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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
131

Effects of Bilateral Lesion of the Locus Coeruleus and of Neonatal Administration of 6-Hydroxydopamine on the Concentration of Individual Proteins in Rat Brain

Heydorn, William E., Nguyen, Khanh Q., Joseph Creed, G., Kostrzewa, Richard M., Jacobowitz, David M. 05 March 1986 (has links)
The role that norepinephrine plays in regulating the concentration of different proteins in the parietal cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum was assessed by investigating the effects of either a bilateral lesion of the locus coeruleus or neonatal administration of 6-hydroxydopamine. Two weeks after lesioning the locus coeruleus, the concentration of two different proteins was elevated in the hippocampus; a third protein was reduced in concentration in this brain area as a result of the lesion. Three proteins were affected in concentration in the cerebellum after the locus coeruleus lesion - two were elevated in concentration and one was reduced in concentration. No proteins were altered in concentration in the parietal cortex as a result of the lesion. Seventy days after neonatal treatment with 6-hydroxydopamine, a total of 6 proteins were found to be changed. Four of these (one in the hippocampus and 3 in the parietal cortex) were reduced in concentration while two proteins (both in the cerebellum) were elevated in concentration after neonatal treatment with the catecholamine neurotoxin. There was little overlap between those proteins affected in concentration by the bilateral lesion of the locus coeruleus and those changed by neonatal treatment with 6-hydroxydopamine. These results suggest that the concentration of a number of different proteins may, under normal physiological conditions, be regulated in vivo by norepinephrine in the brain.
132

Development of Methods for the Study of Phosphoproteins

Chen, Zhaoyuan 01 December 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Characterization of phosphoproteins-including detection, identification of phosphoproteins and identification of phosphorylation sites-is mostly done with radiolabeling and proteomic techniques. Three main topics related to phosphoprotein characterization are included in this dissertation. First, large-scale characterization of the CHO (Chinese hamster ovary) cell phosphoproteome was done using two dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) separation, visualization of phosphoproteins by radiolabeling or a phosphoprotein specific dye, followed by MALDI-TOF identification. Because radiolabeling of phosphoproteins is very sensitive and straightforward to quantify, such analysis can give a clear picture of the relative phosphosphorylation of proteins present in a sample. But there are also limitations to this approach, such as the inability of 2DE to separate hydrophobic, acidic and large proteins and the poor detection limits of common protein stains such as Coomassie stain. Additionally, it is difficulty to excise the right spots for identification because of the low abundance of phosphoproteins which have been visualized by radiolabeling. Furthermore, there are problems associated with metabolic radiolabeling. A second topic of the dissertation is the development of a novel strong cation exchange monolithic column for MudPIT (multidimensional protein identification technology) and phosphopeptide isolation. This column, a poly(AMPS-co-PEGDA) monolith containing as high as 40% AMPS, has several favorable features, such as high binding capacity, extraordinarily high resolution, and high peak capacity, making it ideal for resolving complex peptide samples. Application of this novel column to isolate model phosphopeptides was shown. More general use of this column in MudPIT (strong cation exchange column followed by reverse-phased MS/MS) is probably somewhat limited, due to the hydrophobicity of the AMPS monomer. A better monolith could be obtained if a more hydrophilic monomer was used. In the third area of the dissertation, several individual protein phosphorylation sites were analyzed, employing different strategies. Phosphorylation sites of one multiply phosphorylated tryptic peptide from CK2-phosphorylated phosducin-like protein (PhLP) was well characterized using enrichment with a MonoTip® TiO Pipette Tip. Analysis of syntaxin 1a phosphorylation by AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) was done by peptide level mapping for potential phosphopeptides after its unsuccessful trial with enrichment using the MonoTip® TiO Pipette Tip. Several criteria such as existence of non-phosphorylated forms of potential phosphopeptides, controls and reasonable retention times were used to rule out false positives. Phosphorylation of syntaxin 1a by AMPK was narrowed down to tryptic peptide T32 with evidence from different sources. Three phosphorylation sites of syntaxin 4 by AMPK were identified within the same peptide (Q65QVTILATPLPEESMK80). Further pinpointing of phosphorylation site(s) for syntaxin 1a by AMPK and further confirmation of these phosphorylation sites in syntaxin 4 by AMPK are required in vivo. The role of phosphorylation in syntaxin 4 by AMPK is the next step toward elucidation of AMPK activation and regulation of the glucose uptake mechanism.
133

