956 resultados para FLUORESCENT PROBES
Resumo:
Xanthene dyes, including fluorescein, are a well-known class of fluorescent dyes, which have widespread applications in natural sciences. The synthesis of xanthene derivatives via acid catalyzed condensation of substituted phenols with phthalic anhydride, to afford the asymmetric derivatives, is well established. The high temperature, harsh reaction conditions and often low yields make this method less convenient. The synthesis of xanthene dyes by direct modification of the fluorophore moiety is a great option to circumvent the above mentioned drawbacks. rnOur new synthetic strategy for the preparation of novel asymmetric xanthene dyes via direct conversion of hydroxyl groups on 3'- and 6'-positions into leaving groups by mesylation is reported. It was discovered that 3',6'-di-mesylated fluorescein underwent a nucleophilic aromatic substitution with sulfur nucleophiles and afforded new asymmetric xanthene sulfides. rnThe impact of substituents possessing an electron-withdrawing character such as chlorines and bromines was investigated with the aim to improve the aromatic substitution on the electron-rich fluorescein structure. It was observed that the incorporation of these groups did not considerably affect the substitution reaction and the yields were comparable with the unsubstituted fluorescein. rnThis strategy provided novel fluorescent probes with the linker suitable to further modifications. The modifications of the linker delivered fluorescein derivatives that could be used as fluorescent labels in peptides, oligonucleotides and for cell imaging. rnThe hydroxyl group on the linker was modified to achieve potent bioconjugate functionality such as azide. The new fluorescent azides were obtained in a 4-step synthesis, namely 2-(6-(2-azidoethylthio)-3-oxo-3H-xanthen-9-yl)benzoic acid with an overall yield of 13%, its 2',7'-dichloro derivative with an overall yield of 10% and its 2',4',5'-tribromo derivative with an overall yield of 1%, respectively. rnAn asymmetric xanthene sulfide with an amino functionality placed on the aliphatic linker, namely 2-(6-((2-aminoethyl)thio)-3-oxo-3H-xanthen-9-yl)benzoic acid, was obtained in a 3-step synthesis with an overall yield of 33%. rnThe impact of the substitution with sulfur nucleophiles on the 6'-position of the xanthene moiety on its fluorescent characteristics was investigated. In comparison with fluorescein new asymmetric xanthene sulfides afforded lower extinction coefficients and fluorescent quantum yields. On the other hand, the substitution with a sulfur nucleophile significantly improved the photostability of xanthene dyes. It was shown that after 10 hours of continuous excitation, the asymmetric sulfur-containing xanthene fluorophores exhibited 58-94% of their initial fluorescent intensities. This observation suggested that the novel dyes were 1-2 orders of magnitude more stable than fluorescein. rnThe azido-modified xanthenes were “clicked” via Cu(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition with an oligonucleotide, which contained the terminal alkyne residue. rn
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Lightmicroscopical (LM) and electron microscopi cal (EM) techniques, have had a major influence on the development and direction of cell biology, and particularly also on the investigation of complex host-parasite relationships. Earlier, microscopy has been rather descriptive, but new technical and scientific advances have changed the situation. Microscopy has now become analytical, quantitative and three-dimensional, with greater emphasis on analysis of live cells with fluorescent markers. The new or improved techniques that have become available include immunocytochemistry using immunogold labeling techniques or fluorescent probes, cryopreservation and cryosectioning, in situ hybridization, fluorescent reporters for subcellular localization, micro-analytical methods for elemental distribution, confocal laser scanning microscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy and live-imaging. Taken together, these tools are providing both researchers and students with a novel and multidimensional view of the intricate biological processes during parasite development in the host.
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BACKGROUND: The nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), indomethacin (Indo), has a large number of divergent biological effects, the molecular mechanism(s) for which have yet to be fully elucidated. Interestingly, Indo is highly amphiphilic and associates strongly with lipid membranes, which influence localization, structure and function of membrane-associating proteins and actively regulate cell signaling events. Thus, it is possible that Indo regulates diverse cell functions by altering micro-environments within the membrane. Here we explored the effect of Indo on the nature of the segregated domains in a mixed model membrane composed of dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl-choline (di16:0 PC, or DPPC) and dioleoyl phosphatidyl-choline (di18:1 PC or DOPC) and cholesterol that mimics biomembranes. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using a series of fluorescent probes in a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) study, we found that Indo induced separation between gel domains and fluid domains in the mixed model membrane, possibly by enhancing the formation of gel-phase domains. This effect originated from the ability of Indo to specifically target the ordered domains in the mixed membrane. These findings were further confirmed by measuring the ability of Indo to affect the fluidity-dependent fluorescence quenching and the level of detergent resistance of membranes. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Because the tested lipids are the main lipid constituents in cell membranes, the observed formation of gel phase domains induced by Indo potentially occurs in biomembranes. This marked Indo-induced change in phase behavior potentially alters membrane protein functions, which contribute to the wide variety of biological activities of Indo and other NSAIDs.
