20 research outputs found
Antisperm antibody: a monkey wrench in conception / magic bullet of contraception?
Antisperm antibodies can cause infertility by interacting with spermatozoa through immunoglobulin binding protein thereby blocking their penetrance of cervical mucus and / or by interfering with sperm-egg interaction. However, these antibodies appear not to be cytotoxic to embryos since a high implantation rate and consequently high pregnancy rate were achieved by IVF-ET treatment of women with antisperm antibodies. Also the finding that these antibodies do not appear to cause any deleterious clinical symptoms and have yet be associated with infertility suggested that sperm antigens are promising candidates in the development of immunocontraceptives. Some synthetic peptides corresponding to segments of human sperm antigens have effectively induced infertility in female rats when administered as an immunogen. Different peptides, adjuvants and routes of administration should be studied to determine the optimum conditions for inducing high antisperm antibody titers in the host. Moreover, identification of various steps and factors that are involved in regulating the production of antisperm antibodies such as immunoglobulin binding factor may open new paths in the treatment of immunological infertility and at the same time lead to a more effective immunocontraceptive
Genome-Wide Identification of Transcriptional Start Sites in the Plant Pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato str. DC3000
RNA-Seq has provided valuable insights into global gene expression in a wide variety of organisms. Using a modified RNA-Seq approach and Illumina's high-throughput sequencing technology, we globally identified 5′-ends of transcripts for the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato str. DC3000. A substantial fraction of 5′-ends obtained by this method were consistent with results obtained using global RNA-Seq and 5′RACE. As expected, many 5′-ends were positioned a short distance upstream of annotated genes. We also captured 5′-ends within intergenic regions, providing evidence for the expression of un-annotated genes and non-coding RNAs, and detected numerous examples of antisense transcription, suggesting additional levels of complexity in gene regulation in DC3000. Importantly, targeted searches for sequence patterns in the vicinity of 5′-ends revealed over 1200 putative promoters and other regulatory motifs, establishing a broad foundation for future investigations of regulation at the genomic and single gene levels
GAMETE-RELEASE BY 1-METHYLADENINE IN VITRO IN THE SEA CUCUMBER, LEPTOSYNAPTA INHAERENS
Volume: 150Start Page: 402End Page: 41