scholarly journals Studies on Transformations of Hemophilus influenzae

1961 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sol H. Goodgal

Unlinked transformations were demonstrated to occur by varying the multiplicity of DNA molecules taken up by competent cells. The number of doubles was directly proportional to the product of the frequency of singles for varying concentrations of cells. The kinetics of transformation to doubles and the effect of DNA concentration on double transformations were consistent with the concept that the cell must take up two molecules of DNA in order to be doubly transformed. Linked markers, on the other hand, were a constant fraction of the single transformation for variations in DNA or cell concentration, or time. The kinetics of transformation of linked markers was the same as for the kinetics of single transforming factors. It was, therefore, concluded that linked transformations involve interaction between the cell and a molecule of DNA carrying both markers. The frequency of transformation was found to be the same from resistance to sensitivity as from sensitivity to resistance for the markers streptomycin (S) and cathomycin (C). Purified DNAs, in general, show lower levels of linkage than crude DNA preparations, and for some crude preparations all the S markers were linked to C, suggesting that some dispersion, at least, was a result of DNA preparation. The inactivation of linked markers by heat, ultraviolet, and DNAase was studied.

1984 ◽  
Vol 220 (2) ◽  
pp. 447-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
N J Blackburn ◽  
D Collison ◽  
J Sutton ◽  
F E Mabbs

The kinetics of inhibition of dopamine (3,4-dihydroxyphenethylamine) beta-mono-oxygenase by cyanide (CN-) and azide (N3-) ions have been investigated by using steady-state methods. Both anions show complex non-competitive-inhibition patterns with respect to ascorbate, suggestive of anion binding at two different sites on the oxidized enzyme. To further investigate this finding, e.p.r. titrations of CN- and N3- binding to the 63Cu-reconstituted enzyme were carried out. Addition of approx. 2 equiv. of CN- to copper elicits a new signal with g = 2.217, g = 2.025, A = 17.0 mT characteristic of a copper (II)-cyano complex. Simulations show that this signal accounts for half the copper (II) in the enzyme. The remainder of the enzyme-bound copper is expressed by a signal close to, but not identical with, that of native enzyme. Further addition of CN- induces a simultaneous decrease in intensity of both of these signals so that their 1:1 ratio is maintained. Binding of N3-, on the other hand, changes the e.p.r. spectrum to a form different from either that of the native or CN‒ -treated enzyme, and integrates to 100% of the copper in the enzyme (g = 2.252, g = 2.050, A = 16.5 mT). Resolved superhyperfine structure is apparent in the g region. N3- binding is also accompanied by the appearance of a broad charge-transfer band centred at 387 nm. Neither 9 nor 35 GHz e.p.r. spectra show evidence for more than one (non-interacting) species of Cu(II) in native enzyme and N3- derivatives. The binding and reactivity of CN-, on the other hand, argues against independent copper sites in the enzyme.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 4424-4424
Author(s):  
Angel Guerra-Moreno ◽  
Carlos Palacio ◽  
Noemí Martínez-Morgado ◽  
Margarita Ortega ◽  
Maida Navarrete ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4424 Introduction Recent studies have demonstrated that sequential administration of demethylating or immunomudulator agents have clinical efficacy in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Demethylating agents induce an optimal re-expression of epigenetically silenced tumor suppressor genes. However, the global DNA demethylation observed in malignant cells during treatment doesn't guarantee a better prognosis, suggesting the presence of others important unknown factors. On the other hand, global DNA hypomethylation of CD4+ T-cells have been related with autoimmune pathology diseases like systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The aim of the present study is to establish the degree of the global DNA methylation in CD4+ T-cells in MDS patients and their potential dysfunction. Patients and methods Eight MDS patients with low-risk, according to IPSS (between 0 and 1), diagnosed by cytology, cytogenetics and immunophenotype, and 4 healthy donors have been studied. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were obtained by ficoll density gradient. Negative CD4+ selection followed by a positive selection were performed using the MACS system (Miltenyi). In patients with CD34+ cells expressing CD4+ antigen, lymphocyte isolation was done using a FACSAria sorter (BD Biosciences). Purity of CD4+ T-cells was higher than 90% in all cases. Cell DNA extraction was carried out with the QIAamp DNA blood mini kit (Qiagen). DNA concentration and 260:280 absorbance ratios were calculated with a NanoDrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer (NanoDrop Technologies). Global DNA methylation content was measured by means of an ELISA using an anti-5-mC mAb (Calbiochem) 1/400 diluted. Before proceeding with patient samples, an optimal DNA concentration to evaluate global methylation levels was established. With this purpose, a reference DNA sample of purified CD4+ T cells (374 ng/ml) was twofold serially diluted in TE (starting at 1:1000 dilution) to observe the kinetics of our ELISA. The best DNA concentration range was 0.025–0.05 ng/ml (Figure 1). Methylation indices (MI) were calculated by getting the ratio between optical density (OD) and DNA concentration for each sample. To minimize experimental variability between plates a reference sample was included in each run. Control and patient MI were corrected by establishing the ratio with the reference MI. Results The global DNA methylation indices obtained by ELISA (Figure 2) displayed that most of MDS patients studied presented a global DNA hypomethylation in CD4+ T-cells, and 3 with IPSS 0 showed and important decrease. Conclusion These preliminary results showed that there are low-risk MDS patients with hypomethylation in CD4+ T-cells. This observation may suggest an autoimmune component in these malignancies as the one described in SLE. To address this hypothesis we are increasing the number of patients studied to all IPSS categories, to test if this phenomenon is highly represented in MDS. In the other hand, we are studying the presence of autoimmune-related factors, like the expression of integrins adhesive receptors such as LFA-1, in patients showed CD4 T-cells hypomethylation. Disclosures: Guerra-Moreno: Celgene: Research Funding. Vallespi:Celgene: Research Funding.


