Search Results
Results 1 - 50 of 342
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 >
Ladinsky Mark S - - 2012
The neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) transports maternal IgG across epithelia to confer passive immunity to mammalian young. In newborn rodents, FcRn transcytoses IgG from ingested milk across the intestinal epithelium for release into the bloodstream. We used electron tomography to examine FcRn transport of Nanogold-labeled Fc (Au-Fc) in neonatal rat ...
Barnett Alicia M - - 2012
The mucus layer covering the epithelial surface of the gastrointestinal tract serves as the front line of protection against the luminal contents and plays a key role in the establishment and activity of the commensal microbiota. The composition and complexity of the bacterial community within this environment is altered by ...
Carberry Katrin - - 2012
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is an excellent model system in which to study in vivo organization and function of the intermediate filament (IF) system for epithelial development and function. Using a transgenic ifb-2::cfp reporter strain, a mutagenesis screen was performed to identify mutants with aberrant expression patterns of the IF ...
Kim Sam Kyu - - 2012
Infective juveniles of entomopathogenic nematodes in the genus Steinernema harbor symbiotic bacteria, Xenorhabdus spp., in a discrete structure located in the anterior portion of the intestine known as the 'bacterial receptacle' (formerly known as the bacterial or intestinal vesicle). The receptacle itself is a structured environment in which the bacteria ...
Shafaq-Zadah Massiullah - - 2012
Epithelial tubes perform functions that are essential for the survival of multicellular organisms. Understanding how their polarised features are maintained is therefore crucial. By analysing the function of the clathrin adaptor AP-1 in the C. elegans intestine, we found that AP-1 is required for epithelial polarity maintenance. Depletion of AP-1 ...
Hernández D R - - 2012
In this work, an immunohistochemical study was performed to determine the distribution and relative frequencies of some neuromodulators of the digestive tract of silver catfish (Rhamdia quelen). The digestive tract of silver catfish was divided into six portions; the oesophagus, stomach, intestine (ascendant, descendant and convoluted segments), and rectum. Immunohistochemical ...
Lee Seung-Min - - 2012
While intestinal cellular iron entry in vertebrates employs multiple routes including heme and non-heme routes, iron egress from these cells is exclusively channeled through the only known transporter, ferroportin. Reduced intestinal iron export in sex-linked anemia mice implicates hephaestin, a ferroxidase, in this process. Polarized cells are exposed to two ...
Wang Yu-Chiun - - 2012
During tissue morphogenesis, simple epithelial sheets undergo folding to form complex structures. The prevailing model underlying epithelial folding involves cell shape changes driven by myosin-dependent apical constriction. Here we describe an alternative mechanism that requires differential positioning of adherens junctions controlled by modulation of epithelial apical-basal polarity. Using live embryo ...
Patricia Stock S - - 2012
Differential interference contrast, transmission electron and epifluorescence microscopy techniques were employed to examine the ultrastructure of the rectal glands in Heterorhabditis bacteriophora hermaphrodites, with special attention to the location of Photorhabdus bacteria symbionts within these structures. Three rectal glands were clearly visualized in all examined specimens, with two glands positioned ...
Feldman Jessica L - - 2012
BACKGROUND: The centrosome is the major microtubule organizing center (MTOC) in dividing cells and in many postmitotic, differentiated cells. In other cell types, however, MTOC function is reassigned from the centrosome to noncentrosomal sites. Here, we analyze how MTOC function is reassigned to the apical membrane of C. elegans intestinal cells. ...
Becker Laren - - 2012
Background: Enteric neural stem cells (ENSCs) are a population of neural crest-derived multipotent stem cells present in postnatal gut that may play an important role in regeneration of the enteric nervous system. In most studies, these cells have been isolated from the layer of the gut containing the myenteric plexus. ...
Yanagihashi Yuichi - - 2012
Septate junctions (SJs) are the membrane specializations observed between epithelial cells in invertebrates. SJs play a crucial role in epithelial barrier function by restricting free diffusion of solutes through the intercellular space. In arthropod species, two morphologically different types of SJs have been described: pleated septate junctions (pSJs) and smooth ...
Ikenouchi Junichi - - 2012
The role of tight junctions (TJs) in the establishment and maintenance of lipid polarity in epithelial cells has long been a subject of controversy. We have addressed this issue using lysenin, a toxin derived from earthworms, and an influenza virus labeled with the fluorescent lipid, octadecylrhodamine B (R18). When epithelial ...
