949 resultados para giant unilamellar vesicles
Resumo:
Many Gram-negative, cold-adapted bacteria from the Antarctic environment produce large amounts of extracellular matter with potential biotechnological applications. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis after high-pressure freezing and freeze substitution (HPF-FS) showed that this extracellular matter is structurally complex, appearing around cells as a netlike mesh, and composed of an exopolymeric substance (EPS) containing large numbers of outer membrane vesicles (OMVs). Isolation, purification and protein profiling via 1D SDS-PAGE confirmed the outer membrane origin of these Antarctic bacteria OMVs. In an initial attempt to elucidate the role of OMVs in cold-adapted strains of Gram-negative bacteria, a proteomic analysis demonstrated that they were highly enriched in outer membrane proteins and periplasmic proteins associated with nutrient processing and transport, suggesting that the OMVs may be involved in nutrient sensing and bacterial survival. OMVs from Gram-negative bacteria are known to play a role in lateral DNA transfer, but the presence of DNA in these vesicles has remained difficult to explain. A structural study of Shewanella vesiculosa M7T using TEM and Cryo-TEM revealed that this Antarctic Gram-negative bacterium naturally releases conventional one-bilayer OMVs, together with a more complex type of OMV, previously undescribed, which on formation drags along inner membrane and cytoplasmic content and can therefore also entrap DNA.
Resumo:
Osteoclasts are cells responsible for bone resorption. These cells undergo extensive membrane re-organization during their polarization for bone resorption and form four distinct membrane domains, namely the ruffled border, the basolateral membrane, the sealing zone and the functional secretory domain. The endocytic/biosynthetic pathway and transcytotic route(s) are important for the resorption process, since the endocytic/biosynthetic pathway brings the specific vesicles to the ruffled border whereas the transcytotic flow is believed to transport the degraded bone matrix away from the resorption lacuna to the functional secretory domain. In the present study, we found a new transcytotic route from the functional secretory domain to the ruffled border, which may compensate membrane loss from the ruffled border during the resorption process. We also found that lipid rafts are essential for the ruffled border-targeted late endosomal pathways. A small GTP-binding protein, Rab7, has earlier been shown to regulate the late steps of the endocytic pathway. In bone-resorbing osteoclasts it is involved in the formation of the ruffled border, which displays several features of late endosomal membranes. Here we discovered a new Rab7-interacting protein, Rac1, which is another small GTP-binding protein and binds to the GTP-form of Rab7 in vitro. We demonstrated further that Rab7 colocalizes with Rac1 at the fusion zone of the ruffled border in bone-resorbing osteoclasts. In other cell types, such as fibroblast-like cells, this colocalization is mainly perinuclear. Because Rac1 is known to control the actin cytoskeleton through its effectors, we suggest that the Rab7-Rac1 interaction may mediate late endosomal transport between microtubules and microfilaments, thus enabling endosomal vesicles to switch tracks from microtubules to microfilaments before their fusion to the ruffled border. We then studied the role of Rab-Rac1 interaction in the slow recycling pathway. We revealed that Rac1 also binds directly to Rab11 and to some other but not all Rab-proteins, suggesting that Rab-Rac1 interaction could be a general regulatory mechanism to direct the intracellular vesicles from microtubule mediated transport to actin filament mediated transport and vice versa. On the basis of our results we thus propose a new hypothesis for these GTPases in the regulation of intracellular membrane flow.
Resumo:
Hydrogels micro, sub-micro and nanoparticles are of great interest for drug encapsulation and delivery or as embolotherapic agents. In this work it is described the preparation of nano and sub-microparticles of pre-formed, high molecular weight and monomer free poly(N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone) encapsulated inside the core of lecithin vesicles. The hydrogel particles are formed with a very narrow diameter distribution, of about 800 nm, and a moderate swelling ratio, of approximately 10.
