Functions of the Lymph Gland Cells during the Larval Period in Drosophila

Development ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 122-133
Author(s):  
H. H. El Shatoury ◽  
C. H. Waddington

A Considerable body of information has already been accumulated in which a careful study of the morphological effects of a gene in Drosophila has been used to throw light on the epigenetic processes which bring about development. Much of the earlier work of this kind (e.g. Goldschmidt, Waddington) has dealt with mutant genes which produced abnormal adults. More recently a great deal of attention has been paid to the developmental effects of lethal genes which cause the death of the individual before the adult stage is reached. In a recent monograph on this category of genes, Hadorn (1951), who has been one of the most active workers in this field, lays considerable stress on what he calls the phase specificity of the lethals, that is, on the fact that individuals homozygous for a particular lethal usually die at some rather definitely defined stage of their life history.

Development ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-234
Author(s):  
Stephen Kerridge ◽  
Gines Morata

Nine X-ray-induced mutations of the bithorax complex (BX-C) have been isolated and characterized. They all show the typical features of the Ultrabithorax mutations. They are homozygous lethal, produce a slight enlargement of the haltere in heterozygous condition and fail to complement the mutations at the bx, bxd and pbx loci. Some of them are associated with chromosomal aberrations in the regions 89E 1-4, where the BX-C lies, while others appear normal cytologically. The effect of six of these mutants in the adult cuticle has been studied, producing mutant marked clones in heterozygous individuals. The clones were generated by X-radiation at two points in development: the blastoderm stage and the second larval period. In all cases mutant clones showed the same phenotype: clones appearing in the dorsal structures transform metathorax and first abdominal segment towards mesothorax. That is the additive effect of bx, bxd and pbx mutations. Clones in the legs, if induced during the larval period, show an effect homologous to that seen in the dorsal structures. However, when produced at blastoderm they show in addition a transformation of the posterior second (mesothoracic) and third (metathoracic) legs into the posterior first (prothoracic) leg. This transformation, named postprothorax (ppx) has been recently described for the alleles Ubx130 and Ubx1 (Morata & Kerridge, 1981) and appears to be general for the Ubxmutations. It is concluded that the realm of action of the Ubx gene is defined by part of the rflesothoracic segment (posterior second leg compartment) and the entire metathoracic and first abdominal segments.


2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (04) ◽  
pp. 434-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Zamilpa ◽  
C. García-Alanís ◽  
M.E. López-Arellano ◽  
V.M. Hernández-Velázquez ◽  
M.G. Valladares-Cisneros ◽  
...  

AbstractThe in vitro nematicidal effect of Chenopodium ambrosioides and Castela tortuosa n-hexane extracts (E-Cham and E-Cato, respectively) on Haemonchus contortus infective larvae (L3) and the anthelmintic effect of these extracts against the pre-adult stage of the parasite in gerbils were evaluated using both individual and combined extracts. The in vitro confrontation between larvae and extracts was performed in 24-well micro-titration plates. The results were considered 24 and 72 h post confrontation. The in vivo nematicidal effect was examined using gerbils as a study model. The extracts from the two assessed plants were obtained through maceration using n-hexane as an organic agent. Gerbils artificially infected with H. contortus L3 were treated intraperitoneally with the corresponding extract either individually or in combination. The results showed that the highest individual lethal in vitro effect (96.3%) was obtained with the E-Cham extract at 72 h post confrontation at 40 mg/ml, followed by E-Cato (78.9%) at 20 mg/ml after 72 h. The highest combined effect (98.7%) was obtained after 72 h at 40 mg/ml. The in vivo assay showed that the individual administration of the E-Cato and E-Cham extracts reduced the parasitic burden in gerbils by 27.1% and 45.8%, respectively. Furthermore, the anthelmintic efficacy increased to 57.3% when both extracts were administered in combination. The results of the present study show an important combined nematicidal effect of the two plant extracts assessed against L3 in gerbils.


1999 ◽  
Vol 09 (03n04) ◽  
pp. 335-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. IKEDA ◽  
N. ARAI ◽  
W. SAKAMOTO ◽  
K. YOSHIDA

Trace elements in a cuttlebone, a buoyant calcified tissue developing simultaneously with the individual growth, of an adult giant cuttlefish originating from the water of Ishigaki Island were measured by PIXE to examine the ontogenetic change of the element concentration. Beside calcium (major element), iron, zinc, manganese, copper, bromine and relatively large amounts of strontium were detected in the cuttlebone. Strontium concentration varied with position along the cuttlebone: it was high near the spine (the portion that deposited at the paralarval stage), then showed some variations at the middle portion of the cuttlebone (the portion that deposited from young stage to sub-adult stage) and became the highest near the locus (the portion that deposited near the catch date, i.e., adult stage). This variation was compared to migration of this species between inshore and offshore waters.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 1682-1690 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Tebb ◽  
I W Mattaj

