26 research outputs found

    Stem cell factor (SCF) and c-kit in the ovine fetal testis in normal and nutrition perturbed pregnancies

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    Stem cell factor (SCF) and c-kit in the ovine fetal testis in normal and nutrition perturbed pregnancie

    Ocean Drilling Perspectives on Meteorite Impacts

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    Extraterrestrial impacts that reshape the surfaces of rocky bodies are ubiquitous in the solar system. On early Earth, impact structures may have nurtured the evolution of life. More recently, a large meteorite impact off the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico at the end of the Cretaceous caused the disappearance of 75% of species known from the fossil record, including non-avian dinosaurs, and cleared the way for the dominance of mammals and the eventual evolution of humans. Understanding the fundamental processes associated with impact events is critical to understanding the history of life on Earth, and the potential for life in our solar system and beyond. Scientific ocean drilling has generated a large amount of unique data on impact pro- cesses. In particular, the Yucatán Chicxulub impact is the single largest and most sig- nificant impact event that can be studied by sampling in modern ocean basins, and marine sediment cores have been instrumental in quantifying its environmental, cli- matological, and biological effects. Drilling in the Chicxulub crater has significantly advanced our understanding of fundamental impact processes, notably the formation of peak rings in large impact craters, but these data have also raised new questions to be addressed with future drilling. Within the Chicxulub crater, the nature and thickness of the melt sheet in the central basin is unknown, and an expanded Paleocene hemipelagic section would provide insights to both the recovery of life and the climatic changes that followed the impact. Globally, new cores collected from today’s central Pacific could directly sample the downrange ejecta of this northeast-southwest trending impact. Extraterrestrial impacts have been controversially suggested as primary drivers for many important paleoclimatic and environmental events throughout Earth history. However, marine sediment archives collected via scientific ocean drilling and geo- chemical proxies (e.g., osmium isotopes) provide a long-term archive of major impact events in recent Earth history and show that, other than the end-Cretaceous, impacts do not appear to drive significant environmental changes

    Early paleocene paleoceanography and export productivity in the Chicxulub crater

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    The Chicxulub impact caused a crash in productivity in the world''s oceans which contributed to the extinction of ~75% of marine species. In the immediate aftermath of the extinction, export productivity was locally highly variable, with some sites, including the Chicxulub crater, recording elevated export production. The long-term transition back to more stable export productivity regimes has been poorly documented. Here, we present elemental abundances, foraminifer and calcareous nannoplankton assemblage counts, total organic carbon, and bulk carbonate carbon isotope data from the Chicxulub crater to reconstruct changes in export productivity during the first 3 Myr of the Paleocene. We show that export production was elevated for the first 320 kyr of the Paleocene, declined from 320 kyr to 1.2 Myr, and then remained low thereafter. A key interval in this long decline occurred 900 kyr to 1.2 Myr post impact, as calcareous nannoplankton assemblages began to diversify. This interval is associated with fluctuations in water column stratification and terrigenous flux, but these variables are uncorrelated to export productivity. Instead, we postulate that the turnover in the phytoplankton community from a post-extinction assemblage dominated by picoplankton (which promoted nutrient recycling in the euphotic zone) to a Paleocene pelagic community dominated by relatively larger primary producers like calcareous nannoplankton (which more efficiently removed nutrients from surface waters, leading to oligotrophy) is responsible for the decline in export production in the southern Gulf of Mexico. © 2021. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved

    Non-genomic steroid receptors in the bovine ovary

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    Over the last few years, rapid and physiologically important non-genomic actions of all classes of steroid hormones have been described in many cell types. A putative non-genomic membrane progesterone receptor (NGPR) was the first, and so far the only, non-genomic steroid receptor cloned. Two homologous {NGPR} proteins have been identified in the human, and a similar protein in the bovine and rat. Various detection methods have been used to identify putative {NGPRs} in a range of tissues: however, different methods often yield quite different molecular weights, and probably detect distinct moieties. We describe some properties of the specific cell-surface membrane binding sites for [3H]-progesterone in enriched cell membrane preparations of bovine luteal and follicular cells. Similar binding sites were also detected in cell-membranes of some (but not all) bovine tissues. Western blots of detergent extracts of bovine luteal membranes identified a protein (85 kDa) that reacted with an antiserum to the N-terminal peptide of porcine NGPR. Activity was low in native non-denatured extracts, but increased dramatically in a dose-dependent manner following pretreatment with the cholesterol-complexing agent, digitonin. This protein was co-precipitated by antisera to caveolin. In contrast, a specific monoclonal antibody to the ligand binding domain of the genomic progesterone receptor (Mab C262) detected two proteins (Mr, 55 and 60 kDa) in luteal membrane detergent extracts. Immunostaining of these proteins by Mab {C262} was abolished by digitonin concentration-dependent manner in non-denatured extracts. However, both proteins were unaffected by digitonin in fully denatured detergent extracts, suggesting that digitonin induced a conformational change in the native protein that prevented binding of Mab {C262} to its epitope. Our data suggest the presence of a complex of two or more distinct membrane-associated progesterone-binding proteins in bovine luteal membranes. Moreover, their conformations are specifically affected by removal of bound cholesterol

    Stimulation of specific binding of [3H]-progesterone to bovine luteal cell-surface membranes: specificity of digitonin

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    Non-genomic actions of progesterone have been described in the ovary, and luteal membranes of several species have been shown to possess specific binding sites for [3H]-progesterone. However, binding of radiolabelled progesterone to luteal membranes was demonstrable only in the presence of digitonin. Digitonin is a non-ionic detergent which is thought to act by forming one-to-one complexes with certain sterols. It is also a cardiotonic agent, inhibiting (Na+–K+) {ATPase} activity by interaction with the extracellular (ouabain/K+) binding site. We therefore investigated which properties of digitonin were responsible for its stimulatory actions on progesterone binding to bovine luteal membranes. A range of compounds with detergent, cardiotonic and/or cholesterol-complexing activities were tested for their effects on [3H]-progesterone binding to bovine luteal membrane fractions, and on haemolysis of rat erythrocytes. Stimulation of progesterone binding to luteal membranes was highly specific for digitonin, and a number of ionic and non-ionic detergents, cardenolides, saponins and cholesterol-complexing reagents tested failed either to stimulate [3H]-progesterone binding to bovine luteal membranes in the absence of digitonin, or to inhibit binding specifically in the presence of digitonin. When digitonin was first reacted with excess cholesterol or pregnenolone to form the respective digitonides, stimulatory activity was greatly reduced, suggesting that the ability of digitonin to interact with (an) endogenous steroid(s) may be important in its action. High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-mass spectrometry of commercially available digitonin preparations indicated the presence of numerous minor impurities in most commercial digitonin preparations. Three major UV-absorbing peaks were isolated and characterised by mass spectrometry: all stimulated progesterone binding to bovine luteal membrane receptors in a dose-dependent manner, though to differing extents. Our data suggest that the unique action of digitonin on luteal membrane progesterone receptors is not related to its detergent or cardiotonic properties, but appears to be related to its ability to complex with membrane sterols

    Undernutrition of ewe lambs in utero and in early post-natal life does not affect hypothalamic–pituitary function in adulthood

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    The effect of undernutrition in utero, during late gestation (from day 100), and early neonatal life on hypothalamic–pituitary function was investigated in female lambs born to ewes fed rations calculated to provide either 100% (high; H) or 70% (low; L) of the energy requirements to sustain a twin pregnancy. Following parturition in early spring, ewes and lambs were maintained on pasture with sward heights of 6 cm (H) or 4 cm (L) until week 8 of lactation and then sward heights of 5 cm (H) or 3 cm (L) until weaning at week 14. Mean lamb birth weights were 18% lower in L than H animals (

    Effect of surface pretreatment and alloy type on the durability of adhesive bonded titanium alloy joints

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