Resumo:
Teoreettisen populaatiosynteesin avulla voidaan mallintaa tähtijoukkojen ja galaksien fotometrisiä ominaisuuksia yhdistämällä yksittäisten tähtien tuottama säteily, joka saadaan teoreettisista tähtien kehitysmalleista. Valitsemalla sopiva massajakauma syntyville tähdille voidaan muodostaa yksinkertainen tähtipopulaatio, joka koostuu saman ikäisistä ja kemialliselta koostumukseltaan yhtenäisistä tähdistä. Monimutkaisempia tähtipopulaatioita voidaan muodostaa konvoloimalla yksinkertaisten tähtipopulaatioiden luminositeetti jonkin valitun tähtienmuodostushistorian kanssa sekä yhdistämällä näin muodostettuja populaatioita. Tässä työssä tarkastellaan asymptoottisen jättiläishaaran (AGB) tähtien uusien, tarkentuneiden evoluutiomallien vaikutusta populaatiosynteesin tuloksiin niin yksinkertaisten tähtipopulaatioiden kuin galaksien mallinnukseen soveltuvien monimutkaisempien tähtipopulaatioiden kohdalla. Työn päätarkoitus on tuottaa uudistuneisiin malleihin perustuvat populaation massa-luminositeetti -suhteen ja värin väliset relaatiot (MLC-relaatiot). MLC-relaatioita voidaan käyttää populaation massan määrittämiseen sen fotometristen ominaisuuksien (väri, luminositeetti) perusteella. Lisäksi tutkitaan tähtienvälisen pölyn vaikutusta yksinkertaisen spiraaligalaksimallin MLC-relaatioihin. Työssä käytetyt tähtien kehitysmallit perustuvat julkaisuun Marigo et al. (Astronomy & Astrophysics 482, 2008). Havaitaan, että AGB-tähtien vaikutus populaation integroituun luminositeettiin on pieni näkyvillä aallonpituuksilla, mutta merkittävä lähi-infrapuna-alueella. Vaikutus MLC-relaatioihin on vastaavasti merkittävä tarkkailtaessa luminositeettia lähi-infrapunassa sekä käytettäessä värejä, joissa yhdistetään optisia ja lähi-infrapunan kaistoja. Todetaan, että MLC-relaatioiden käyttö lähi-infrapunassa edellyttää tarkentuneen AGB-vaiheen sisällyttämistä populaatiosynteesin malleihin. Tähtienvälisen pölyn vaikutus MLC-relaatioihin todetaan riippuvan käytetystä kaistasta ja väristä, mutta vaikutuksen havaitaan olevan suurin optisen ja lähi-infrapunan väriyhdistelmillä.
Resumo:
Hematological results are reported for 13 giant anteaters (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) and 13 collared anteaters (Tamandua tetradactyla). Animals were captive-reared adults held at the Fundação Parque Zoológico de São Paulo (São Paulo, SP, Brazil) and Parque Zoológico Municipal Quinzinho de Barros (Sorocaba, SP, Brazil), and were considered healthy on physical examination. Examined parameters included red blood cell count, white blood cell count, hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, total plasmatic protein and differential leukocyte counts. Also, a survey for hemoparasites was done and none was observed in thin blood smears. The results were generally similar to those previously reported in the exiguous literature for these species, providing further reference data for the interpretation of laboratory results besides health monitoring, assisting early disease diagnosis and providing relevant information for conservation programs for these species.
Resumo:
Abstract:A serological survey for antibodies against Leptospira interrogans, Brucella abortus, and Chlamydophila abortus was conducted in 21 clinically healthy, free-ranging giant ant- eaters (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) from Parque Nacional das Emas (Goiás State, Brazil; n=6), Parque Nacional da Serra da Canastra (Minas Gerais State, Brazil; n=9), and RPPN SESC Pantanal (Mato Grosso State, Brazil; n=6) between July 2001 and September 2006. Sera were screened for antibodies against 22 serovars of Leptospira interrogans with a microscopic agglutination test. Twelve tested positive for L. interrogansserovars sentot (n=5 in PN Emas, n=2 in PN Serra da Canastra), butembo (n=2 in PN Serra da Canastra), autumnalis, bataviae, and shermani/icterohaemorrhagiae(n=1 each in SESC Pantanal)One adult female tested positive for B. abortus with the buffered plate antigen test. All sera were negative for C. abortususing the complement fixation text. This is the first report of pathogens that may interfere with the reproduction and population dynamics of free-ranging giant anteaters.
Resumo:
Endochondral calcification involves the participation of matrix vesicles (MVs), but it remains unclear whether calcification ectopically induced by implants of demineralized bone matrix also proceeds via MVs. Ectopic bone formation was induced by implanting rat demineralized diaphyseal bone matrix into the dorsal subcutaneous tissue of Wistar rats and was examined histologically and biochemically. Budding of MVs from chondrocytes was observed to serve as nucleation sites for mineralization during induced ectopic osteogenesis, presenting a diameter with Gaussian distribution with a median of 306 ± 103 nm. While the role of tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) during mineralization involves hydrolysis of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi), it is unclear how the microenvironment of MV may affect the ability of TNAP to hydrolyze the variety of substrates present at sites of mineralization. We show that the implants contain high levels of TNAP capable of hydrolyzing p-nitrophenylphosphate (pNPP), ATP and PPi. The catalytic properties of glycosyl phosphatidylinositol-anchored, polidocanol-solubilized and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C-released TNAP were compared using pNPP, ATP and PPi as substrates. While the enzymatic efficiency (k cat/Km) remained comparable between polidocanol-solubilized and membrane-bound TNAP for all three substrates, the k cat/Km for the phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C-solubilized enzyme increased approximately 108-, 56-, and 556-fold for pNPP, ATP and PPi, respectively, compared to the membrane-bound enzyme. Our data are consistent with the involvement of MVs during ectopic calcification and also suggest that the location of TNAP on the membrane of MVs may play a role in determining substrate selectivity in this micro-compartment.
