Variation in phytoecdysteroid accumulation in hairy roots of Silene linicola over extended time periods

Author(s):  
Anna A. Erst ◽  
Larisa N. Zibareva ◽  
Elena S. Filonenko
Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3480-3480
Author(s):  
Ramakrishnan Gopalakrishnan ◽  
Ulla Hedner ◽  
Samit Ghosh ◽  
Ramesh Nayak ◽  
Usha Pendurthi ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3480 Poster Board III-417 Frequent spontaneous joint bleedings in severe hemophilia leads to chronic arthopathy, which significantly reduces the quality of life of these patients. Recent clinical studies suggest that the prophylactic use of rFVIIa markedly reduced the number of bleeding incidents, hospitalization time and days of immobility in hemophilic patients with inhibitors. Interestingly the prophylactic effect of rFVIIa was maintained during the 3-month post-prophylactic follow up (Konkle et al., J Thromb Haemost 2007; 5:1904-13). Given the short biological half-life rFVIIa (∼2 to 3 h), it is unclear how rFVIIa prophylaxis continues to reduce the number of hemorrhagic events in the post-treatment period. It had been hypothesized that rFVIIa administered pharmacologically may reach the extravascular spaces where it could be retained for extended time periods and therefore continue to be available at the site of injury to contribute to the hemostatic plug (Hedner, J Thromb Haemost 2006; 4:2498-500). The present study was aimed to examine the extravascular distribution of pharmacologically administered rFVIIa. Recombinant mouse FVIIa was tagged with AF488 fluorophore (AF488-FVIIa) and the AF488-FVIIa was administered into anesthetized male C57BL/6 mice through the tail vein (120 mg/kg b.w.). At different time intervals following AF488-FVIIa administration (from 10 min to 7 days), mice were exsanguinated and various tissues were collected. The tissues were fixed, processed, sectioned and examined for rFVIIa by immunohistochemistry by using specific antibodies directed against AF488. We also examined the distribution of AF488-rFIX under similar experimental settings. The immunohistochemistry data revealed that rFVIIa given at a pharmacological dose enters the extravascular compartment and accumulates differentially in different tissues. The tissue and cell localization appear to be specific for rFVIIa as we found significant differences between rFVIIa and rFIX distribution following their administration to mice. rFVIIa, immediately following administration, was found associated with the endothelium lining of large blood vessels. This may reflect rFVIIa binding to EPCR as FVIIa has been shown to bind to EPCR and endothelial cells lining large blood vessels have been shown to express EPCR. In contrast to rFVIIa, rFIX failed to associate with the endothelial cells. Within one hour, rFVIIa bound to endothelial cells was transferred to the perivascular tissue surrounding the blood vessels and thereafter diffused throughout the tissue. Although we have noted rFVIIa association with the endothelium in many vascular beds (e.g., bone joints, liver, skin, heart and kidney), it is conspicuously absent in the lung and brain. In liver, rFVIIa was localized initially to the portal vein and the sinusoidal capillaries. rFVIIa was also accumulated in hepatocytes. Although rFVIIa levels in the liver were decreased 6 h after administration, traces of rFVIIa were still seen at both 3 and 7 days following rFVIIa administration. In the bone, large amounts of rFVIIa accumulated in the zone of calcified cartilage for 6 h following administration and were decreased only slightly thereafter. A significant amount of rFVIIa was retained in the zone of calcified cartilage even a week following the administration. The common finding of the present study is that rFVIIa in extravascular spaces was mostly localized to the regions that contain TF expressing cells. For example, in the skin, the sebaceous gland and hair follicles that are rich with TF were shown to sequester FVIIa for a longer time period than other regions where TF is absent. In the kidney, FVIIa was retained in glomeruli that express high levels of TF. Overall, the present study suggests that pharmacologically administered rFVIIa readily associates with the endothelium, probably by binding to EPCR, and then enters into extravascular spaces probably by EPCR-mediated transcytosis where it likely binds to TF and is consequently retained for extended time periods. This may explain the prolonged pharmacological effect of rFVIIa. Disclosures: Hedner: Nono Noridsk: Consultancy. Rao:Novo Nordisk: Research Funding.