Identification of human hair follicle antigens targeted in the presumptive autoimmune hair follicle disorder Alopecia Areata and their potential functional relevance In Vitro. Methods development for isolation and identification of Alopecia Areata-relevant human hair follicle antigens using a proteomics approach and their functional assessment using an Ex Vivo hair follicle organ culture model.

Leung, Man Ching January 2008 (has links)
Alopecia areata (AA) is a putative autoimmune hair loss disorder. It mainly affects the scalp hair but can also involve body hair, and can also affect the nail and the eye. While there are may be several lines of evidence to support the autoimmune basis of AA, there is still very little information on the hair follicle autoantigen(s) involved in its pathogenesis. In this project, serum antibodies (AA=10, control=10) were used to immunoprecipitate AA-relevant target antigens from normal human scalp hair follicle extracts. These immunoprecipitates were analysed by LC-MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry for target protein identification. This part of the project involved substantial methods development. Trichohyalin was immunoprecipitated by all AA sera, but by only 5 normal sera. Importantly, the mean Mascot scores of the AA group was significantly higher than the normal group (p=0.005). Keratin 16 was also identified from immunoprecipitates as another potential AA-relevant target antigen. Functional studies by ex vivo whole hair follicle organ culture using commercial antibodies to trichohyalin and keratin 16 significantly inhibited hair fibre elongation compared to controls. Indirect immunofluorescence studies revealed that AA sera contained higher immunoreactivity against normal human scalp anagen hair follicles compared to normal sera. Immunoreactivities were mainly in the outer root sheath and inner root sheath, and less so to the medulla and hair bulb matrix. Double immunofluorescence studies of AA and normal serum with anti-trichohyalin antibody (AE15) revealed co-localisation of 9 of the AA sera antibodies with trichohyalin in the inner root sheath (mostly in Henle¿s, less in Huxley¿s/inner root sheath cuticle), but only weakly in 3 normal sera. This study supports the involvement of an antibody response to anagen-specific hair follicles antigens in AA. Moreover, there may be some evidence that these antibodies may have a pathogenic role.
134

The Distribution of Manganese in Blood

Hancock, Ronald George Vincent 09 1900 (has links)
<p> The distribution of manganese in blood serum and erythrocytes has been investigated using a combination of radioactive tracer method with both gel chromatography and disc gel electrophoresis. </p> <p> In serum, there are two manganese-binding proteins. The first is a(beta)1 globulin with a molecular weight of 70,000. This forms a relatively labile manganese complex both in vitro and in vivo, and is remarkably similar in both its chromatographic and electrophoretic behaviour to the iron-binding protein, transferrin. The second protein is a higher molecular weight (beta) globulin. It is found to incorporate radiomanganese in vivo only, thereupon forming a very stable entity. </p> <p> In erythrocytes, manganese occurs predominantly in a porphyrin bound to apoglobin, giving rise to a species similar to hemoglobin . </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
135

Genetic and biochemical characterization of resistance to bacterial canker of tomato caused by <i>Clavibacter michiganensis</i> subsp. <i>michiganensis</i>

Coaker, Gitta Laurel January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
136

Identification of human hair follicle antigens targeted in the presumptive autoimmune hair follicle disorder alopecia areata and their potential functional relevance in vitro : methods development for isolation and identification of alopecia areata-relevant human hair follicle antigens using a proteomics approach and their functional assessment using an ex vivo hair follicle organ culture model