Resumo:
During the process of endochondral bone formation, chondrocytes and osteoblasts mineralize their extracellular matrix by promoting the formation of hydroxyapatite (HA) seed crystals in the sheltered interior of membrane-limited matrix vesicles (MVs). Ion transporters control the availability of phosphate and calcium needed for HA deposition. The lipidic microenvironment in which MV-associated enzymes and transporters function plays a crucial physiological role and must be taken into account when attempting to elucidate their interplay during the initiation of biomineralization. In this short mini-review, we discuss the potential use of proteoliposome systems as chondrocyte- and osteoblast-derived MVs biomimetics, as a means of reconstituting a phospholipid microenvironment in a manner that recapitulates the native functional MV microenvironment. Such a system can be used to elucidate the interplay of MV enzymes during catalysis of biomineralization substrates and in modulating in vitro calcification. As such, the enzymatic defects associated with disease-causing mutations in MV enzymes could be studied in an artificial vesicular environment that better mimics their in vivo biological milieu. These artificial systems could also be used for the screening of small molecule compounds able to modulate the activity of MV enzymes for potential therapeutic uses. Such a nanovesicular system could also prove useful for the repair/treatment of craniofacial and other skeletal defects and to facilitate the mineralization of titanium-based tooth implants.
Resumo:
Interest in the role of extracellular vesicles in various diseases including cancer has been increasing. Extracellular vesicles include microvesicles, exosomes, apoptotic bodies, and argosomes, and are classified by size, content, synthesis, and function. Currently, the best characterized are exosomes and microvesicles. Exosomes are small vesicles (40-100 nm) involved in intercellular communication regardless of the distance between them. They are found in various biological fluids such as plasma, serum, and breast milk, and are formed from multivesicular bodies through the inward budding of the endosome membrane. Microvesicles are 100-1000 nm vesicles released from the cell by the outward budding of the plasma membrane. The therapeutic potential of extracellular vesicles is very broad, with applications including a route of drug delivery and as biomarkers for diagnosis. Extracellular vesicles extracted from stem cells may be used for treatment of many diseases including kidney diseases. This review highlights mechanisms of synthesis and function, and the potential uses of well-characterized extracellular vesicles, mainly exosomes, with a special focus on renal functions and diseases.
Resumo:
Spermatogenesis is a unique process compared to cell differentiation in somatic tissues. Germ cells undergo a considerable number of metabolic and morphological changes during their differentiation: they initially proliferate by mitosis to increase in number; at some point they scramble their genetic material by meiosis, to create new genetic combinations that are the basis for evolution through natural selection and, finally, they change their shape and produce specialized structures characteristic of the mature sperm. Germ cells display an astonishingly broad transcription of their genome compared to differentiated somatic cells. Moreover, the different RNAs need to be specifically regulated in space and time for sperm production to occur appropriately. Different proteins localized in specific subcellular compartments, along with regulatory small RNAs, have an essential role in the proper execution of the different steps of spermatogenesis. These ribonucleoprotein granules interact with cytoplasmic vesicles and organelles to accomplish their role during sperm development. In this study, we characterized the most prominent ribonucleoprotein granule found in germ cells, the Chromatoid body (CB). For the first time we investigated the interaction of the CB with the cytoplasmic vesicles that surround it. These studies directed us to the description of Retromer proteins in germ cells and their involvement with the CB and the acrosome formation. Moreover, we discovered the interplay between the CB and the lysosome system in haploid round spermatids, and identified FYCO1, a new protein central to this interaction. Our results suggest that the vesicular transport system participates in the CB-mediated RNA regulation during sperm development.
