Structural Changes of GPI Anchor After Its Attachment to Proteins: Functional Significance

Author(s):  
Taroh Kinoshita
Medicina ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia Paramonova ◽  
Ilva Trapina ◽  
Kristine Dokane ◽  
Jolanta Kalnina ◽  
Tatjana Sjakste ◽  
...  

Background and objectives: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system, leading to demyelination of neurons and potentially debilitating physical and mental symptoms. The disease is more prevalent in women than in men. The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region has been identified as a major genetic determinant for autoimmune diseases, and its role in some neurological disorders including MS was evaluated. An intergenic single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs9275596, located between the HLA-DQB1 and HLA-DQA2 genes, is in significant association with various autoimmune diseases according to genome-wide association studies (GWASs). A cumulative effect of this SNP with other polymorphisms from this region was revealed. The aim of the study was to verify the data on rs9275596 association in multiple sclerosis in a case/control study of the Latvian population and to evaluate eventual functional significance of allele substitutions. Materials and Methods: rs9275596 (chr6:32713854; GRCh38.p12) was genotyped in 273 MS patients and 208 controls on main and sex-specific associations. Eventual functional significance of allele substitutions was evaluated in silico using publicly available tools. Results: The rs9275596 rare alleles were identified as a disease susceptibility factor in association with the MS main group and in affected females (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively). Risk factor genotypes with rare alleles included were associated with the MS common cohort (p < 0.002) and female cohort (odds ratio, OR = 2.24) and were identified as disease susceptible in males (OR = 2.41). It was shown that structural changes of rs9275596 affect the secondary structure of DNA. Functional significance of allele substitutions was evaluated on the eventual sequence affinity to transcription factors (TFs) and splicing signals similarity. A possible impact of the particular polymorphisms on the transcription and splicing efficiency is discussed. Conclusions: Our results suggest susceptibility of rs9275596 to multiple sclerosis in Latvians.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (6) ◽  
pp. 1166-1172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Loudon ◽  
Donald N. Alstad

Multiple nets spun in different water velocities were collected from individual hydropsychid caddisfly larvae (Hydropsyche and Cheumatopsyche) in a flow tank. Mesh size (coarseness) decreased and the total area of the regular meshes of the net increased with increasing ambient velocity for nets spun by individual Hydropsyche larvae but not for those spun by individual Cheumatopsyche larvae in the range of velocities used (0.05–0.45 m/s). The functional significance of these observed structural changes for both particle capture rate and silk stress was evaluated theoretically on the basis of mechanical principles. The structural changes seen in faster water are predicted to increase the particle capture rate by about 75% and the stress in the silk of the net by about 25%. These increases due to structural changes are small compared with the predicted 25-fold increases in particle capture rate and stress due solely to experiencing faster water. The changes in construction do suggest that a greater investment of silk and spinning time is made by larvae in faster water, and this is also demonstrated by the greater proportion of nets that were spun in faster water.


Parasitology ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 53 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 7-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. A. Sprent

The development ofAmplicaecum robertsihas been followed from the egg to the adult stage using laboratory mice and rats as intermediate hosts. The eggs were found to be resistant to desiccation and would develop under water; they were infective to mice after culturing for 18 days after removal from the uterus.Completion of the first moult occurred after hatching of the eggs in the intestine. Within 6 hr. of infection second-stage larvae had reached the liver. They also appeared in the lungs and carcass, but after 2 days were mostly confined to the liver.At 5–7 days after infection larvae underwent a period of lethargy followed by the second moult and the third-stage larvae commenced a period of growth reaching a length of 79 mm. at 28 weeks after infection in the liver of mice. In rats the growth of the larvae was slower for the first 2 months, but eventually they reached more or less the same proportions as in mice. The intestinal caecum appeared at a length of 3–4 mm., but there was no development of the reproductive organs throughout the third stage and no evidence of the third moult in rodents.Fifty carpet snakes were autopsied and searched for larvae and adults ofA. robertsi; in two snakes third-stage larvae were found in the aorta; in one snake the third moult was observed in the wall of the stomach and oesophagus; in three snakes the fourth moult was observed in the wall of the stomach; in twenty-six snakes adults were found.Experimental infection of laboratory-reared carpet snakes showed that infection with embryonated eggs resulted in second-stage larvae in the tissues which did not develop further. Infection with third-stage larvae, resulted in two distinct migratory patterns depending upon the maturity of the larvae administered. Larvae from the liver of laboratory rats which had been infected less than 12 weeks previously, migrated to various tissues, especially the aorta, of the snake, where they remained coiled in cysts filled with clotted blood for periods up to 112 days. Growth occurred within these cysts, but no evidence of moulting was observed. In contrast, larvae from the liver of laboratory rats infected 12 weeks or more previously, and from mice infected for 8 weeks or more, underwent the third moult in the wall of the oesophagus and stomach of the snake.With the onset of the fourth stage, the development of the reproductive organs became evident and continued during the fourth stage. It appeared that the fourth stage may occur in two phases, possibly depending on the size of the third-stage larva at the time of ingestion. Some experimental infections indicated that third-stage larvae may give rise to attached fourth stage larvae, probably capable of active growth. Other observations indicated that fourth-stage larvae may remain encapsulated in the wall of the stomach or oesophagus until sex differentiation is completed, after which the fourth moult occurs and the adult parasite emerges, leaving two sheaths of the same length within the capsule.The functional significance of each of the larval stages is discussed and it was concluded:—that the first-stage larva is one of tissue differentiation, whereby development proceeds to the infective stage; that the second stage represents a migratory phase without structural changes; that the third stage represents a growth phase, characterized by considerable increase in size, but without further radical changes in differentiation.In contrast, the fourth stage is characterized by absence of growth, inability to migrate, and by marked structural changes in the reproductive organs, whereby the sexes are differentiated. Evidently this development may take place while the fourth stage is attached to the wall of the stomach or oesophagus, or while the larva remains in the capsule in a state of quiescence.The fourth moult may occur in the attached state, but usually occurs within the capsule. After it is completed, the adult may remain for an indefinite period within the capsule with the two sheaths of the third and fourth stage. The emergence of the adult worms may be influenced by the arrival of food in the stomach. Once this phase is initiated, both growth and reproductive activity ensue during the adult stage.This work was financed by a research grant from the University of Queensland. The writer wishes to acknowledge the valuable assistance of Miss Ann Pritchard.