Bazellières Elsa - - 2012
Although columnar epithelial cells are known to acquire an elongated shape, the mechanisms involved in this morphological particularity have not yet been completely elucidated. Using the columnar human intestinal Caco2 cells, it was established here that the levels of Drebrin E, an actin-binding protein, increase in the terminal web both ...
Sarita-Reyes Carmen D - - 2012
Three cases of adamantinoma were studied by electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. In the tubular pattern, well-differentiated epithelial cells and glandular structures were present, in addition to ill-defined glands. In the basaloid pattern, less differentiated epithelial cells with discohesion were seen in the central epithelial masses. This study established the epithelial ...
Naydenov Nayden G - - 2012
Tight junctions (TJs) and adherens junctions (AJs) are key determinants of the structure and permeability of epithelial barriers. Although exocytic delivery to the cell surface is crucial for junctional assembly, little is known about the mechanisms controlling TJ and AJ exocytosis. This study was aimed at investigating whether a key ...
Canan Bhaskara - - 2012
This study investigated the morphohistology of the digestive tract and the mean intestinal coefficient of the damsel fish Stegastes fuscus captured from the tidal pools of Northeastern Brazil. The wall of the digestive tract of S. fuscus is composed of the tunica mucosa, tunica muscularis, and tunica serosa. The esophagus ...
Praper Tilen - - 2011
The cytotoxic cell granule secretory pathway is essential for immune defence. How the pore-forming protein perforin (PFN) facilitates the cytosolic delivery of granule-associated proteases (granzymes) remains enigmatic. Here we show that PFN is able to induce invaginations and formation of complete internal vesicles in giant unilamellar vesicles. Formation of internal ...
Young J'nelle Sarah - - 2011
Tubulobulbar complexes (TBCs) are elaborate cytoskeleton-related structures that are formed in association with intercellular junctions in the seminiferous epithelium. They consist of a cylindrical double-membrane core, composed of the plasma membranes of the two attached cells, cuffed by a dendritic network of actin filaments. TBCs are proposed to be subcellular ...
Williams C F - - 2011
Monobothrium wageneri is a monozoic caryophyllidean tapeworm of tench Tinca tinca. The pathological changes caused by this parasite within the intestinal tract of wild tench are described for the first time. Parasites were found attached to the anterior third of the intestine in tight clusters comprising up to 109 tapeworms. ...
Mullins Dyche - - 2011
To establish and maintain their internal organization, living cells must move molecules to their correct locations. Long-range intracellular movements are often driven by motor molecules moving along microtubules, similarly to trucks driving along a highway. Recent work demonstrates that some randomly dispersed cargos can generate actin filaments that form a ...
Strotmann Jörg - - 2011
The detection of odorants in vertebrates is mediated by chemosensory neurons that reside in the olfactory epithelium of the nose. In land-living species, the hydrophobic odorous compounds inhaled by the airstream are dissolved in the nasal mucus by means of specialized globular proteins, the odorant-binding proteins (OBPs). To assure the ...
Ghosh Saroj Kumar - - 2011
The olfactory epithelium of adult Labeo bata (Hamilton) has been studied by light and scanning electron microscopy. The oval shaped olfactory rosette consists of 26 to 28 primary lamellae arranged on both side of the median leaf like raphe. The middle dorsal portion of the lamellae is provided with linguiform ...
Wang Zhenyu - - 2011
This is the first study investigating the toxicity of nanoparticles (NPs) to algae in the presence of dissolved organic matter (DOM). Suwannee river fulvic acid (SRFA), a type of DOM, could significantly increase the toxicity of CuO NPs to prokaryotic alga Microcystis aeruginosa. Internalization of CuO NPs was observed for ...
Nigrovic Lise E - - 2011
We sought to determine the relationship between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) protein and CSF red blood cells in children with traumatic lumbar punctures. For every 1000 cell increase in CSF red blood cells per mm(3), CSF protein increases by 1.1 mg/dL (95% CI, 0.9-1.1 mg/dL).
