20 research outputs found
Calpain 3 is important for muscle regeneration: Evidence from patients with limb girdle muscular dystrophies
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Limb girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) type 2A is caused by mutations in the CAPN3 gene and complete lack of functional calpain 3 leads to the most severe muscle wasting. Calpain 3 is suggested to be involved in maturation of contractile elements after muscle degeneration. The aim of this study was to investigate how mutations in the four functional domains of calpain 3 affect muscle regeneration.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We studied muscle regeneration in 22 patients with LGMD2A with calpain 3 deficiency, in five patients with LGMD2I, with a secondary reduction in calpain 3, and in five patients with Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) with normal calpain 3 levels. Regeneration was assessed by using the developmental markers neonatal myosin heavy chain (nMHC), vimentin, MyoD and myogenin and counting internally nucleated fibers.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We found that the recent regeneration as determined by the number of nMHC/vimentin-positive fibers was greatly diminished in severely affected LGMD2A patients compared to similarly affected patients with LGMD2I and BMD. Whorled fibers, a sign of aberrant regeneration, was highly elevated in patients with a complete lack of calpain 3 compared to patients with residual calpain 3. Regeneration is not affected by location of the mutation in the <it>CAPN3 </it>gene.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our findings suggest that calpain 3 is needed for the regenerative process probably during sarcomere remodeling as the complete lack of functional calpain 3 leads to the most severe phenotypes.</p
Late Cretaceous mega-, meso-, and microfloras from Lower Silesia
Late Cretaceous plants from the North Sudetic Basin (Lower Silesia, south-western Poland) are reviewed on the basis of
megaflora from 17 localities (270 identifiable specimens), mesoflora from two localities, and microflora from four localities.
Major sites are Rakowice MaĹe and BolesĹawiec. Eight megafloral assemblages are distinguished (Assemblage 1, Turonian;
Assemblages 2, 3, lowerâmiddle Coniacian; Assemblages 4, 5, upper Coniacian?âlower Santonian?; Assemblages 6â8,
lowerâmiddle Santonian); the bulk of the palaeoflora is from Assemblages 4â6 and 8. Megaflora consists of 29 taxa (6 ferns,
4 conifers, and 19 angiosperms). Geinitzia reichenbachii is the most common species. Dryophyllum westerhausianum
(Richter, 1904) Halamski and KvaÄek comb. nov. is a trifoliolate leaf re-interpreted as a representative of Fagales. Three
species of Dewalquea are distinguished: Dewalquea haldemiana, Dewalquea insignis, and Dewalquea aff. gelindenensis.
Platanites willigeri Halamski and KvaÄek sp. nov. is characterised by trifoliolate leaves, the median leaflet of which is
ovate, unlobed, with a serrate margin, and cuneate base. Palaeocommunities inferred from the megafossil record include:
a back swamp forest dominated by Geinitzia, with abundant ferns; a Dryophyllum-dominated riparian forest; a forest with
Dewalquea and Platanites willigeri possibly located in the marginal part of the alluvial plain; dunes with D. haldemiana and
Konijnenburgia; a fern savanna with patches of Pinus woodlands. Palynoassemblage A from the Nowogrodziec Member,
studied mostly at Rakowice MaĹe and ĹťeliszĂłw, consists of 126 taxa, including 105 terrestrial palynomorphs (54 bryophyte,
lycophyte, and pteridophyte spores, 16 gymnosperms, 35 angiosperms). The mega- and mesofossil records are dominated
by angiosperms; the palynoassemblages are dominated by ferns. Palaeocommunities represented solely by the microfossil
record are halophytic (with Frenelopsis and unconfirmed presence of Nypa) and pioneer vegetation. Palaeocommunities
are intermediate in general character between those pre-dating the Cretaceous Terrestrial Revolution and modern, angiosperm-
dominated vegetation. In comparison to older plant assemblages from contiguous areas laurophylls are much rarer;
this might correspond to a real phenomenon of exclusion of lauroids from Santonian riparian forests. The studied assemblage
is more similar to younger palaeofloras than to older ones; this might be interpreted as stabilisation of communities
after a period of pronounced change related to the rise to dominance of the angiosperms. In contrast to widespread endemism
among vertebrates of the European Archipelago, the plant cover consists mostly of species that are widely distributed