Leung, Man Ching January 2008 (has links)
Alopecia areata (AA) is a putative autoimmune hair loss disorder. It mainly affects the scalp hair but can also involve body hair, and can also affect the nail and the eye. While there are may be several lines of evidence to support the autoimmune basis of AA, there is still very little information on the hair follicle autoantigen(s) involved in its pathogenesis. In this project, serum antibodies (AA=10, control=10) were used to immunoprecipitate AA-relevant target antigens from normal human scalp hair follicle extracts. These immunoprecipitates were analysed by LC-MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry for target protein identification. This part of the project involved substantial methods development. Trichohyalin was immunoprecipitated by all AA sera, but by only 5 normal sera. Importantly, the mean Mascot scores of the AA group was significantly higher than the normal group (p=0.005). Keratin 16 was also identified from immunoprecipitates as another potential AA-relevant target antigen. Functional studies by ex vivo whole hair follicle organ culture using commercial antibodies to trichohyalin and keratin 16 significantly inhibited hair fibre elongation compared to controls. Indirect immunofluorescence studies revealed that AA sera contained higher immunoreactivity against normal human scalp anagen hair follicles compared to normal sera. Immunoreactivities were mainly in the outer root sheath and inner root sheath, and less so to the medulla and hair bulb matrix. Double immunofluorescence studies of AA and normal serum with anti-trichohyalin antibody (AE15) revealed co-localisation of 9 of the AA sera antibodies with trichohyalin in the inner root sheath (mostly in Henle's, less in Huxley's/inner root sheath cuticle), but only weakly in 3 normal sera. This study supports the involvement of an antibody response to anagen-specific hair follicles antigens in AA. Moreover, there may be some evidence that these antibodies may have a pathogenic role.
137

Enhanced gel electrophoresis (GE) and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) based methods for the identification and separation of proteins and peptides

Haider, Syed January 2012 (has links)
The main focus of the PhD study was to develop new gel electrophoresis and ICP-MS based methods to analyze a wide variety of the bio-molecules such as proteins, phosphoproteins and metalloproteins etc. The tricine-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (tricine-SDS-PAGE) method is commonly used to resolve low molecular mass proteins, however, it requires a high percentage gel and a very complicated procedure to achieve this separation. This study describes a modification to tricine-SDS-PAGE to make it more effective for the separation of smaller proteins and for coupling to ICP-MS. The modified method employs low percentage PAGE gels and low reagent concentrations that provide efficient separations, good quantitation and low matrix levels that are compatible with ICP-MS. This modified method was applied to analyze phosphopeptides. Phosphopeptides are very small in size and difficult to separate using the other techniques such as Laemmli SDS-PAGE, original tricine-SDS-PAGE, immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC), size exclusion chromatography (SEC) etc. In this study a simplified procedure is described based on modifying the original tricine-SDS-PAGE method. A comparative study showed that this modified method successfully resolved a digest mixture of very low to high molecular mass phosphopeptides/peptides. In off-line coupling of this method with ICP-MS, much better recoveries of the peptides from the gel were obtained as compared to traditional methods which indicate the compatibility of this modified method for quantitative studies. An on-line coupling of the modified system with ICP-MS was also demonstrated and it was applied for the separation, detection and quantification of phosphopeptides. Another application of this modified system was the separation of serum proteins. Blood serum contains five major protein groups i.e., albumin, alpha-1 globulin, alpha-2 globulin, beta globulin and gamma globulin. The separation of these five major proteins in a single gel is difficult to achieve using traditional methods. The modified system was shown to be superior for the separation of these serum proteins in a 7% (m/v) native-PAGE gel and a cellulose acetate membrane. A further study was carried out into controlling the factors that cause metal loss and protein fragmentation in SDS-PAGE. Using a reducing sample buffer, and heating to high temperatures (90-100ºC) in alkaline or acidic conditions may cause protein fragmentation and decrease the metal binding affinity. 70ºC was found suitable to prepare the sample at neutral, alkaline or acidic pH as no fragmentation observed. To prevent metal loss, the binding constant (log K) values of metal-amino acids, play the major role. Those metals which have high binding affinities with the amino acids in proteins can also be affected by the variation of the pH so prior information about pH to maintain the binding constant values is essential to minimize metal loss. This was observed in the loss of zinc, and to a lesser extent copper from human serum albumin (HSA) as measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The method described above was applied for the separation and quantification of the serum proteins obtained from age-related macular degeneration (AMD) patients (where the AMD patients were from Moorfields Eye Hospital, London). Zn and Cu were quantified employing external calibration. Zn concentration showed variation whilst Cu did not show any significant variations in samples from AMD patients. A brief study of the interaction of cisplatin and oxaliplatin with HSA and transferrin was also performed. Cisplatin bound much faster than oxaliplatin with HSA. After 24 hours incubation, cisplatin showed a decrease in signal intensity which indicates that cisplatin binding decreases with time. Cisplatin binding with transferrin as compared to HSA was not significant, which could be the result of unstable Pt-transferrin complex formation. Oxaliplatin did not show high binding to either protein, perhaps due to the presence of the bulky, non polar DACH ligand.
138

