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Wood Christopher S - - 2012
In the Golgi apparatus, lipid homeostasis pathways are coordinated with the biogenesis of cargo transport vesicles by phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases (PI4Ks) that produce phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P), a signaling molecule that is recognized by downstream effector proteins. Quantitative analysis of the intraGolgi distribution of a PtdIns4P reporter protein confirms that PtdIns4P is ...
Saito Mitsumasa - - 2012
The verotoxin (Shiga toxin) receptor globotriaosyl ceramide (Gb3), mediates VT1/VT2 retrograde transport to the ER for cytosolic A subunit access to inhibit protein synthesis. AdamantylGb3, is an amphipathic competitive inhibitor of in vitro VT1/VT2 -Gb3 and cell binding. However, Gb3-negative VT-resistant CHO/Jurkat cells incorporate adaGb3 to become VT1/VT2 sensitive. CarboxyadaGb3, ...
Kumagai Keigo - - 2012
The intracellular transport of lipids from the sites of their synthesis to their appropriate destination is a critical step for lipid metabolism. One well-defined inter-organelle lipid movement is the transport of ceramide by ceramide transport protein (CERT). Ceramide, a key intermediate for both sphingomyelin and glycosphingolipids, is synthesized at the ...
Wolff Natascha A - - 2011
Ferroportin 1 (FPN1) is an iron export protein expressed in liver and duodenum, as well as in reticuloendothelial macrophages. Previously, we have shown that divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) is expressed in late endosomes and lysosomes of the kidney proximal tubule (PT), the nephron segment responsible for the majority of ...
Roberts T - - 2011
Significant changes in the voice occur after the age of 50 years. Changes in the structure of the vocal fold (VF) can interfere with the voice. The aim of this study is to investigate the structure of the VF of elderly people that may contribute to the tendency of the ...
Kahn Edmond - - 2010
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the cytotoxicity of iron nanoparticles on cardiac cells and to determine whether they can modulate the biological activity of 7-ketocholesterol (7KC) involved in the development of cardiovascular diseases. Nanoparticles of iron labeled with Texas Red are introduced in cultures of nonbeating mouse cardiac cells (HL1-NB) with or ...
Kato Gregory J - - 2010
The breakdown of senescent or defective red blood cells releases red cell contents, especially haemoglobin, which scavenges nitric oxide (NO) and decomposes to haem and free iron. These are potent oxidants, all of which have promoted the evolution of inducible and vasculoprotective compensatory pathways to rapidly clear and detoxify haemoglobin, ...
Lin Yun-Yue - - 2009
A polymer solar cell based on poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT)/iron disulfide (FeS2) nanocrystal (NC) hybrid is presented. The FeS2 NCs of 10 nm in diameter were homogeneously blended with P3HT to form an active layer of a solar cell. An extended red light harvesting up to 900 nm resulting from the NCs ...
Roschzttardtz Hannetz - - 2009
Deciphering how cellular iron (Fe) pools are formed, where they are localized, and which ones are remobilized represents an important challenge to better understand Fe homeostasis. The recent development of imaging techniques, adapted to plants, has helped gain insight into these events. We have analyzed the localization of Fe during ...
Fakih Sarah - - 2009
The physiological and pathophysiological importance of intracellular redox active "labile" iron has created a significant need for improved noninvasive diagnostic tools to reliably monitor iron metabolism in living cells. In this context, fluorescent iron-sensitive chemosensors in combination with digital fluorescence spectroscopic methods have proven to be highly sensitive and indispensable ...
Walker Phillip L - - 2009
Porosities in the outer table of the cranial vault (porotic hyperostosis) and orbital roof (cribra orbitalia) are among the most frequent pathological lesions seen in ancient human skeletal collections. Since the 1950s, chronic iron-deficiency anemia has been widely accepted as the probable cause of both conditions. Based on this proposed ...
Barger Anne - - 2009
A 2-year-old spayed female, German Shepherd dog was presented to the University of Illinois Veterinary Teaching Hospital with a history of intermittent lethargy. On physical examination, lung sounds were increased. The dog had a mild fever (103.7 degrees F) and mild tachycardia (120 bpm). Thoracic ultrasound revealed a sternal mass ...
Borch-Iohnsen B - - 2009
Seasonal iron overload in Svalbard reindeer was studied by light and electron microscopy and by X-ray microanalysis. The hepatic iron overload was of two types. The first type was characterized by massive siderosis of both parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells caused by a diet very rich in iron but low in ...
