38 research outputs found

    CLINICAL AND BIOMECHANICAL COMPARISONS BETWEEN YOUTH PITCHERS WITH AND WITHOUT A HISTORY OF THROWING ARM PAIN OR INJUR

    Get PDF
    This study aimed to determine if there are clinical and kinematic differences in youth pitchers with a self-reported history of throwing arm pain or injury (PI) to those without (NPI). Forty male baseball pitchers ages 9 to 14 years old were divided into a PI group (n=20) and a NPI group (n=20). Injury history, pitching exposure, subject demographics, range of motion, and strength measurements were collected, along with throwing arm kinematics via a motion capture system. When comparing PI and NPI, significant physical differences were observed, with a greater presence of axillary hair, increased forearm length and decreased shoulder internal rotation strength in PI. No significant differences of upper limb motion during pitching were reported. When considering youth pitchers, evidence of physical maturity, arm length, and strength could be important factors in developing pain or injury

    A Herpesvirus Encoded Deubiquitinase Is a Novel Neuroinvasive Determinant

    Get PDF
    The neuroinvasive property of several alpha-herpesviruses underlies an uncommon infectious process that includes the establishment of life-long latent infections in sensory neurons of the peripheral nervous system. Several herpesvirus proteins are required for replication and dissemination within the nervous system, indicating that exploiting the nervous system as a niche for productive infection requires a specialized set of functions encoded by the virus. Whether initial entry into the nervous system from peripheral tissues also requires specialized viral functions is not known. Here we show that a conserved deubiquitinase domain embedded within a pseudorabies virus structural protein, pUL36, is essential for initial neural invasion, but is subsequently dispensable for transmission within and between neurons of the mammalian nervous system. These findings indicate that the deubiquitinase contributes to neurovirulence by participating in a previously unrecognized initial step in neuroinvasion

    Targeting of Pseudorabies Virus Structural Proteins to Axons Requires Association of the Viral Us9 Protein with Lipid Rafts

    Get PDF
    The pseudorabies virus (PRV) Us9 protein plays a central role in targeting viral capsids and glycoproteins to axons of dissociated sympathetic neurons. As a result, Us9 null mutants are defective in anterograde transmission of infection in vivo. However, it is unclear how Us9 promotes axonal sorting of so many viral proteins. It is known that the glycoproteins gB, gC, gD and gE are associated with lipid raft microdomains on the surface of infected swine kidney cells and monocytes, and are directed into the axon in a Us9-dependent manner. In this report, we determined that Us9 is associated with lipid rafts, and that this association is critical to Us9-mediated sorting of viral structural proteins. We used infected non-polarized and polarized PC12 cells, a rat pheochromocytoma cell line that acquires many of the characteristics of sympathetic neurons in the presence of nerve growth factor (NGF). In these cells, Us9 is highly enriched in detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs). Moreover, reducing the affinity of Us9 for lipid rafts inhibited anterograde transmission of infection from sympathetic neurons to epithelial cells in vitro. We conclude that association of Us9 with lipid rafts is key for efficient targeting of structural proteins to axons and, as a consequence, for directional spread of PRV from pre-synaptic to post-synaptic neurons and cells of the mammalian nervous system

    A Wide Extent of Inter-Strain Diversity in Virulent and Vaccine Strains of Alphaherpesviruses

    Get PDF
    Alphaherpesviruses are widespread in the human population, and include herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) and 2, and varicella zoster virus (VZV). These viral pathogens cause epithelial lesions, and then infect the nervous system to cause lifelong latency, reactivation, and spread. A related veterinary herpesvirus, pseudorabies (PRV), causes similar disease in livestock that result in significant economic losses. Vaccines developed for VZV and PRV serve as useful models for the development of an HSV-1 vaccine. We present full genome sequence comparisons of the PRV vaccine strain Bartha, and two virulent PRV isolates, Kaplan and Becker. These genome sequences were determined by high-throughput sequencing and assembly, and present new insights into the attenuation of a mammalian alphaherpesvirus vaccine strain. We find many previously unknown coding differences between PRV Bartha and the virulent strains, including changes to the fusion proteins gH and gB, and over forty other viral proteins. Inter-strain variation in PRV protein sequences is much closer to levels previously observed for HSV-1 than for the highly stable VZV proteome. Almost 20% of the PRV genome contains tandem short sequence repeats (SSRs), a class of nucleic acids motifs whose length-variation has been associated with changes in DNA binding site efficiency, transcriptional regulation, and protein interactions. We find SSRs throughout the herpesvirus family, and provide the first global characterization of SSRs in viruses, both within and between strains. We find SSR length variation between different isolates of PRV and HSV-1, which may provide a new mechanism for phenotypic variation between strains. Finally, we detected a small number of polymorphic bases within each plaque-purified PRV strain, and we characterize the effect of passage and plaque-purification on these polymorphisms. These data add to growing evidence that even plaque-purified stocks of stable DNA viruses exhibit limited sequence heterogeneity, which likely seeds future strain evolution

    VIBRATIONAL STUDIES OF BISMUTH HALOGEN COMPLEXES

    No full text
    Author Institution: Department of Chemistry, Texas A \& M UniversityThe low-frequency (0−200cm−10-200 cm^{-1}) infrared and Raman spectra of several bismuth halogen complexes have been recorded and analyzed. The complexes studied included those with formulas R3BiX6R_{3}BiX_{6}, R2BiX5R_{2}BiX_{5}, RBiX4RBiX_{4}, and R3Bi2X9R_{3}Bi_{2}X_{9} where X=BrX=Br or II and RR is an organic cation. The stretching and bending modes of these complexes have been assigned and spectra have been correlated to the molecular structures
    corecore