33 research outputs found
Treatment of Canine Osseous Tumors with Photodynamic Therapy: A Pilot Study
Photodynamic therapy uses nonthermal coherent light delivered via fiber optic cable to locally activate a photosensitive chemotherapeutic agent that ablates tumor tissue. Owing to the limitations of light penetration, it is unknown whether photodynamic therapy can treat large osseous tumors. We determined whether photodynamic therapy can induce necrosis in large osseous tumors, and if so, to quantify the volume of treated tissue. In a pilot study we treated seven dogs with spontaneous osteosarcomas of the distal radius. Tumors were imaged with MRI before and 48 hours after treatment, and the volumes of hypointense regions were compared. The treated limbs were amputated immediately after imaging at 48 hours and sectioned corresponding to the MR axial images. We identified tumor necrosis histologically; the regions of necrosis corresponded anatomically to hypointense tissue on MRI. The mean volume of necrotic tissue seen on MRI after photodynamic therapy was 21,305 mm3 compared with a pretreatment volume of 6108 mm3. These pilot data suggest photodynamic therapy penetrates relatively large canine osseous tumors and may be a useful adjunct for treatment of bone tumors
Nordic Seas polynyas and their role in preconditioning marine productivity during the Last Glacial Maximum.
Arctic and Antarctic polynyas are crucial sites for deep-water formation, which helps sustain global ocean circulation. During glacial times, the occurrence of polynyas proximal to expansive ice sheets in both hemispheres has been proposed to explain limited ocean ventilation and a habitat requirement for marine and higher-trophic terrestrial fauna. Nonetheless, their existence remains equivocal, not least due to the hitherto paucity of sufficiently characteristic proxy data. Here we demonstrate polynya formation in front of the NW Eurasian ice sheets during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), which resulted from katabatic winds blowing seaward of the ice shelves and upwelling of warm, sub-surface Atlantic water. These polynyas sustained ice-sheet build-up, ocean ventilation, and marine productivity in an otherwise glacial Arctic desert. Following the catastrophic meltwater discharge from the collapsing ice sheets at ~17.5 ka BP, polynya formation ceased, marine productivity declined dramatically, and sea ice expanded rapidly to cover the entire Nordic Seas
Conformation and dynamics of surface carbohydrates in lipid membranes
NRC publication: Ye
Dynamics of glycolipids in the liquid-crystalline state: 2 H-NMR study: Biophys.J.
NRC publication: Ye
Dynamics of glycolipids in the liquid-crystalline state. 2H NMR study.
It has been shown previously that two types of motion are adequate to describe the partially relaxed 2H NMR line shapes (inversion recovery experiment) for the backbone portion of the glycolipid 1,2-di-O-tetradecyl-3-O-(beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol (beta-DTGL) in the highly ordered gel phase (Auger, M.A., D. Carrier, I.C.P. Smith, and H. C. Jarrell. 1990. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 112:1373-1381). This study extends the latter investigation to the more fluid liquid-crystalline phase, where more complex motions are anticipated. Analyses of the powder line shapes and oriented sample relaxation data for both the glycerol backbone and head group regions of this lipid have been performed. The dynamics of glycerol at the C3 position in the gel state have been described by large angle jumps about the C2-C3 bond with a correlation time in the fast-limit motional regime (omega o tau c much less than 1) and site populations 0.46, 0.34, and 0.20. The present data show that in the liquid-crystalline phase the internal jump rate is maintained, and two additional motions are necessary to describe the dependence of the relaxation rate on the orientation of the director with respect to the magnetic field direction. These are rotation about the molecular long axis with a correlation time in the slow-limit motional regime very near to the T1 minimum (omega o tau c approximately 0.65), and molecular fluctuations about the order director (modeled by a Maier-Saupe restoration potential). This treatment was also extended to the glucose head group where additional segmental motion about the glycosidic bond has been reported previously. While the two motions dominating relaxation at the glycerol C3 segment reproduce the general relaxation features of the glucose head group, the results suggest that additional motion about the glycosidic linkage must be present. This study is a stringent test of the motional model chosen earlier because relaxation data were obtained at two 2H NMR frequencies using two relaxation experiments (T1Z and T1Q) and two types of sample preparation (oriented and dispersed multibilayers). The results strongly uphold the choice of model and indicate the utility of both oriented samples and the T1Q experiment
Influence of the membrane surface on glycolipid conformation and dynamics. An interpretation of NMR results using conformational energy calculations.
Glycolipids constitute an important class of biomolecules that are involved in biomolecular recognition. The importance of carbohydrate head group conformation in such processes is well recognized. Glycolipids typically occur as minor components of the complex heterogeneous matrix of a biological membrane. As a result, the membrane surface may not only influence head group conformation but also serves as a spatial frame in which the glycolipid is oriented and recognized. In this study, conformational energy calculations have been used to assess the conformational space available to the glucose head group of 1,2-di-O-tetradecyl-3-O-(beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-sn-glycerol (beta-DTGL) in a liquid-crystalline membrane matrix. 2H NMR quadrupolar splittings are calculated and compared with those observed experimentally. This study demonstrates the importance of including surface interactions when considering the conformational space accessible to cell surface carbohydrates. The empirical approach taken here provides considerable insight at the molecular level, and offers the possibility of exploring even more complex systems