inflow of warm water to the eastern tropical Pacific caused by an intensified Northern Equatorial Countercurrent (NECC), resulting in the formation of EPWP (9.8 to 4.2 Ma); and (4) the reduction of the EPWP and the NECC, and an increase in upwelling (4.2 to 0 Ma). The timing of these paleoceanographic events indicated the strong relations with the opening and closing of the Indonesian and Central American (Panama) Seaways. The reduction of the EPWP (this study) and the deepening of the thermocline in western Pacific at about 4.2 Ma (Cannariato and Ravelo, 1997; Chaisson and Ravelo, 2000) indicated a change from a state resembling El Niño in the late Miocene and the early Pliocene time to a state resembling La Niña by the late Pliocen
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