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The role of oxidative stress and apoptosis has recently been recognized as an important determinant in the development of a variety of diseases known to man. The oncogene BCL-2 is known to regulate sensitivity to induction of apoptosis and appears to function in an antioxidant pathway by regulating glutathione. We have investigated various steps in the oxidative stress cascade to determine possible sites of action for BCL-2. The fluorescent probes H2DCFDA, dihydroethidium and cis-parinaric acid were used to quantitate generation of peroxides, superoxide and lipid peroxidation, respectively. While each of these agents was able to detect substantial increases in oxidative stress following exposure of cells to ionizing radiation, there was no significant difference between cells expressing high or low levels of BCL-2. Investigation of mitochondrial dysfunction during apoptosis revealed a possible site of bcl-2 intervention, but, analysis of kinetic events occurring during apoptosis suggested that the observed effect is not in the direct apoptotic effector pathway. When glutathione was studied, localization to the nucleus was observed in cells overexpressing BCL-2 that did not occur in cells lacking BCL-2. Additionally, nuclear accumulation of glutathione was sufficient to block granzyme b-mediated nuclear DNA fragmentation, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and caspase activity suggesting that nuclear accumulation of glutathione via a bcl-2 dependent process is functionally relevant to suppression of apoptosis. Thus, a model system emerges where BCL-2 is able to regulate a cell's ability to prevent apoptosis by modifying the cell's antioxidant systems at the organelle level to compensate for oxidative stresses placed upon it. ^
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Programmed cell death is characterized by tightly controlled temporal and spatial intracellular Ca2+ responses that regulate the release of key proapoptotic proteins from mitochondria to the cytosol. Since apoptotic cells retain their ability to exclude membrane impermeable dyes, it is possible that the cells evoke repair mechanisms that, similar to those in normal cells, patch any damaged areas of the plasma membrane that preclude dye permeation. One critical distinction between plasma membrane repair in normal and apoptotic cells is the preservation of membrane lipid asymmetry. In normal cells, phosphatidylserine (PS) retains its normal asymmetric distribution in the inner membrane leaflet. In apoptotic cells, PS redistributes to the outer membrane leaflet by a Ca2+ dependent mechanism where it serves as a recognition ligand for phagocytes(1). In this study Ca 2+-specific fluorescent probes were employed to investigate the source of Ca2+ required for PS externalization. Experiments employing Rhod2-AM, calcium green 1, fura2-AM and the aqueous space marker FITC-dextran, demonstrated that exogenous Ca2+ imported with endocytotic vesicles into the cell was released into the cytosol in an apoptosis dependent manner. Labeling of the luminal side of the endocytotic vesicles with FITC-annexin 5, revealed that membrane lipid asymmetry was disrupted upon endosome formation. Specific labeling of the lysosomal luminal surface with the non-exchangeable membrane lipid probe, N-rhodamine-labeled-phosphatidylethanolamine (N-Rho-PE) and the lysosomal specific probe, lysotracker green, facilitated real-time monitoring of plasma membrane-to-endosome-to-lysosome transitions. Enforced elevation of cytosolic [Ca2+] with ionophore resulted in the redistribution of N-Rho-PE and PS from the inner membrane leaflet to the PM outer membrane leaflet. Identical results were obtained during apoptosis, however, the redistribution of both N-RhoPE and PS was dependent on the release of intra-lysosomal Ca2+ to the cytosol. Additional experiments suggested that lipid redistribution was dependent on the activity of lysosomal phospholipase A2 activity since lipid trafficking was abolished in the presence of chloroquine and lipase inhibitors. These data indicate that endosomal/lysosomal Ca2+ and the fusion of hybrid organelles to the plasma membrane regulates the externalization of PS during apoptosis. ^