The sequences involved in enhancement of transcription of the Xenopus U2 small nuclear RNA gene by the distal sequence element (DSE) of its promoter were analyzed in detail by microinjection of mutant genes into Xenopus oocytes. The DSE was shown to be roughly 60 base pairs long. Within this region, four motifs were found to contribute to DSE function: an ATGCAAAT octamer sequence, an SpI binding site, and two additional motifs which, since they are related in sequence, may bind the same transcription factor. These motifs were named D2 (for DSE; U2). Both the octamer sequence and the SpI site bound nuclear factors in vitro, but no factor binding to the D2 motifs was detected. All four elements were independently capable of enhancing transcription of the U2 gene to some extent. Furthermore, when assayed under both competitive and noncompetitive conditions, the individual units of the DSE displayed functional redundancy.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 1682-1690
Author(s):  
G Tebb ◽  
I W Mattaj

The sequences involved in enhancement of transcription of the Xenopus U2 small nuclear RNA gene by the distal sequence element (DSE) of its promoter were analyzed in detail by microinjection of mutant genes into Xenopus oocytes. The DSE was shown to be roughly 60 base pairs long. Within this region, four motifs were found to contribute to DSE function: an ATGCAAAT octamer sequence, an SpI binding site, and two additional motifs which, since they are related in sequence, may bind the same transcription factor. These motifs were named D2 (for DSE; U2). Both the octamer sequence and the SpI site bound nuclear factors in vitro, but no factor binding to the D2 motifs was detected. All four elements were independently capable of enhancing transcription of the U2 gene to some extent. Furthermore, when assayed under both competitive and noncompetitive conditions, the individual units of the DSE displayed functional redundancy.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4268-4268
Author(s):  
Kim P. Ahrens

Abstract Mutations in the Nucleophosmin, member 1 (NPM1) gene, have been shown to be significant for prognosis and treatment of cytogenetically normal (CN) patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). To increase sensitivity for minimal residual disease (MRD) detection, especially in AMLs without a distinct phenotype or genetic marker, some assays have specifically targeted the individual mutation, which has led to an increased complexity of these tests. Other assays use expensive equipment such as capillary electrophoresis to differentiate between the usual 4bp size difference in the mutated gene and the wildtype(wt) gene. We developed a simple PCR-based procedure that amplifies the exon 12 region of the NPM1 gene and produces a small product (156bp for the wt and 160 for the mutant genes) using RNA that can be separated on a 4% metaphor agarose gel. This approach is clinically relevant since it can easily distinguish greater than 95% of the mutations. Eight of 24 AMLs of various types were positive for the mutation using our technique and those that were cloned and sequenced yielded the most common insertion TCTG, confirming its accuracy.


1996 ◽  
Vol 169 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth S. Kendler ◽  
Laura Karkowski-Shuman ◽  
Dermot Walsh

BackgroundFor many common medical and neuropsychiatric disorders, early age at onset reflects high familial liability to illness. However, for schizophrenia, most studies do not find such a relationship.MethodUsing Cox proportional hazard models, we investigate this question in the epidemiologically-based Roscommon family study.ResultsNo relationship was found between age at onset in schizophrenic probands and the hazard rate for schizophrenia in their relatives. Similar results were obtained when the definition of illness was expanded to include schizoaffective disorder and other non-affective psychoses.ConclusionsFor schizophrenia, a ‘common-sense’ model for age of onset (i.e. those with highest familial liability to illness succumb first while those with lower liability survive longer before falling ill) does not seem to apply. Our results are more consistent with a model in which variation in age at onset of schizophrenia is due to random developmental effects or to environmental experiences unique to the individual.


Behaviour ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 57 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 64-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas S. Thompson ◽  
Michael J. Boughey