Garrick Michael D - - 2009
Iron has a split personality as an essential nutrient that also has the potential to generate reactive oxygen species. We discuss how different cell types within specific tissues manage this schizophrenia. The emphasis in enterocytes is on regulating the body's supply of iron by regulating transport into the blood stream. ...
Tribl Florian - - 2009
In the pigmented dopaminergic neurons of the human substantia nigra pars compacta the system relevant in iron storage is the polymer neuromelanin (NM). Although in most cells this function is mainly accomplished by ferritin, this protein complex appears not to be expressed in NM-containing neurons. Nevertheless the conceivable presence of ...
Croft Philip R - - 2009
The histologic characteristics of grossly unremarkable pediatric dura mater obtained at autopsy are not well defined. The microscopic examination of pediatric dura mater is often undertaken to look for evidence of recent, resolving, or remote craniocerebral trauma. Pathologic processes cannot be defined without knowledge of expected histology, however. In this ...
Groman Ernest V - - 2009
Nanoparticles are increasingly used to label cells to track them by imaging or to quantify them in vivo. However, normal cellular uptake mechanisms are inadequate to load cells with tracking label. We propose a simple method to coat nanoparticles, such as monocrystalline iron oxide nanoparticle (MION), with the transfection agent ...
Geiser Dawn L - - 2009
Ferritin is a multimer of 24 subunits of heavy and light chains. In mammals, iron taken into cells is stored in ferritin or incorporated into iron-containing proteins. Very little ferritin is found circulating in mammalian serum; most is retained in the cytoplasm. Female mosquitoes, such as Aedes aegypti (yellow fever ...
Brandão Marcelo M - - 2009
Iron deficiency is a systemic disorder, which affects a variety of different cell types and is one of the most frequent diseases throughout the world. The influence of iron deficiency upon erythrocyte deformability is controversial and could be a consequence of membrane peroxidation damage or cross linking of membrane proteins. ...
Xia Jingguang - - 2008
Carboxylmethyl starch sodium-coated magnetic nanoparticles (CMS@MNs) with average size of 10 nm were synthesized by chemical coprecipitation. Cellular iron content showed that CMS@MNs could be efficiently uptaken by human hepatoma cells. TEM image showed that clusters consisting of nanoparticles were enclosed within sub-micrometric endosomes and one cell contained several such ...
Tribl Florian - - 2008
Neuromelanin granules are pigmented organelles in the human midbrain that give name to a brain area, substantia nigra pars compacta, which macroscopically appears as a dark brown region in the midbrain due to the insoluble pigment neuromelanin. The substantia nigra pars compacta massively degenerates in Parkinson's disease and gives rise ...
Kohyama Masako - - 2009
Tissue macrophages comprise a heterogeneous group of cell types differing in location, surface markers and function. Red pulp macrophages are a distinct splenic subset involved in removing senescent red blood cells. Transcription factors such as PU.1 (also known as Sfpi1) and C/EBPalpha (Cebpa) have general roles in myelomonocytic development, but ...
Maxson Julia E - - 2009
Hemojuvelin (HJV) was recently identified as a critical regulator of iron homeostasis. It is either associated with cell membranes through a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor or released as a soluble form. Membrane-anchored HJV acts as a coreceptor for bone morphogenetic proteins and activates the transcription of hepcidin, a hormone that regulates iron ...
Funai Edmund F - - 2009
This study sought to determine the time interval from fetal defecation to membrane staining and subsequent meconium uptake by amnionic macrophages. Pieces of external membranes were fastened to Teflon rings to create a well. The amnionic surface was exposed to meconium and amniotic fluid for 1 to 48 hours and ...
Kim Tae-Wan - - 2008
A structurally ordered, CMK-1 type mesoporous carbon nanoparticle (MCN) material was successfully synthesized by using a MCM-48 type mesoporous silica nanoparticle as template. The structure of MCN was analyzed by a series of different techniques, including the scanning and transmission electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction, and N2 sorption analysis. To ...
Heaton Sarah J - - 2008
BeWo cells are a placental cell line that has been widely used as an in vitro model for the placenta. The b30 subclone of these cells can be grown on permeable membranes in bicameral chambers to form confluent cell layers, enabling rates of both nutrient uptake into the cells from ...