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La crioconservación se ha descrito como una técnica de conservación ex situ a largo plazo que ha sido aplicada con éxito a numerosas especies, y resulta especialmente importante en aquellas con propagación vegetativa, infértiles o amenazadas, en las que sistemas de conservación ex situ más sencillos, como los bancos de semillas, no son posibles. También presenta ventajas frente a la conservación in vitro, ya que logra disminuir o eliminar problemas como la excesiva manipulación del material, evitando los subcultivos periódicos y disminuyendo así el riesgo de contaminaciones y de aparición de variación somaclonal. Sin embargo, someter al material vegetal a los procedimientos que implica la crioconservación provoca distintos estreses. Entre ellos, el estrés oxidativo puede potencialmente producir daños en membranas, proteínas, carbohidratos y en el ADN. En este trabajo se han evaluado diversos sistemas de crioconservación en ápices de Mentha × piperita L., híbrido estéril entre Mentha aquatica L. y Mentha spicata L. Se han utilizado ápices de dos genotipos (‘MEN 186’y ‘MEN 198’) en los cuales se compararon dos técnicas de crioconservación, encapsulación-deshidratación y vitrificación-droplet. El análisis de la supervivencia y capacidad de regeneración del material sometido a los tratamientos de crioconservación, junto con el análisis de la estabilidad genética de dicho material mediante marcadores moleculares (RAPD y AFLP) han permitido comparar los distintos protocolos y tratamientos establecidos. El estudio sobre el tipo de protocolo empleado reveló una mayor variabilidad genética en la técnica de encapsulación-deshidratación, especialmente en el genotipo ‘MEN 186’, ya que ‘MEN 198’ resultó ser más estable en todos los análisis. La inestabilidad encontrada en esta técnica no fue exclusiva de aquellos explantos crioconservados, sino que los pasos previos a la inmersión en nitrógeno líquido (NL) también provocaron variaciones en el ADN. Según el tipo de muestra analizada se encontraron diferencias en la estabilidad: muestras provenientes de callos presentaron una mayor inestabilidad que aquellas de hojas (brotes). Se utilizaron tres medios para la recuperación de los ápices tras la crioconservación con el uso de diferentes combinaciones de reguladores de crecimiento: “Reed” (0,5 mgL-1 6-bencilaminopurina, BAP), “Senula” (0,5 mgL-1 6-dimetilalilamino-purina, 2-iP + 0,1 mgL-1 ácido α-naftalen-acético, ANA) y “Nudos” (0,5 mgL-1 BAP + 0,1 mgL-1ANA). El medio “Reed” produjo un aumento en la supervivencia y recuperación de los ápices en ambos genotipos y técnicas, y disminuyó la formación de callo. Sin embargo, no tuvo un efecto significativo en la estabilidad genética. El medio “Senula” provocó una mayor estabilidad genética en el genotipo más inestable, ‘MEN 186’. Para reducir el daño oxidativo producido durante la encapsulación-deshidratación, e incrementar la recuperación de los ápices manteniendo su estabilidad genética, se comparó el efecto de añadir sustancias antioxidantes en el precultivo de los ápices (ácido ascórbico, vitamina E y glutatión). No se obtuvo la respuesta esperada y estos tratamientos no presentaron efectos significativos tanto en la estabilidad como en la recuperación. Para entender mejor qué sucede durante todo el proceso de encapsulación-deshidratación, se evaluó cada paso del protocolo por separado y su efecto en la estabilidad y la recuperación. Además, se determinó el estado de oxidación en cada etapa mediante la cuantificación de malondialdehído y la detección de la formación de radicales libres (mediante el ensayo del ácido tiobarbitúrico, y sondas fluorescentes específicas, respectivamente). Se determinó que a partir de los primeros pasos se genera estrés oxidativo, el cual aumenta a medida que se avanza por el protocolo hasta la inmersión en nitrógeno líquido. Esto se ve reflejado en la disminución progresiva tanto de la recuperación como de la estabilidad genética. Con el uso de antioxidantes en el precultivo (ácido ascórbico y vitamina E) no se obtuvo un efecto positivo en el mantenimiento de la estabilidad genética, y tan sólo con el uso de vitamina E se observó una recuperación mayor en uno de los pasos estudiados (después de la desecación). Sin embargo, cuando se utilizó ácido ascórbico durante el precultivo o la deshidratación osmótica se consiguió disminuir de forma significativa la formación de MDA y la acumulación del radical superóxido (O2•-) en la mayoría los pasos analizados, aunque esta reducción no parece tener un efecto directo en la estabilidad genética del material recuperado. ABSTRACT Cryopreservation has been described as an effective technique for the long term of ex situ conservation that has been successfully applied to numerous species, and is of especial relevance for those with vegetative propagation, infertile or endangered, in which simpler systems of ex situ conservation, such as seed banking, are not feasible. It also has advantages over in vitro conservation, as it reduces or eliminates excessive material handling, avoids periodic