1970 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
SC Chan ◽  
FK Chan

Salts of one isomeric series of chloro(amine)bis(ethylenediamine)cobalt(111) type of cations have been prepared from trans-dichlorobis(ethy1enediamine)-cobalt(111) chloride by replacing one of its chloro ligands with either glycinenitrile or glycinamide. These complexes have been assigned a cis-configuration on the basis of spectral observations. For the glycinenitrile system, the cis-chloro(cyano-methylamine)bis(ethylenediamine)cobalt(111) cation rearranges to the trans-chloro(aminoacetonitrile) isomer in aqueous solution at rates very much higher than those for the aquation of both forms. This isomerization is retarded by acid and accelerated by base. The kinetics of base hydrolysis are also reported. On the other hand, for the glycinamide system, the corresponding isomerization proceeds at rates comparable to those of chloride release, the latter leading to the formation of the chelated N,O-glycinamidebis(ethylenediamine)cobalt(111) species. Consequently, it has not been possible to isolate the other linkage isomer in the pure state. Furthermore, although the aquo(glycinamide)bis(ethylenediamine)cobalt(111) species is not formed in non-basic spontaneous chloride release, its hydroxo counterpart can be readily obtained by base hydrolysis. The mechanistic implications of these observations are discussed.


Author(s):  
Alireza Sepehri

In this paper, we consider the structure of water and waves from viewpoints of two observers, one lives on 4-dimensional manifold and another lives on 11-dimensional manifold. On four dimensional manifold, if a water contains molecules of DNA, emits waves that by achieving to second water, give their information to it and produce new structures which are aected by the existence of DNA molecules and can be detected by PCR. Type of packings of DNAs in men is dierent from women. Consequently, their radiated waves are dierent and for storing their information, we need to two types of water. However on four dimensional manifold, the structures of water are approximately the same. There is a probability that dierences between various types of water could be observed in extra dimensions. On the other hand, waves that interact with water in extra dimensions can play the role of topoisomerases in biology on 11-dimensional manifold. They open packings of DNA, read it's information and transmit it to water. Properties of these topoisomerase-like waves are dierent from electromagnetic and gravitational waves. However,by reducing dimensions from 11 to 4, these waves become similar to known waves in four dimensions. Two structures of water and wave in extra dimensions have eects in nature. For example, waters inside the egg of women and water outside it have dierent structures which causes to the emergence of the entanglement between them. If sperms enter to water outside the egg, this entanglement is broken and some holes are appeared inside the egg. To ll these holes, sperms are teleported from water outside the egg to water inside the egg. Another eect is radiating some topoisomerase like waves of earth and sun which are helpful for plants and transcription and translation in cells.