Efficacité d'espèces ligneuses en symbiose mycorhizienne arbusculaire pour la phytoremédiation d'un site urbain contaminé

Bissonnette, Laurence January 2009 (has links)
Mémoire numérisé par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal.
139

Patterns of protein expression in tissues of the killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus and Fundulus grandis

Abbaraju, Naga Vijayalaxmi 20 May 2011 (has links)
Fundulus is a diverse and widespread genus of small teleost fish of North America. Due to its high tolerance for physiochemical variation (e.g. temperature, oxygen, salinity), Fundulus is a model organism to study physiological and molecular adaptations to environmental stress. The thesis focuses on patterns of protein expression in Fundulus heteroclitus and F. grandis.The patterns of protein expression were investigated using traditional methods of enzyme activity measurements and recent proteomic approaches. The findings of the study can be used to guide future studies on the proteomic responses of vertebrates to environmental stress. Chapter 2 focuses on measurement of the temporal effects of oxygen treatments on the maximal specific activities of nine glycolytic enzymes in liver and skeletal muscle during chronic exposure (28d) of Fundulus heteroclitus. The fish was exposed to four different oxygen treatments: hyperoxia, normoxia, moderate hypoxia, and severe hypoxia. The time course of changes in maximal glycolytic enzyme specific activities was assessed at 0, 8, 14 and 28 d. The results demonstrate that chronic hypoxia alters the capacity for carbohydrate metabolism in F. heteroclitus, with the important observation that the responses are both tissue- and enzyme-specific. Chapter 3 studies the effect of tissue storage on protein profile of tissues of F. grandis. The technique of one dimensional gel electrophoresis (1D-SDS-PAGE) was used to assess the effects of tissue sampling, flash frozen in liquid nitrogen versus immersion of fresh tissue in RNA later, for five tissues, liver, skeletal muscle, brain, gill, and heart, followed by LC-MS/MS to identify protein bands that were differentially stabilized in gill and liver. The study shows that, in F. grandis, the preferred method of preservation was tissue specific. xi Chapter 4 focuses on the use of advanced 2DE-MS/MS to characterize the proteome of multiple tissues in F. grandis. Database searching resulted in the identification of 253 non-redundant proteins in five tissues: liver, muscle, brain, gill, and heart. Identifications include enzymes of energy metabolism, heat shock proteins, and structural proteins. The protein identification rate was approximately 50 % of the protein spots analyzed. This identification rate for a species without a sequenced genome demonstrates the utility of F. grandis as a model organism for environmental proteomic studies in vertebrates.
140

Cariótipo molecular: uma ferramenta para o estudo analítico e evolutivo do genoma de Trypanosoma cruzi / Molecular karyotype: a tool for the analytical and evolutionary study of Trypanosoma cruzi genome.

