3 resultados para Dutch -- Indonesia
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
The Sangiran dome is the primary stratigraphic window for the Plio-Pleistocene deposits of the Solo basin of Central Jawa. The dome has yielded nearly 80 Homo erectus fossils, around 50 of which have known findspots. With a hornblende 40Ar/39Ar plateau age of 1.66 ± 0.04 mega-annum (Ma) reportedly associated with two fossils [Swisher, C.C., III, Curtis, G. H., Jacob, T., Getty, A. G., Suprijo, A. & Widiasmoro (1994) Science 263, 1118–1121), the dome offers evidence that early Homo dispersed to East Asia during the earliest Pleistocene. Unfortunately, the hornblende pumice was sampled at Jokotingkir Hill, a central locality with complex lithostratigraphic deformation and dubious specimen provenance. To address the antiquity of Sangiran H. erectus more systematically, we investigate the sedimentary framework and hornblende 40Ar/39Ar age for volcanic deposits in the southeast quadrant of the dome. In this sector, Bapang (Kabuh) sediments have their largest exposure, least deformation, and most complete tephrostratigraphy. At five locations, we identify a sequence of sedimentary cycles in which H. erectus fossils are associated with epiclastic pumice. From sampled pumice, eight hornblende separates produced 40Ar/39Ar plateau ages ranging from 1.51 ± 0.08 Ma at the Bapang/Sangiran Formation contact, to 1.02 ± 0.06 Ma, at a point above the hominin-bearing sequence. The chronological sequence of 40Ar/39Ar ages follows stratigraphic order across the southeast quadrant. An intermediate level yielding four nearly complete crania has an age of about 1.25 Ma.
Resumo:
Cerebrovascular amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) deposition is a pathological feature of several related disorders including Alzheimer disease and hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis Dutch-type (HCHWA-D). HCHWA-D is caused by a point mutation in the gene that encodes the Abeta precursor and results in a Glu --> Gln substitution at position 22 of Abeta. In comparison to Alzheimer disease, the cerebrovascular Abeta deposition in HCHWA-D is generally more severe, often resulting in intracerebral hemorrhage when patients reach 50 years of age. We recently reported that Abeta(1-42), but not the shorter Abeta(1-40) induces pathologic responses in cultured human leptomeningeal smooth muscle cells including cellular degeneration that is accompanied by a marked increase in the levels of cellular Abeta precursor and soluble Abeta peptide. In the present study, we show that the HCHWA-D mutation converts the normally nonpathologic Abeta(1-40) into a highly pathologic form of the peptide for cultured human leptomeningeal smooth muscle cells. These findings suggest that these altered functional properties of HCHWA-D mutated Abeta may contribute to the early and often severe cerebrovascular pathology that is the hallmark of this disorder.