Of the three related reactions 2N 2 O = 2N 2 + O 2 ............ [1] 2H 2 + O 2 = 2H 2 O ..............[2] N 2 O + H 2 = N 2 + H 2 O ................[3] only the first two have hitherto been studied. The investigation of the kinetic relation of the third to the first two is the object of this paper. In the preceding paper it has been shown that the thermal decomposition of nitrous oxide into its elements is a homogeneous reaction in which practically every pair of nicrous oxide molecules react which collide under the condition that their joint energy exceeds about 58,000 cals, (for 2 gram molecules). This decomposition is uncatalysed by platinum or by rhodium. The combination of hydrogen and oxygen is, on the other hand, a reaction very dependent on catalytic influences. Bodenstein (‘Z. Physikal. Chem.,’ vol. 29, p. 665 (1899)) found that between 482° C. and about 600° C. the combination proceeds exclusively on the walls of a porcelain containing-vessel. Platinum, rhodium, and other metals have long been known to have a very pronounced catalytic action on a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen. Langmuir (‘Trans. Faraday Soc.,’ vol. 17, p. 621 (1922)) has studied the kinetics of the interaction of hydrogen and oxygen on the surface of a platinum wire, and finds that between 300° and 600° abs. the rate of combination is approximately proportional to the pressure of the oxygen and inversely to that of the hydrogen. There is now abundant evidence that catalytic reactions occur within a layer of adsorbed gas not more than a molecule or so deep, in immediate contact with the surface, and the interpretation of Langmuir’s results is that between 300° and 600° abs. the surface of the platinum is nearly completely covered with a layer of hydrogen and that reaction occurs when oxygen molecules enter gaps in this layer, the number of free spaces being easily shown to be inversely proportional to the pressure of the hydrogen. Turning now from the reactions [1] and [2] to the related reaction [3], the following questions present themselves, namely:— ( a ) whether nitrous oxide and hydrogen undergo a homogeneous bimolecular interaction at temperatures below that at which [1] takes place; ( b ) whether hydrogen and nitrous oxide interact catalytically on the surface of platinum. On the one hand, platinum becomes covered with a film of hydrogen which is activated for reaction [2], while on the other hand, platinum has no activating effect on nitrous oxide for reaction [1].


1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (12) ◽  
pp. 1234-1238 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R. P. Godin ◽  
Keith Vaughan ◽  
Kenneth W. Renton

A series of antitumor dimethylaryltriazenes (ArN=N∙NMe2) have been studied with respect to enzyme catalysed N-demethylation by liver microsomes and the Km values determined by Lineweaver–Burk treatement. The substituent in the aryl group of the triazene does not significantly effect the magnitude of Km, which is of the same order of magnitude as the Km for aminopyrine. On the other hand, dimethyltriazenes appear to have lower Km values for demethylation than the structurally similar dimethylnitrosamines. Monomethyltriazenes, the proposed active metabolites of the dimethyltriazenes, do not undergo appreciable demethylation in the presence of microsomes and it appears that the dimethyltriazenes only demethylate once during metabolism. Spontaneous formaldehyde release from the hydroxymethyltriazene in the presence of the Nash reagent prevented an analogous study of the metabolism of these compounds.


2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 198
Author(s):  
J. Losano ◽  
J. Padín ◽  
I. Méndez-López ◽  
D. Angrimani ◽  
N. Montez ◽  
...  

Studies have reported the importance of mitochondria in sperm metabolism. However, for some species, glycolysis appears to be as essential as oxidative phosphorylation in sperm physiology. On the other hand, these mechanisms have not been fully elucidated for bovine spermatozoa. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the role of mitochondria and glycolysis in ATP synthesis and sperm kinetics of bovine spermatozoa. For this purpose, sperm from seven bovine epididymides (n=7) was collected and diluted to a concentration of 100×106 spermatozoamL−1 in Tyrode's albumin lactate pyruvate medium. Then, each sample was divided into 10 aliquots and evaluated in a 2×5 factorial design, with the first factor being the presence or absence of glucose (5mM) to stimulate glycolysis and the second factor being treatment with the mitochondrial uncoupler carbonyl cyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone (FCCP; 0, 0.1, 0.3, 1, and 3 µM) to deplete mitochondrial ATP. Sperm samples were subjected to measurements of ATP levels using a luminescence technique (CellTiter-Glokit, Promega), with ATP levels measured in duplicate. In addition, sperm samples were subjected to computerised analysis of total and progressive motilities (ISAS, Proiser). Statistical analysis was performed using SAS (SAS Institute Inc.), where the interaction between the factors was analysed using PROC GLM and the comparison between groups was performed using means analysis of variance (least significant difference test). It was considered significant at 5%. Adenosine triphosphate was lower at FCCP concentrations of 0.3 µM (180.3±31.9nM), 1 µM (220.2±40.4nM), and 3 µM (272.3±70.4nM) than at 0 µM (control; 448.6±63.7nM) and 0.1 µM (422.4±41.5nM) in the absence of glucose. However, in the groups treated with FCCP supplemented with glucose, ATP concentrations did not differ among the groups (0 µM: 577.2±70.4 nM; 0.1 µM: 610.8±57.8 nM; 0.3 µM: 606.2±64.2 nM; 1 µM: 670.9±61.9 nM; 3 µM: 696.1±68.5nM). Additionally, total motility was lower in FCCP-treated groups without glucose supplementation. On the other hand, total motility increased in the groups treated with 0.3, 0.1, 1, and 3 µM FCCP supplemented with glucose. A similar effect was verified for progressive motility. Based on these results, we can suggest that glucose supplementation is able to maintain ATP levels and motility in bull sperm undergoing FCCP-induced mitochondrial depolarisation.