subcultures and thus limits the risk of contamination and the appearance of somaclonal variation. However, plant material is subjected to different treatments involved in the cryopreservation procedures, which impose several stresses. Among them, oxidative stress can potentially cause damage to membranes, proteins, carbohydrates and DNA. In this work, two cryopreservation techniques have been evaluated in Mentha × piperita L. shoot tips, sterile hybrid between Mentha aquatica L. and Mentha spicata L. Two genotypes ('MEN 186' and 'MEN 198') were used to compare two techniques: encapsulation-dehydration and droplet-vitrification. The analysis of survival and recovery capacity of the material after the cryopreservation treatments, and the analysis of the genetic stability by molecular markers (RAPD and AFLP) have enabled the comparison between protocols and treatments. The study of the two cryopreservation procedures revealed a higher genetic variability in the encapsulation-dehydration technique, especially in genotype 'MEN 186', as 'MEN 198' was more stable in all analyses. The instability generated in this technique was not exclusive of cryopreserved explants, pretreatments prior to immersion in NL also caused DNA variations. The type of sampled plant material revealed also differences in the stability: callus samples showed greater instability than shoots. Three different culture media were used for the recovery of shoot tips after cryopreservation, using different combinations of growth regulators: "Reed" (0.5 mgL-1 6-benzylaminopurine, BAP), "Senula" (0.5 mgL-1 6-dimetilalilamino-purine, 2-iP + 0.1 mgL-1 α-naphthalene acetic acid, ANA) and "Nodes" (0.5 mgL-1 BAP + 0.1 mgL-1 ANA). "Reed" medium increased survival and recovery of shoot tips in both genotypes and techniques and decreased callus formation. However, it didn`t have a significant effect on genetic stability. "Senula" medium caused a higher genetic stability in the most unstable genotype, 'MEN 186'. To reduce oxidative damage during encapsulation-dehydration, and increase shoot tip recovery and maintain genetic stability, the effect of added antioxidants (ascorbic acid, vitamin E and glutathione) in the shoot tip preculture medium was studied. These treatments had no significant effect on both stability and recovery. To better understand the events during the encapsulation-dehydration process, the effect of each step of the protocol on stability and recovery was evaluated separately. Moreover, the oxidation level was determined by quantifying malondialdehyde (MDA) formation and detecting free radical accumulation (using the thiobarbituric acid assay, and specific fluorescent probes, respectively). The oxidative stress was detected from the first steps and increased throughout the protocol until the immersion in liquid nitrogen. This was also reflected in the gradual decline of recovery and genetic stability. The use of antioxidants (ascorbic acid and vitamin E) in the shoot tip preculture medium had no effect in maintaining genetic stability; only vitamin E increased recovery in one of the steps studied (after desiccation). However, when ascorbic acid was used during the preculture or during the osmotic dehydration, a significantly decrease was observed in MDA formation and superoxide radical accumulation in most of the steps analyzed, although this reduction did not seem to have a direct effect on the genetic stability of recovered material.
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The sperm acrosome reaction is a Ca2+-dependent exocytotic event that is triggered by adhesion to the mammalian egg’s zona pellucida. Previous studies using ion-selective fluorescent probes suggested a role of voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels in acrosome reactions. Here, whole-cell patch clamp techniques are used to demonstrate the expression of functional T-type Ca2+ channels during mouse spermatogenesis. The germ cell T current is inhibited by antagonists of T-type channels (pimozide and amiloride) as well as by antagonists whose major site of action is the somatic cell L-type Ca2+ channel (1,4-dihydropyridines, arylalkylamines, benzothiazapines), as has also been reported for certain somatic cell T currents. In sperm, inhibition of T channels during gamete interaction inhibits zona pellucida-dependent Ca2+ elevations, as demonstrated by ion-selective fluorescent probes, and also inhibits acrosome reactions. These studies directly link sperm T-type Ca2+ channels to fertilization. In addition, the kinetics of channel inhibition by 1,4-dihydropyridines suggests a mechanism for the reported contraceptive effects of those compounds in human males.