Wang Hai-Qiao - - 2008
Quantum dot (QD) solubilization, conjugation with biomolecules, column purification, and labeling of human HepG2 cells with transferrin-QD (Tf-QD) conjugates are reported in detail in this article. Water-soluble QDs (WQDs) were obtained using sodium thiolycolate to replace the surface ligand tri-n-octylphosphine oxide (TOPO) on the surface of oil-soluble QDs, and Tf-QD ...
Galanou Maria C - - 2008
Hypericin (HYP), a photocytotoxic phenanthroperylenquinone was encapsulated in liposomes outfitted with guanidinium-bearing lipids to ensure efficient cell binding through molecular recognition with anionic groups resident on the plasma membrane. The uptake of HYP encapsulated in these liposomes by DU145 human prostate cancer cells, was studied employing fluorescence, versus nonguadinylated liposomes ...
Yetgin Sevgi - - 2008
Peripheral blood smears of 43 patients (26 males, median age 18 months, range: 6-180 months) with nutritional iron-deficiency anemia (IDA) were examined for the presence of trilineage hematological dysplasia. Twelve patients were reexamined for dysplastic findings after achieving a normal Hb and hematocrit level for age by the end of ...
Eivazi-Ziaei J - - 2008
BACKGROUND: Thalassemia trait (THA) is an important differential diagnosis of iron deficiency anemia (IDA). The red cell distribution width (RDW) is usually elevated in IDA, but often is normal in THA. OBJECTIVE: This study was conducted to determine the usefulness of red cell flags in differentiating iron deficiency anemia and ...
Martina Marie-Sophie - - 2008
Interactions of magnetic-fluid-loaded liposomes (MFL) with human adenocarcinoma prostatic cell line PC3 were investigated in vitro. MFL consisted of unilamellar phosphatidylcholine vesicles (mean hydrodynamic diameter close to 180 nm) encapsulating 8-nm nanocrystals of maghemite (gamma-Fe(2)O(3)) and sterically stabilized by introducing 5 mol.% of distearylphosphatidylcholine poly(ethylene glycol)(2000) (DSPE-PEG(2000)) in the vesicle ...
Abreu Fernanda P - - 2008
The ultrastructure of the greigite magnetosome membrane in the multicellular magnetotactic bacteria 'Candidatus Magnetoglobus multicellularis' was studied. Each cell contains 80 membrane-enclosed iron-sulfide magnetosomes. Cytochemistry methods showed that the magnetosomes are enveloped by a structure whose staining pattern and dimensions are similar to those of the cytoplasmic membrane, indicating that ...
Han Hye Seung - - 2008
Iron overload reportedly increases the risk of colorectal neoplasms, but the distribution of tissue iron in a colorectal neoplasm remains controversial. In this study, we attempted to determine the significance of tissue iron in colorectal adenomas and adenocarcinomas. This study investigated 138 colorectal neoplasms (54 adenocarcinomas, 25 adenomas with high-grade ...
Urrechaga E - - 2009
Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) and beta-thalassaemia are the most common causes of microcytic anaemia. Some indices have been defined to quickly discriminate this diseases based on red cell parameters obtained from automated blood cell analyzers, and can be effective for use as a preliminary screening tool to allow the reflex ...
Szuber Natasha - - 2008
OBJECTIVE: beta-thalassemia major, or Cooley's anemia, is a red blood cell disorder requiring lifelong blood transfusions for survival. Erythrocytes accumulate toxic iron at their membranes, triggering an oxidative cascade that leads to their premature destruction in high numbers. We hypothesized that removing this proximate iron compartment as a primary treatment, ...
Goya G F - - 2008
We have investigated the internalization of magnetic nanoparticles (NPs) into dendritic cells (DCs) in order to assess both the final location of the particles and the viability of the cultured cells. The particles, consisting of a metallic iron core covered with carbon, showed no toxic effects on the DCs and ...
Schroeder Josef A - - 2008
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The pathogenesis of acquired nephrogenic systemic fibrosis recently described for patients with renal insufficiency and a history of exposition to gadolinium-based magnetic resonance contrast agents is not completely understood. A role for circulating fibroblasts in the fibrosing tissue is hypothetical, and the mechanism of the assumed trigger ...