Pedroso Junior, Aurelio 20 January 2005 (has links)
Diferentes métodos de caracterização e inferências filogenéticas baseadas na seqüência de alguns genes nucleares indicam que Typanosoma cruzi pode ser dividido em dois grupos principais, denominados T. cruzi I e T. cruzi II. Outros subgrupos de isolados foram descritos, tais como grupo de rDNA 1/2 e zimodema 3 (Z3) cuja relação filogenética com os grupos T.cruzi I e T.cruzi II ainda não está clara. O cariótipo molecular é uma ferramenta que permite abordar diferentes aspectos do genoma de organismos. Neste trabalho, caracterizamos o cariótipo molecular de 22 isolados de T. cruzi a partir da separação de seus cromossomos por eletroforese de campo pulsado e hibridação com sondas que representam genes codificadores de proteína e de RNA. Verificamos extenso polimorfismo cromossômico entre os isolados e que isolados pertencentes aos grupos T. cruzi II, rDNA 1/2 e Z3 têm cromossomos de tamanho molecular maior (até 3,5 Mb) em relação a isolados de T. cruzi I (até 2,8 Mb). Os dados do cariótipo molecular também foram utilizados para averiguar o significado evolutivo do polimorfismo cromossômico. As análises fenéticas foram baseadas no índice de diferença absoluta de tamanho cromossômico (aCSDI) obtido a partir da hibridação dos cromossomos com um número variável de marcadores genéticos. Inicialmente analisamos nove isolados, classificados por diferentes abordagens moleculares nos gruposT. cruzi I, T. cruzi II e grupo de rDNA 1/2, este último considerado um grupo de isolados híbridos e incluído por alguns autores no grupo T. cruzi II. Dendrogramas de aCSDI obtidos a partir de 3 a 21 sondas definiram em todos os casos três grupos: dois correspondentes a T. cruzi I e T. cruzi II e um terceiro, ao grupo de rDNA 1/2. O isolado CL Brener - organismo de referência do Projeto Genoma deT. cruzi - ora agrupou com T. cruzi II ora com o grupo de rDNA 1/2, ilustrando seu caráter híbrido. Três grupos também foram observados no dendrograma construído com dados de polimorfismo de tamanho de fragmentos de restrição (RFLP) hibridados com dezoito sondas. A topologia dos dendrogramas de dados de cariótipo molecular e de RFLP é similar, com um coeficiente de correlação significante (r = 0.86062; P < 0.0001), corroborando uma forte estruturação dos grupos. Subseqüentemente, avaliamos a posição de isolados de Z3 em relação aos três grupos acima mencionados, uma vez que alguns autores situam Z3 no grupo T. cruzi II. Analisamos o padrão de hibridação de 9 sondas com os cromossomos de 19 isolados (oito de Z3, três de T. cruzi I, três de T. cruzi II e cinco de rDNA 1/2). A topologia dos dendrogramas mostrou quatro grupos correspondentes, respectivamente, a T. cruzi I, T. cruzi II, grupo de rDNA 1/2 + CL Brener e Z3 (oito dos nove isolados). Este estudo também revelou que isolados híbridos têm uma maior proporção de cromossomos homólogos de tamanhos diferentes em comparação com isolados não híbridos. De um modo geral, nossos resultados mostram que cromossomos são caracteres valiosos para a identificação de táxons em T. cruzi. Uma vez que isolados do grupo de rDNA 1/2 apresentam cistrons ribossômicos de tipo 1 e de tipo 2, caracterizamos a distribuição dos cistrons nas bandas cromossômicas destes isolados. Verificamos que a fração majoritária dos genes de rDNA do tipo 2 está localizada na banda de 1,5 Mb e que os cistrons do tipo 1 estão localizados principalmente na banda de 1,1 Mb. Também estimamos o número de cromossomos e tamanho do genoma de quatro isolados de T. cruzi , com base na análise densitométrica da intensidade de fluorescência dos cromossomos corados com SYBR Green I. Para esta finalidade idealizamos um modelo matemático que permitiu estimar 52, 65, 72 e 44 cromossomos (na célula 2N), respectivamente, para CL Brener, Esmeraldo cl3, SO3 cl5 e Silvio X10 cl1. O tamanho do genoma dos isolados foi calculado, respectivamente em, 70 Mb, 78 Mb, 94,7 Mb e 47 Mb. Os novos aspectos do cariótipo molecular de T. cruzi aqui apresentados contribuirão para a compreensão da organização do genoma deste parasita e auxiliarão na atribuição de arcabouços de genes (scaffolds) aos