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Intracellular calcium ions are involved in many forms of cellular function. To accommodate so many control functions, a complex spatiotemporal organization of calcium signaling has developed. In both excitable and nonexcitable cells, calcium signaling was found to fluctuate. Sudden localized increases in the intracellular calcium concentration—or calcium sparks—were found in heart, striated and smooth muscle, Xenopus Laevis oocytes, and HeLa and P12 cells. In the nervous system, intracellular calcium ions were found important in key processes such as transmitter release, repetitive firing, and gene expression. Hence, we examined whether calcium sparks also exist in neurons. Using confocal laser-scanning microscopy and fluorescent probes, we found that calcium sparks exist in two types of neuronal preparations: the presynaptic boutons of the lizard neuromuscular junction and rat hippocampal neurons in cell culture. Control experiments exclude the possibility that these calcium sparks originate from instrumental or biological artifacts. Calcium sparks seem to be just the tip of the iceberg of a more general phenomenon of intracellular calcium “noise.” We speculate that calcium sparks and calcium noise may be of key importance in calcium signaling in the nervous system.
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The “cut” mutants of Schizosaccharomyces pombe are defective in spindle formation and/or chromosome segregation, but they proceed through the cell cycle, resulting in lethality. Analysis of temperature-sensitive alleles of cut11+ suggests that this gene is required for the formation of a functional bipolar spindle. Defective spindle structure was revealed with fluorescent probes for tubulin and DNA. Three-dimensional reconstruction of mutant spindles by serial sectioning and electron microscopy showed that the spindle pole bodies (SPBs) either failed to complete normal duplication or were free floating in the nucleoplasm. Localization of Cut11p tagged with the green fluorescent protein showed punctate nuclear envelope staining throughout the cell cycle and SPBs staining from early prophase to mid anaphase. This SPB localization correlates with the time in the cell cycle when SPBs are inserted into the nuclear envelope. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed the localization of Cut11p to mitotic SPBs and nuclear pore complexes. Cloning and sequencing showed that cut11+ encodes a novel protein with seven putative membrane-spanning domains and homology to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene NDC1. These data suggest that Cut11p associates with nuclear pore complexes and mitotic SPBs as an anchor in the nuclear envelope; this role is essential for mitosis.
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The three largest known populations of amacrine cells in the rabbit retina were stained with fluorescent probes in whole mounts and counted at a series of retinal eccentricities. The retinas were counterstained using a fluorescent DNA-binding molecule and the total number of nuclei in the inner nuclear layer were counted in confocal sections. From the total number of inner nuclear layer cells and the known fraction of them occupied by amacrine cells, the fraction of amacrine cells made up by the stained populations could be calculated. Starburst cells made up 3%, indoleamine-accumulating cells made up 4%, and AII cells made up 11% of all amacrine cells. By referring four smaller populations of amacrine cells to the number of indoleamine-accumulating cells, they were estimated to make up 4% of all amacrine cells. Thus, 78% of all amacrine cells in the rabbit’s retina are known only from isolated examples, if at all. This proportion is similar in the retinas of the mouse, cat, and monkey. It is likely that a substantial fraction of the local circuit neurons present in other regions of the central nervous system are also invisible as populations to current techniques.
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The pancreatic acinar cell produces powerful digestive enzymes packaged in zymogen granules in the apical pole. Ca2+ signals elicited by acetylcholine or cholecystokinin (CCK) initiate enzyme secretion by exocytosis through the apical membrane. Intracellular enzyme activation is normally kept to a minimum, but in the often-fatal human disease acute pancreatitis, autodigestion occurs. How the enzymes become inappropriately activated is unknown. We monitored the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), intracellular trypsin activation, and its localization in isolated living cells with specific fluorescent probes and studied intracellular vacuole formation by electron microscopy as well as quantitative image analysis (light microscopy). A physiological CCK level (10 pM) eliciting regular Ca2+ spiking did not evoke intracellular trypsin activation or vacuole formation. However, stimulation with 10 nM CCK, evoking a sustained rise in [Ca2+]i, induced pronounced trypsin activation and extensive vacuole formation, both localized in the apical pole. Both processes were abolished by preventing abnormal [Ca2+]i elevation, either by preincubation with the specific Ca2+ chelator 1,2-bis(O-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N-N′,N′-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA) or by removal of external Ca2+. CCK hyperstimulation evokes intracellular trypsin activation and vacuole formation in the apical granular pole. Both of these processes are mediated by an abnormal sustained rise in [Ca2+]i.