Resumo:
In the developing mouse embryo, the diploid trophectoderm is known to undergo a diploid to giant cell transformation. These cells arise by a process of endoreduplication, characterized by replication of the entire genome without subsequent mitosis or cell division, leading to polyploidy and the formation of giant nuclei. Studies of 13.5 day rat trophoblast derived from the parietal yolk sac have indicated a relatively low rate of DNA polymerase a activity, the noinnal eukaryotic replicase, in comparison to that of DNA polymerase g. These results have suggested that endoreduplication in trophoblast giant cells may not employ the normal replicase enzyme, DNA polymerase a. In order to determine whether a 'switch' from DNA polymerase to DNA polymerase is a necessary concomitant of the diploid to giant cell transformation, two distinct populations of trophoblast giant cells, the primary giant cell derived from the mural trophectoderm and the secondary giant cell derived from the polar trophoectoderm were used. These two populations of trophoblast giant cells can be obtained from the tissue outgrowths of 3.5da blastocysts and the extraembryonic ectoderm (EX) and ectoplacental cone (EPC) of 7.5 day embryos respectively. Tissue outgrowths were treated with aphidicolin, a specific reversible inhibitor of eukaryotic DNA polymerase a, on various days after explantation. The effect of aphidicolin treatment was assessed both qualitatively, using autoradiography and quantitatively by scintillation counting and Feulgen staining. 3 DNA synthesis was measured in control and treated cultures after a Hthymidine pulse. Scintillation counts of the embryo proper revealed that DNA synthesis was consistently inhibited by greater than 907. in the presence of aphidicolin. Inhibition of DNA synthesis in the EX and EPC varied between 81-957. and 82-987. respectively, indicating that most DNA synthesis was mediated by DNA polymerase a, but that a small but significant amount of residual synthesis was indicated. A qualitative approach was then applied to determine whether the apparent residual DNA synthesis was restricted to a subpopulation of giant cells or whether all giant cells displayed a low level of DNA synthesis. Autoradiographs of the ICM of blastocysts and the embryo proper of 7.5da embryos, which acted as diploid control population, was completely inhibited regardless of duration in explant culture. In contrast, primary trophoblast giant cells derived from blastocysts and secondary giant cells derived from the EX and EPC were observed to possess some heavily labelled cells after aphidicolin treatment. These results suggest that although DNA polymerase a is the primary replicating enzyme responsible for endoreduplication in mouse trophoblast giant cells, some nonactivity is also observed. A DNA polymerase assay employing tissue lysates of outgrown 7.5da embryo, EX and EPC tissues was used to attempt to confirm the presence of higher nonactivity in tissues possessing trophoblast giant cells. Employing a series of inhibitors of DNA polymerases, it would appear that DNA polymerase a is the major polymerase active in all tissues of the 7.5da mouse embryo. The nature of the putative residual DNA synthetic activity could not be unequivically determined in this study. Therefore, these results suggest that both primary and secondary trophoblast giant cells possess and use DNA polymerase a in endoreduplicative DNA synthesis. It would appear that the high levels of DNA polymerase g activity reported in trophoblast tissue derived from the 13.5 da rat yolk sac was not a general feature of all endoreduplication.
Resumo:
Studies on the steady state behavior of soluble cytochrome c oxidase are extensive. These studies have examined the influence of ionic strength and pH and may provide answers to questions such as the link between proton translocation and charge separation. The present study examined the influence of external bulk pH on ApH formation, biphasic kinetics, and steady state reduction of cytochromes c and a of cytochrome c oxidase in proteoliposomes. Bulk pH has an appreciable effect on ApH formation and steady state reduction levels of cytochromes c and 8. Bulk pH affected total Vmax and Km at the low affinity binding site of cytochrome c. This study also examined the influence of bovine serum albumin and free fatty acids on proton pumping activity in bovine heart proteoliposomes. Proton pumping activity decreased after treatment with BSA, and was subsequently reinstated after further treatment with FFA. Much study in the superfamily of haem/copper oxidases has recently been devoted to the bacterial oxidases. The present study has examined some protein composition characteristics and bioenergetic features of Bacillus subtilis cytochrome caa3 oxidase. Results provide evidence for the structural composition of the enzyme in relation to the covalently bound cytochrome c to the oxidas~. Bioenergetically, caa3 COV showed appreciable proton pumping activity. Steady state analysis of the caa3 COV showed significantly different cytochrome c and a reduction characteristics compared to the bovine enzyme.
Resumo:
The wrestler's name is Cardiff Giant and the number stamped on the reverse is 649.
Resumo:
Giant Steps is a therapeutic school for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) founded in 1995 by a group of parents who felt that the public school system was not fully able to meet the needs of their children. While the education system has progressed through the years to offer all students with access to public education, many educators still are not adequately prepared to provide inclusive learning environments for students with ASD. Given the prevalence of ASD in southern Ontario (1 in every 42 boys and 1 in every 189 girls), research on ASD and inclusive practices is both vital and timely. The purpose of this qualitative case study is to understand how the Giant Steps program prepares and transitions students with ASD for inclusive classrooms. Data was collected through two rounds of in-depth interviews, and was subsequently analyzed and interpreted into research findings that are presented through three major themes (i.e., unique program aspects, holistic approach, inclusion not integration). Collectively, the themes provide insights about how students at Giant Steps are prepared for inclusion, as well as how different stakeholders within the Giant Steps program perceive inclusion and their role in preparing students for inclusive classrooms.