Lane Darius J R - - 2008
K562 erythroleukemia cells import non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) by an incompletely understood process that requires initial iron reduction. The mechanism of NTBI ferrireduction remains unknown but probably involves transplasma membrane electron transport. We here provide evidence for a novel mechanism of NTBI reduction and uptake by K562 cells that utilizes transplasma ...
Coupland S E - - 2008
BACKGROUND: Vitreous opacities are diverse in nature. Many underlying diseases are sight-threatening and several are also lethal. This review presents the pathologist's perspective of vitreous opacities, correlates laboratory findings with the underlying disease and recommends safe methods for handling specimens. An aetiological classification of vitreous opacities is also proposed. METHODS: ...
Wang Xueqian - - 2008
Confocal microscopy was used to investigate the effects of manganese (Mn) and iron (Fe) exposure on the subcellular distribution of metal transporting proteins, i.e., divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1), metal transporter protein 1 (MTP1), and transferrin receptor (TfR), in the rat intact choroid plexus which comprises the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier. ...
Harrington Alexandra M - - 2008
We observed increased numbers of an infrequently referenced poikilocyte, the prekeratocyte, in iron deficiency anemia (IDA) compared with beta-thalassemia minor and anemia of chronic disease (ACD) and, therefore, chose to quantify these cells and other morphologic features in these anemias. Prekeratocytes were observed in 31 (78%) of 40 IDAs vs ...
Mailänder Volker - - 2008
Cell labeling by superparamagnetic iron oxide particles (SPIO) has emerged as a potentially powerful tool to monitor trafficking of transplanted cells by magnetic resonance tomography, e.g., in studies for tissue repair. However, intracellular labeling is mostly achieved by transfection agents not approved for clinical use. In this work, the feasibility ...
Bertinato Jesse - - 2008
Ctr1 (copper transporter 1) mediates high-affinity copper uptake. Ctr2 (copper transporter 2) shares sequence similarity with Ctr1, yet its function in mammalian cells is poorly understood. In African green monkey kidney COS-7 cells and rat tissues, Ctr2 migrated as a predominant band of approximately 70 kDa and was most abundantly ...
Kidd, Matthew J.
In this thesis metals were studied in several biological systems using XRF microscopy and XAS spectroscopy. In chapter two, I examined the budding yeast Sacchromyces cervisiae using XRF microscopy. Using fluorescent stains to identify the vacuole and the nucleus, we were able to determine which elements localized where. We found ...
Meczynska Sylwia - - 2008
A prerequisite of dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) formation is the presence of nitric oxide (NO), iron (Fe) and thiol/imidazole groups. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of Fe chelators on the formation of DNIC in erythroid K562 cells. The cells were treated with lipophilic salicylaldehyde isonicotinoyl ...
Qian Xinlei - - 2007
The c-type cytochrome (OmcB) and the multicopper protein (OmpB) required for Fe(III) oxide reduction by Geobacter sulfurreducens were predicted previously to be outer membrane proteins, but it is not clear whether they are positioned in a manner that permits the interaction with Fe(III). Treatment of whole cells with proteinase K ...
Soenen Stefaan J H - - 2007
A comparative study that deals with the internalisation of different types of magnetoliposomes (MLs) by 3T3 fibroblasts revealed that cationic MLs proved to be superior to neutral and anionic ones. Internalisation was visualised both by optical light and transmission electron microscopy. The latter showed that the cationic MLs ultimately ended ...
Franzen Anderson J - - 2008
Melanin is a complex polymer widely distributed in nature and has been described as an important virulence factor in pathogenic fungi. In the majority of fungi, the mechanism of melanin formation remains unclear. In Fonsecaea pedrosoi, the major etiologic agent of chromoblastomycosis, melanin is stored in intracellular vesicles, named melanosomes. ...
Sohn Yang-Sung - - 2008
Various pathologies are characterized by the accumulation of toxic iron in cell compartments. In anemia of chronic disease, iron is withheld by macrophages, leaving extracellular fluids iron-depleted. In Friedreich ataxia, iron levels rise in the mitochondria of excitable cells but decrease in the cytosol. We explored the possibility of using ...
Moslavac, Suncana
The filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 (further referred to as Anabaena sp.) is a model system to study nitrogen fixation, cell differentiation, cell pattern formation and evolution of plastids. It is a multicellular photosynthetic microorganism consisting of two cell types, vegetative cells and nitrogen fixing heterocysts. This study focuses ...
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