2012 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Jamsari Jamsari

DNA preparation from C. capsici dan C. gleosporides is important for PCR based analysis of anthracnose causingpathogens. On the other hand, RAPD as one of DNA-based fingerprinting is hindered by its instability and its nonspecifity problems. For that reason, converting RAPD fragments into other DNA based systems is an alternative toincrease its analysis reliability. The study showed that mycelia grown in 2-days liquid culture is appropriate materialfor DNA preparation especially when combined with Shagai-Maroof protocol as well as Promega Genomic DNAIsolation Kit. The study indicated also that some isolated RAPD-fragments showed its instability character. Thiswas proved by the occurrence of multi different length of fragments after re-amplification of some single RAPDspecific fragments.


1931 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 471-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret Pittman

During the course of a study of different strains of influenza bacilli, fifteen strains have been found to form colonies of a different appearance from that usually considered typical of influenza bacilli. These colonies are smooth, more opaque, and are iridescent in oblique transmitted light. Most of these strains were isolated from patients in whom these organisms seemed to play a pathogenic rô1e. When these strains were grown repeatedly on blood agar, other colonies appeared which were smaller, less smooth, less opaque, and not iridescent, and when subcultures were made from these rough colonies, all of the colonies were of this character. Further study of the cultures obtained from these smooth and rough colonies have shown that one is a variant of the other. The strain from the smooth colony has been called an S strain, that from the rough colony an R strain. Certain differences in the morphology of the organisms in the R and S strains have been observed. Of special importance is the fact that the bacteria of the S strains are possessed of capsules. It has also been found that the S strains are somewhat more virulent for laboratory animals than are the R strains. In the supernatant fluid of broth cultures of S strains, and in the washing fluid of S bacteria grown on agar, there is present a soluble substance which, in the presence of homologous immune serum, gives rise to a precipitate. No reaction of this kind, however, occurs with the cultures of the R strains. By means of cross precipitin reactions, employing antisera against the different S strains, it has been found that the fifteen strains studied may be divided into two distinct immunological groups. Three of these strains belong in one group, Type a, and the remaining twelve in another group, Type b. Seven of the strains studied were isolated from the spinal fluid in cases of meningitis, and all of these strains are of Type b. Agglutination tests performed at 37°C. with these fifteen S strains have revealed the same specific type relationships among the organisms as did the precipitin tests. The R strains on the other hand, exhibit no similar type agglutinations. If the agglutination tests are made at a higher temperature, 47°C., the S strains also fail to show the specific type reactions which occur at 37°C. Certain differences between other biochemical reactions exhibited by the two types of strains have been noted, but it is not believed that they are sufficiently constant to be of great significance. When S strains are grown on artificial media outside the animal body, they tend to be converted into the R form. The rapidity and the readiness with which this conversion occurs depend on certain conditions, such as the kind of media employed, the temperature at which the cultures are kept, and the atmospheric conditions under which they are cultivated. The rate of conversion is increased when the S strains are grown in media containing anti-S immune serum of the homologous type. On the other hand, conversion of R strains into the S form occurs with much less readiness, and then only if very particular conditions are present. On one occasion conversion occurred when an R strain was grown in a medium containing anti-R immune serum. On two other occasions this same strain changed from the R to the S form during passage through animals. With other R strains it has so far been impossible to bring about this transformation. These studies indicate that the bacteria belonging in the group Hemophilus influenzae exhibit changes in pathogenicity and immunological specificity, which are analogous to those shown by the bacteria of the pneumococcus group. It is important to continue this study, with the technique which has been developed, to include a much larger number of strains. On account of the readiness with which the S strains of influenza bacilli lose their type specificity when grown on artificial culture media, it is important that the organisms be studied as soon as possible after removal from their pathological sources. It is not impossible that many strains lose their specificity immediately after removal from the host, and that the specific immunological differentiation of many strains may, for that reason, be very difficult, if not impossible.


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 249-254
Author(s):  
A.M. Silva ◽  
R.D. Miró

AbstractWe have developed a model for theH2OandOHevolution in a comet outburst, assuming that together with the gas, a distribution of icy grains is ejected. With an initial mass of icy grains of 108kg released, theH2OandOHproductions are increased up to a factor two, and the growth curves change drastically in the first two days. The model is applied to eruptions detected in theOHradio monitorings and fits well with the slow variations in the flux. On the other hand, several events of short duration appear, consisting of a sudden rise ofOHflux, followed by a sudden decay on the second day. These apparent short bursts are frequently found as precursors of a more durable eruption. We suggest that both of them are part of a unique eruption, and that the sudden decay is due to collisions that de-excite theOHmaser, when it reaches the Cometopause region located at 1.35 × 105kmfrom the nucleus.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document