5 resultados para 150501 Consumer-Oriented Product or Service Development

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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A questionnaire was mailed to 148 publicly and privately supported academic health sciences libraries affiliated with Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC)–accredited medical schools in the United States and Canada to determine level of access and services provided to the general public. For purposes of this study, “general public” was defined as nonaffiliated students or health care professionals, attorneys and other nonhealth-related professionals, patients from affiliated or other hospitals or clinics, and general consumers. One hundred five (71%) libraries responded. Results showed 98% of publicly supported libraries and 88% of privately supported libraries provided access to some or all of the general public. Publicly supported libraries saw greater numbers of public patrons, often provided more services, and were more likely to circulate materials from their collections than were privately supported libraries. A significant number of academic health sciences libraries housed a collection of consumer-oriented materials and many provided some level of document delivery service, usually for a fee. Most allowed the public to use some or all library computers. Results of this study indicated that academic health sciences libraries played a significant role in serving the information-seeking public and suggested a need to develop written policies or guidelines covering the services that will be provided to minimize the impact of this service on primary clientele.

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To investigate the role of complement protein factor B (Bf) and alternative pathway activity in vivo, and to test the hypothesized potential genetic lethal effect of Bf deficiency, the murine Bf gene was interrupted by exchange of exon 3 through exon 7 (including the factor D cleaving site) with the neor gene. Mice heterozygous for the targeted Bf allele were interbred, yielding Bf-deficient offspring after the F1 generation at a frequency suggesting that Bf deficiency alone has no major effect on fertility or fetal development. However, in the context of one or more genes derived from the 129 mouse strain, offspring homozygous for Bf deficiency were generated at less than expected numbers (P = 0.012). Bf-deficient mice showed no gross phenotypic difference from wild-type littermates. Sera from Bf-deficient mice lacked detectable alternative complement pathway activity; purified mouse Bf overcame the deficit. Classical pathway-dependent total hemolytic activity was lower in Bf-deficient than wild-type mice, possibly reflecting loss of the alternative pathway amplification loop. Lymphoid organ structure and IgG1 antibody response to a T-dependent antigen appeared normal in Bf-deficient mice. Sensitivity to lethal endotoxic shock was not significantly altered in Bf-deficient mice. Thus, deficiency of Bf and alternative complement activation pathway led to a less dramatic phenotype than expected. Nevertheless, these mice provide an excellent model for the assessment of the role of Bf and the alternative pathway in host defense and other functions in vivo.

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Higher plants are sessile organisms that perceive environmental cues such as light and chemical signals and respond by changing their morphologies. Signaling pathways utilize a complex network of interactions to orchestrate biochemical and physiological responses such as flowering, fruit ripening, germination, photosynthetic regulation, and shoot or root development. In this session, the mechanisms of signaling systems that trigger plant responses to light and to the gaseous hormone, ethylene, were discussed. These signals are first sensed by a receptor and transmitted to the nucleus by a complex network. A signal may be transmitted to the nucleus by any of several systems including GTP binding proteins (G proteins), which change activity upon GTP binding; protein kinase cascades, which sequentially phosphorylate and activate a series of proteins; and membrane ion channels, which change ionic characteristics of the cells. The signal is manifested in the nucleus as a change in the activity of DNA-binding proteins, which are transcription factors that specifically interact and modulate the regulatory regions of genes. Thus, detection of an environmental signal is transmitted through a transduction pathway, and changes in transcription factor activity may coordinate changes in the expression of a portfolio of genes to direct new developmental programs.

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Ceramide, a product of sphingomyelin turn-over, has been proposed as a novel lipid second messenger with specific roles in mediating antiproliferative responses including apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. In this study, we examine the relationship between the ceramide-mediated pathway of growth suppression and the bcl-2 protooncogene. In ALL-697 leukemia cells, the addition of the chemotherapeutic agent vincristine resulted in a time-dependent growth suppression characterized by marked apoptosis. The effects of vincristine on cell death were preceded by a prolonged and sustained accumulation of endogenous ceramide levels reaching -10.4 pmol ceramide/nmol phospholipids at 12 hr following the addition of vincristine--an increase of 220% over vehicle-treated cells. Overexpression of bcl-2 resulted in near total protection of cell death in response to vincristine. However, the ceramide response to vincristine was not modulated by overexpression of bcl-2, indicating that bcl-2 does not interfere with ceramide formation. Overexpression of bcl-2 prevented apoptosis in response to ceramide, suggesting that bcl-2 acts at a point downstream of ceramide. On the other hand, bcl-2 did not interfere with the ability of ceramide to activate the retinoblastoma gene product or to induce cell cycle arrest, suggesting that the effects of ceramide on cell cycle arrest can be dissociated from the effects on apoptosis. These studies suggest that ceramide and bcl-2 partake in a common pathway of cell regulation. The results also cast ceramide as a gauge of cell injury rather than an "executor" of cell death with clearly dissociable biological outcomes of its action depending on downstream factors.

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Thy-1, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily, is one of the most abundant glycoproteins on mammalian neurons. Nevertheless, its role in the peripheral or central nervous system is poorly understood. Certain monoclonal antibodies to Thy-1 promote neurite outgrowth by rodent central nervous system neurons in vitro, suggesting that Thy-1 functions, in part, by modulating neurite outgrowth. We describe a binding site for Thy-1 on astrocytes. This Thy-1-binding protein has been characterized by immunofluroesence with specific anti-idiotype monoclonal antibodies and by three competitive binding assays using (i) anti-idiotype antibodies, (ii) purified Thy-1, and (iii) Thy-1-transfected cells. The Thy-1-binding protein may participate in axonal or dendritic development in the nervous system.