Cheng C Yan - - 2011
The blood-testis barrier (BTB) is a unique ultrastructure in the mammalian testis. Unlike other blood-tissue barriers, such as the blood-brain barrier and the blood-ocular (or blood-retina) barrier which formed by tight junctions (TJ) between endothelial cells of the microvessels, the BTB is constituted by coexisting TJ, basal ectoplasmic specialization (basal ...
Barrière Herve - - 2011
The wild-type CFTR channel undergoes constitutive internalization and recycling at the plasma membrane. This process is initiated by the recognition of the Tyr- and di-Leu-based endocytic motifs of CFTR by the AP-2 adaptor complex, leading to the formation of clathrin-coated vesicles and the channel delivery to sorting/recycling endosomes. Accumulating evidence ...
Zukor Katherine A - - 2011
Newts have the remarkable ability to regenerate their spinal cords as adults. Their spinal cords regenerate with the regenerating tail after tail amputation, as well as after a gap-inducing spinal cord injury (SCI), such as a complete transection. While most studies on newt spinal cord regeneration have focused on events ...
Arrizabalaga Jon - - 2011
Spain was officially represented at the preliminary international conference the "International Committee for the Assistance to Sick and Wounded Soldiers" (better known as the "Geneva Committee") organised at Geneva in October 1863; and joined the Red Cross one year later on the occasion of the first Geneva Convention in August ...
Alves Isabel D - - 2011
Penetratin is a positively charged cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) that has the ability to bind negatively charged membrane components, such as glycosaminoglycans and anionic lipids. Whether this primary interaction of penetratin with these cell surface components implies that the peptide will be further internalized is not clear. Using mass spectrometry, the ...
Johanson Conrad - - 2011
Bordering the ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) are epithelial cells of choroid plexus (CP), ependyma and circumventricular organs (CVOs) that contain homeostatic transporters for mediating secretion/reabsorption. The distributional pathway ("nexus") of CP-CSF-ependyma-brain furnishes peptides, hormones, and micronutrients to periventricular regions. In disease/toxicity, this nexus becomes a conduit for infectious and xenobiotic ...
Wang Gang - - 2011
In seasonally breeding birds, encephalic photoreceptors (EPs) play an important role in regulating photoperiodic gonadal responses. Multiple photopigments have been suggested as the putative EPs, including rhodopsin, melanopsin, VA opsin and the cryptochromes. As for rhodopsin, two potential brain sites, the lateral septum (SL) and the infundibulum (INF) have been ...
Toner E - - 2010
Eight indoor-reared cross-bred sheep with no pre-exposure to Fasciola hepatica were infected by oral gavage with 200 metacercarial cysts of the triclabendazole (TCBZ)-susceptible Cullompton isolate of F. hepatica. At 12 weeks post-infection, sheep were dosed with 10mg/kg triclabendazole. Two sheep per time period were euthanized at 48 h, 72 h ...
Conington Joanne - - 2010
Shelly hoof in sheep occurs when the hoof wall becomes detached from the laminar corium; it often then becomes impacted with debris leading to infection, pain and lameness. The problem of shelly hoof is under-reported and is often confused with classical footrot. A study was conducted using data on 9,169 ...
Dobson Brooke J - - 2010
In young ruminants, as in most animals, the thymus and Peyer's patches (PP) play a key role in immune function. In sheep and cattle it has been shown that they follow a recognisable pattern of development throughout early life but a study of these tissues in red deer (Cervus elaphus) ...
Oryan A - - 2009
Pulmonary myxomas are rare in domestic animals and only two cases have been reported previously in sheep. An 8 x 6 x 4 cm mass was detected in the diaphragmatic lobe of the right lung of a 4-year-old Persian Karakul ewe. The mass was well demarcated, multilobulated, soft in consistency ...
Poindexter Brian J - - 2009
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to visualize and localize the sheep antimicrobials, beta-defensins 1, 2, and 3, (SBD-1, SBD-2, SBD-3), sheep neutrophil defensin alpha (SNP-1), and the cathelicidin LL-37 in sheep small intestine after burn injury, our hypothesis being that these compounds would be upregulated in an effort ...
Bourke C A - - 2008
There have been anecdotal reports since 1962 of 'staggers' in sheep grazing Romulea rosea infested pastures, but this is the first detailed account. In September 2005, a locomotor disorder developed in 12 of 120 Merino wethers that had grazed R. rosea infested pasture at Albury, New South Wales, over several ...