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Mass spectrometry and fluorescent probes have provided direct evidence that alkylating agents permeate the protein capsid of naked viruses and chemically inactivate the nucleic acid. N-acetyl-aziridine and a fluorescent alkylating agent, dansyl sulfonate aziridine, inactivated three different viruses, flock house virus, human rhinovirus-14, and foot and mouth disease virus. Mass spectral studies as well as fluorescent probes showed that alkylation of the genome was the mechanism of inactivation. Because particle integrity was not affected by selective alkylation (as shown by electron microscopy and sucrose gradient experiments), it was reasoned that the dynamic nature of the viral capsid acts as a conduit to the interior of the particle. Potential applications include fluorescent labeling for imaging viral genomes in living cells, the sterilization of blood products, vaccine development, and viral inactivation in vivo.
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The intracellular degradation of many proteins is mediated in an ATP-dependent manner by large assemblies comprising a chaperone ring complex associated coaxially with a proteolytic cylinder, e.g., ClpAP, ClpXP, and HslUV in prokaryotes, and the 26S proteasome in eukaryotes. Recent studies of the chaperone ClpA indicate that it mediates ATP-dependent unfolding of substrate proteins and directs their ATP-dependent translocation into the ClpP protease. Because the axial passageway into the proteolytic chamber is narrow, it seems likely that unfolded substrate proteins are threaded from the chaperone into the protease, suggesting that translocation could be directional. We have investigated directionality in the ClpA/ClpP-mediated reaction by using two substrate proteins bearing the COOH-terminal ssrA recognition element, each labeled near the NH2 or COOH terminus with fluorescent probes. Time-dependent changes in both fluorescence anisotropy and fluorescence resonance energy transfer between donor fluorophores in the ClpP cavity and the substrate probes as acceptors were measured to monitor translocation of the substrates from ClpA into ClpP. We observed for both substrates that energy transfer occurs 2–4 s sooner with the COOH-terminally labeled molecules than with the NH2-terminally labeled ones, indicating that translocation is indeed directional, with the COOH terminus of the substrate protein entering ClpP first.
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An unusual feature of the mammalian genome is the number of genes exhibiting monoallelic expression. Recently random monoallelic expression of autosomal genes has been reported for olfactory and Ly-49 NK receptor genes, as well as for Il-2, Il-4 and Pax5. RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) has been exploited to monitor allelic expression by visualizing the number of sites of transcription in individual nuclei. However, the sensitivity of this technique is difficult to determine for a given gene. We show that by combining DNA and RNA FISH it is possible to control for the hybridization efficiency and the accessibility and visibility of fluorescent probes within the nucleus.
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Alternative models to describe the endocytosis phase of synaptic vesicle recycling are associated with time scales of vesicle recovery ranging from milliseconds to tens of seconds. There have been suggestions that one of the major models, envisioned as a slow process that occurs only after complete fusion of the vesicle membrane with the neurolemma, might be applicable only under conditions of heavy, nonphysiological stimulation. Using FM 1-43 and similar fluorescent probes to label recycling synaptic vesicles in rat hippocampal neurons, we have measured the kinetics of endocytosis with a wide range of action-potential-driven exocytotic loads. Our results indicate that when either 5% or 25% of the vesicle pool is used, vesicles are recovered with a half-time on the order of 20 s (24 degrees C). This endocytosis rate was not influenced by operations designed to alter intracellular Ca2+ during membrane retrieval, suggesting that residual Ca2+ after strong stimuli probably does not greatly retard endocytosis. Finally, we have shown that vesicle-destaining kinetics are not strongly influenced by the substantially differing rates at which two marker dyes tested dissociate from membranes. This observation suggests that vesicles remain open long enough for essentially complete dissociation of even the slower dye (a few seconds) or, alternatively, that both dyes readily escape vesicle membrane by lateral diffusion through any exocytotic opening. These data seem most consistent with applicability of the slow-endocytosis, complete-fusion model at low as well as high levels of exocytosis.