AbstractThe Brown Thrasher, like his fellow mimic thrushes, sings a highly variable song. So variable are the individual notes of the song that field identification on the basis of a single burst of song is hazardous. Reliable field identification traditionally has depended on the number of utterances of each sound rather than on the note qualities of the sounds themselves: Brown Thrashers (Toxostoma rufum) seem to utter sounds in pairs, whereas Catbirds (Dumetella carolinensis) do not repeat sound and Mockingbirds (Mimus polyglottos) repeat each sound several times. The purposes of this study were two: first, to establish that the thrasher does in fact distinguish his own song from that of the other mimic thrushes. Second, to develop evidence of the cues used to make the discrimination. Two techniques were used, playback trials and song recording analysis. In playback trials, Brown Thrashers were played samples of Brown Thrasher, Catbird, and Mockingbird song. Some samples were natural recordings and some were artificial samples in which the numerical properties of the songs had been distorted. For comparison purposes, an analogous set of recordings was played to Catbirds. The song recording analyses entailed sonagraphic reproduction of extensive segments of the songs of four thrashers and a careful study of the form, temporal properties, and statistical characteristics of the sounds thus represented. 1) Brown Thrashers clearly discriminate Brown Thrasher song from Catbird song and the basis of the discrimination is the number of utterances of each sound. Thrashers respond more vigorously to Brown Thrasher song than to Catbird song, to doubled Catbird song than to normal Catbird song, and to normal thrasher song than to halved thrasher song. 2) The results do not show that thrashers discriminate their own songs from Mockingbird song. Thrashers do respond more vigorously to normal Brown Thrasher song than to artificially lengthened Brown Thrasher song, but do not respond more vigorously to normal Brown Thrasher song than to normal Mockingbird song nor do they respond more vigorously to shortened Mockingbird song than they do to the normal form. 3) Catbirds can discriminate their songs from the songs of the other mimic thrushes, but they do not appear to make this discrimination on the basis of number. Catbirds respond more vigorously to the normal songs of their own species than to normal songs of the other two species but they do not respond more vigorously to shortened versions of the other species songs nor less vigorously to lengthened versions of their own song. 4) The sonagraphic analysis of thrasher song produced paradoxical results. Despite the importance of the two-ness in the field identification of thrasher song, no reliable property of two-ness was discernible in the sonagrams. Brown Thrashers did not reliably repeat each utterance nor pair utterances. In fact, the numerical properties of their songs, like all of the properties observed, overlapped extensively with the numerical properties of the other two mimic thrushes. However, these properties, like other properties studied, did differ on the average between the song of the thrasher and the song of the other mimic thrushes. The results suggest that the search for a single parameter that immediately distinguishes the songs of the species may be misguided. The songs of the mimic thrushes may differ only in the average value of several parameters and the birds like human observers in the field may have to hear several units of song before they can make a definite species identification. Despite the inefficiency of this process, the birds sing so rapidly and constantly that species identification of their songs would take no longer than species identification of slower but more consistent song.


In certain breeds and varieties of the domestic fowl, e. g ., the Brown Leghorn, the adult plumage presents a sexual dimorphism in the kind and distribution of colour in the individual feathers, and in one or more of the seven areas in which plumage colour differences may distinguish breed from breed, and variety from variety, and also in the structure of the feathers of the neck and saddle hackles, and by the presence of the large tail sickles of the male. In other cases, such as the White Leghorn, the sexes are to be distinguished only by the structural differences in the hackle feathers and by the large tail sickles of the male. In the case of certain other breeds, the Campines and the Sebrights, for example, the plumage of the male is identical with that of the female both in colouration and in structure. Cocky-feathering in the case of such varieties as the Brown and the White Leghorns can be regarded as a trustworthy indication that within the body there is, or was at the time when the plumage was developed, active functional testicular tissue; henny-feathering as an indication that there is, or was when the plumage was developed, active functional ovarian tissue. Gonadectomy in both sexes is followed after a moult by the assumption of a plumage which has the colouration of that of the male of the variety to which the bird belongs, whilst the barbules in the distal portions of the feathers of the hackle regions are absent, also a characteristic of the cocky-feathered male, but the plumage is much looser and far more luxuriant in its growth ; the plumage characters of the capon and of the poularde are exactly alike. Since this is the case, it is commonly argued that the gonads exhibit an endocrine function, the ovarian hormone possessing the faculty of inhibiting the development of cocky-feathering. The fact that in the Campine and the Sebright the cock is also hennyfeathered is explained on the assumption that in their functioning the testes of such a male are equivalent endocrinologically to the ovary of a hen. Such an interpretation is supported by the facts that castration of the normally henny-feathered cock is followed by the assumption of typical cocky-feathering ; that castration of the normally cocky-feathered male and subsequent successful ovarian implantation is followed by the development of henny-feathering; and that, in such cases as have so far been recorded, successful testicular implantation in an ovariotomised hen has been followed by the development of a plumage of the cock (as opposed to that of the capon or poularde). There is undoubtedly a considerable body of evidence, secured from careful experimentation, that supports the endocrine interpretation of the relations between gonad structure and plumage characterisation, and most biologists have accepted this interpretation. However, there are several facts concerning the fowl that cannot easily be reconciled to this hypothesis. The case about to be discussed in our opinion, severely questions its validity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Petya Konakchieva ◽  
◽  
◽  

The paper presents the chronicle of a good tradition kept by the Faculty of Pedagogy at St. Cyril and St. Methodius University of Veliko Tarnovo, namely My First Pedagogical Experiences student contest. In the context of the democratic and humane values in education as well as on the basis of the modern concepts, models, and technologies, the capacity of the forum to activate personality’s synergic self-organizational potential by changing student participation in the educational process is demonstrated. From the point of view of the young people, the developmental effects of the awakening education – realized through the conceptual model of the contest – are studied and systematized. The emphasis is put on encouraging the individual activity and creativity of the future teachers through their active participation in their own professional and practical training. A successful academic tradition is being promoted to stimulate students of Pedagogy to set the vector for their future professional development.


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