Takanashi Motoko - - 2008
The secondary lymphoid tissues appear in sheep ileum after involution of ileal Peyer's patch (PP). However, the existence of the secondary lymphoid tissues before involution of ileal PP has not yet been studied. We examined morphological characteristics of the full length of calf ileal PP using gross and microscopic anatomical ...
Beum Paul V - - 2008
Binding of the CD20 mAb rituximab (RTX) to B lymphocytes in normal human serum (NHS) activates complement (C) and promotes C3b deposition on or in close proximity to cell-bound RTX. Based on spinning disk confocal microscopy analyses, we report the first real-time visualization of C3b deposition and C-mediated killing of ...
McConville M - - 2008
Eight indoor-reared, crossbred sheep with no pre-exposure to Fasciola hepatica were infected, by oral gavage, with 200 metacercarial cysts of the triclabendazole-susceptible, Cullompton isolate of F. hepatica. Anthelmintic dosing occurred at 4 weeks post-infection using 15mg/kg compound alpha. Two treated sheep per time period were euthanized at 24h, 48h and ...
Jaromin Anna - - 2008
The cytotoxic and antitumor activity of DIMIQ (5,11-dimethyl-5H-indolo[2,3-b]quinoline), synthetic analog of neocryptolepine, makes this compound a potential antitumor agent. An attempt to obtain liposomal form of DIMIQ.HCl was undertaken in the present study. Standard experimental conditions were chosen and information on the physicochemical parameters of the liposome dispersion containing studied ...
Conchedda Margherita - - 2008
"Anomalous", as yet unreported forms of brood capsules (BC) in cystic echinococcosis larvae from humans and sheep are described, thought to be the likely effect of degenerative involution of the parasite. Morphological examination showed an inner laminated layer (LL) in the brood capsules in intimate contact with the internal wall ...
van Heerden, JM; Elsenburg ...
The production of a pure lucerne (<i>Medicago sativa</i>) pasture, two lucerne-grass pastures and two red clover (<i>Trifolium pratense</i>)grass pastures was compared at two grazing pressures (3.5 and 4.0kg DM per small stock unit d<sup>–1</sup> in the Outeniqua area, using Mutton Merino sheep in a put-and-take system of grazing. The four ...
McGovern Gillian - - 2007
Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or prion diseases often result in accumulation of disease-associated PrP (PrP(d)) in the lymphoreticular system (LRS), specifically in association with follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) and tingible body macrophages (TBMs) of secondary follicles. We studied the effects of sheep scrapie on lymphoid tissue in tonsils and lymph ...
Green Michael - - 2006
BACKGROUND: Tc-Evans blue is a 'single dose' agent for lymphatic mapping combining radioactivity and blue dye for sentinel node identification. The mechanism and distribution of blue dye retention in the lymph node is not clearly understood. OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the cellular distribution of Tc-Evans blue in sheep sentinel lymph nodes ...
Stahlmann Ralf - - 2006
We studied the sensitising and allergenic potentials of the textile dyes disperse yellow 3, disperse orange 30, disperse red 82, disperse yellow 211 and two metabolites of disperse yellow 3, 4-aminoacetanilide and 2-amino-p-cresol, using modified protocols of the murine "local lymph node assay" (LLNA). Test substances were applied either to ...
Wehrend A - - 2004
The aim of the present study was to examine the suitability of sirius red staining for selective light microscopic demonstration of eosinophil granulocytes in cervical tissue of mares, cows and sheep. For this purpose, tissue was fixed in 4% neutral buffered formol or in Bouin's solution. Paraffin sections of 5-microm ...
Ersdal Cecilie - - 2004
On immunohistochemical examination several morphological types of disease-specific prion protein (PrP(d)) accumulation are recognised in the brain of sheep suffering from scrapie. The present study examined the relationship between the type of PrP(d) deposits seen by light microscopy and ultrastructural changes in the olivary nuclei and the dorsal motor nucleus ...
Kijimoto-Ochiai Shigeko - - 2004
We have sought an endogenous membrane bound sialidase acting at neutral pH in immune system, because the removal of sialic acid from cell surfaces will affect the cell-cell interaction directly or indirectly. The levels of activity of unique membrane-bound sialidase at neutral pH and also soluble sialidase are high in ...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 >