cromossomos de CL Brener. / Different typing methods and phylogenetic inference based on the nucleotide sequence of few nuclear genes indicate that Trypanosoma cruzi can be divided into two major groups named as T. cruzi I and T. cruzi II. Additional subgroups of isolates have been described, such as group of rDNA 1/2 and zymodeme 3 (Z3), whose phylogenetic relationships with the T. cruzi I and T. cruzi II groups is not clear. The molecular karyotype is a tool that allows investigation of particular aspects of the genome of organisms. In this study, we have characterized the molecular karyotype of 22 isolates following the separation of chromosomes by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and hybridization with probes that represent genes coding for proteins or RNA species. We observed an extensive chromosome polymorphism between the isolates and that isolates typed as T. cruzi II, rDNA 1/2 and Z3 have chromosome of larger molecular size (up to 3.5 Mb) in relation to T. cruzi I isolates (up to 2.8 Mb). Data from molecular karyotype have been also used to verify the evolutionary meaning of chromosome polymorphism. The phenetic analyses were based on the absolute chromosomal size difference index (aCSDI), calculated from the hybridization of a variable number of genetic markers. Initially, we analyzed nine isolates, classified by different molecular approaches into T. cruzi I,T. cruzi II and rDNA 1/2 groups. This latter group has been considered of hybrid genotypes and has been included by some authors in the T. cruzi II group. aCSDI-based dendrograms obtained from 3 to 21 probes defined in all the cases three clusters: two corresponding, respectively, to T. cruzi I and T. cruzi II groups; and a third one, to rDNA group 1/2. CL Brener - the reference organism of the T. cruzi Genome Project - was alternatively positioned in T. cruzi II or rDNA 1/2 group clusters, illustrating the hybrid nature of this isolate. Three clusters were also observed in the dendrogram constructed with restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) data from 18 probes. The topology of the chromosome and RFLP dendrograms is similar, with a significant correlation coefficient (r = 0.86062; P < 0.0001), supporting a strong structuring of the clusters. Subsequently we evaluated the position of Z3 isolates in relation to the above-mentioned groups, because some authors clustered Z3 with T. cruzi II group. For this purpose we determined the hybridization pattern of 9 probes with the chromosomes of 19 isolates (eight of Z3; three of T. cruzi I; three of T. cruzi II and five of rDNA 1/2). The topology of the aCSDI-based dendrograms showed four clusters corresponding, respectively, to T. cruzi I, T. cruzi II, rDNA 1/2 + CL Brener and Zymodeme 3 (eight out of nine isolates). This study also revealed that hybrid stocks have a larger proportion of two different-sized homologous chromosomes, as compared with non-hybrid. Overall, our results show that chromosomes are valuable characters for identification of evolutionary groups in T. cruzi. Because rDNA 1/2 isolates have ribosomal cistrons of type 1 and type 2, we have characterized the distribution of both cistrons in the chromosomal bands of these isolates. We verified that the majority of type-2 rDNA genes are localized in a 1.5 Mb band, whereas type-1 cistrons are mostly concentrated in a 1.1 Mb band. We have also estimated the number of chromosomes and genome size of four T. cruzi isolates, based on the densitometric analysis of the fluorescence intensity of chromosomes stained with SYBR Green I. For this purpose, we devised a mathematical model that allowed estimating 52, 65, 72 and 44 chromosomes (2N cell), respectively, in CL Brener, Esmeraldo cl3, SO3 cl5 and Silvio X10 cl1. The genome size in these isolates has been calculated, respectively, as 70 Mb, 78 Mb, 94,7 Mb and 47 Mb. The novel aspects of T. cruzi karyotype here presented contribute to the comprehension of the genome organization of this parasite and will assist the assignment of scaffold to the CL Brener chromosomes.

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