Flora ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 242 ◽  
pp. 146-154
Author(s):  
Anatoly Pautov ◽  
Olga Yakovleva ◽  
Elena Krylova ◽  
Irina Pautova ◽  
Galina Gussarova

1988 ◽  
Vol 62 (01) ◽  
pp. 83-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia H. Kelley ◽  
Charles T. Swann

The excellent preservation of the molluscan fauna from the Gosport Sand (Eocene) at Little Stave Creek, Alabama, has made it possible to describe the preserved color patterns of 15 species. In this study the functional significance of these color patterns is tested in the context of the current adaptationist controversy. The pigment of the color pattern is thought to be a result of metabolic waste disposal. Therefore, the presence of the pigment is functional, although the patterns formed by the pigment may or may not have been adaptive. In this investigation the criteria proposed by Seilacher (1972) for testing the functionality of color patterns were applied to the Gosport fauna and the results compared with life mode as interpreted from knowledge of extant relatives and functional morphology. Using Seilacher's criteria of little ontogenetic and intraspecific variability, the color patterns appear to have been functional. However, the functional morphology studies indicate an infaunal life mode which would preclude functional color patterns. Particular color patterns are instead interpreted to be the result of historical factors, such as multiple adaptive peaks or random fixation of alleles, or of architectural constraints including possibly pleiotropy or allometry. The low variability of color patterns, which was noted within species and genera, suggests that color patterns may also serve a useful taxonomic purpose.


Author(s):  
S. Phyllis Steamer ◽  
Rosemarie L. Devine

The importance of radiation damage to the skin and its vasculature was recognized by the early radiologists. In more recent studies, vascular effects were shown to involve the endothelium as well as the surrounding connective tissue. Microvascular changes in the mouse pinna were studied in vivo and recorded photographically over a period of 12-18 months. Radiation treatment at 110 days of age was total body exposure to either 240 rad fission neutrons or 855 rad 60Co gamma rays. After in vivo observations in control and irradiated mice, animals were sacrificed for examination of changes in vascular fine structure. Vessels were selected from regions of specific interest that had been identified on photomicrographs. Prominent ultrastructural changes can be attributed to aging as well as to radiation treatment. Of principal concern were determinations of ultrastructural changes associated with venous dilatations, segmental arterial stenosis and tortuosities of both veins and arteries, effects that had been identified on the basis of light microscopic observations. Tortuosities and irregularly dilated vein segments were related to both aging and radiation changes but arterial stenosis was observed only in irradiated animals.


Author(s):  
W. Kunath ◽  
E. Zeitler ◽  
M. Kessel

The features of digital recording of a continuous series (movie) of singleelectron TV frames are reported. The technique is used to investigate structural changes in negatively stained glutamine synthetase molecules (GS) during electron irradiation and, as an ultimate goal, to look for the molecules' “undamaged” structure, say, after a 1 e/Å2 dose.The TV frame of fig. la shows an image of 5 glutamine synthetase molecules exposed to 1/150 e/Å2. Every single electron is recorded as a unit signal in a 256 ×256 field. The extremely low exposure of a single TV frame as dictated by the single-electron recording device including the electron microscope requires accumulation of 150 TV frames into one frame (fig. lb) thus achieving a reasonable compromise between the conflicting aspects of exposure time per frame of 3 sec. vs. object drift of less than 1 Å, and exposure per frame of 1 e/Å2 vs. rate of structural damage.


Author(s):  
K. Kovacs ◽  
E. Horvath ◽  
J. M. Bilbao ◽  
F. A. Laszlo ◽  
I. Domokos

Electrolytic lesions of the pituitary stalk in rats interrupt adenohypophysial blood flow and result in massive infarction of the anterior lobe. In order to obtain a deeper insight into the morphogenesis of tissue injury and to reveal the sequence of events, a fine structural investigation was undertaken on adenohypophyses of rats at various intervals following destruction of the pituitary stalk.The pituitary stalk was destroyed electrolytically, with a Horsley-Clarke apparatus on 27 male rats of the R-Amsterdam strain, weighing 180-200 g. Thirty minutes, 1,2,4,6 and 24 hours after surgery the animals were perfused with a glutaraldehyde-formalin solution. The skulls were then opened and the pituitary glands removed. The anterior lobes were fixed in glutaraldehyde-formalin solution, postfixed in osmium tetroxide and embedded in Durcupan. Ultrathin sections were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate and investigated with a Philips 300 electron microscope.


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