2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 117-123
Author(s):  
Donald D. Davis ◽  
Larry J. Kuhns ◽  
Kristen Akina ◽  
T. L. Harpster

Abstract During the last decade, the ‘artillery fungus’ has emerged from an interesting mycological curiosity that grows in landscape mulch to a problem of major financial concern to homeowners, insurance companies, mulch producers, and landscape contractors. This common inhabitant of landscape mulch produces sticky spore masses (gleba) that it shoots towards the light or towards reflective objects such as light-colored automobiles or house siding. We evaluated 27 different mulches in the field to determine their ability to support growth and sporulation of the artillery fungus. Each mulch type was inoculated in 1998 with the artillery fungus and the amount of sporulation (number of spore masses on targets) determined annually until 2002, approximately 4 years after inoculation. We grouped the 27 mulches into nine general categories that had common characteristics: mulches that originated from large piles of bark and wood mixtures, mulches blended with 5% compost, cedar mulch, mulches commercially designated as ‘bark’ but containing considerable wood, dyed wood chips, non-dyed wood chips, cypress mulch, large bark nuggets, and 100% spent mushroom substrate. The mulches obtained from large piles shredded blends of bark and wood supported significantly greater levels of artillery fungus sporulation than did other mulches. Such highly susceptible mulches should be avoided if the artillery fungus is to be minimized. In contrast, large bark nuggets, cypress mulch, and 100% spent mushroom substrate supported less artillery fungus. Other mulches supported intermediate levels of sporulation. All wood/bark landscape mulches will eventually support the artillery fungus over extended time periods (i.e., 34 years), and even more tolerant mulches should be replaced or covered with a fresh layer of mulch on a regular basis.


2019 ◽  
Vol 469 ◽  
pp. 47-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo Li-Ying Chan ◽  
Kai W. Wucherpfennig ◽  
Lucas Ferrari de Andrade

Author(s):  
Christopher A. Kearney

Many parents find getting their child to school in the morning a challenge. If your child consistently pleads with you to let him stay home from school, if she skips school or is often late to school, if his morning routine is fraught with misbehaviors, or if she exhibits signs of distress and anxiety related school attendance, this book can help. Getting Your Child Back to School: A Parent’s Guide to Solving School Attendance Problems is designed to help address your child’s school attendance problems in the early stages. This guide helps identify different school attendance problems and provides step-by-step instructions to help solve the problem and learn different techniques for getting your child to school, including monitoring your child’s behavior, working with school officials, practicing enhanced relaxation, changing your child’s distressed thoughts about school, establishing a clear and predictable morning routine, setting up a system of rewards for going to school, handling inappropriate behaviors, writing clear agreements, and helping your child decline offers to miss school. Suggestions are made for preventing attendance problems in the future, dealing with special circumstances, addressing severe attendance problems, and handling extended time periods out of school. Easy to read and filled with concrete strategies, this book is the first of its kind to educate parents and arm them with tools needed to resolve their child’s school attendance problem. The book covers severe attendance problems and suggestions for families who must endure an extended period of time out of school due to school shutdowns.


2005 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 847-852 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis W. Ashley ◽  
J William Mix ◽  
Benjamin Christie ◽  
Charles G. Burton ◽  
Frank K. Lochner ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Nathan S. Boyd ◽  
Shawn Steed

Abstract Weeds are difficult to control in potted tropical ornamentals especially when they are kept for extended time periods at a nursery. Management is complicated by the lack of tolerance data for many tropical species. Experiments were conducted in 2015, 2016 and 2017 at the Gulf Coast Research and Education Center in Balm, Florida, to evaluate tolerance of stromanthe, croton, philodendron, arbicola, cordyline, ixora, plumbago, allamanda, bird of paradise, firebush and hibiscus to granular applications of indazaflam, flumioxazin, pendimethalin + oxyfluorfen, pendimethalin + dimethenamid-P, trifluralin + oxyfluorfen + isoxaben, trifluralin + isoxaben, and liquid applications of prodiamine + isoxaben and dimethenamid-P. Indazaflam, pendimethalin + oxyfluorfen, and trifluralin + oxyfluorfen + isoxabin were safe for use on all evaluated ornamentals except stromanthe, Dimethenamid-P and pendimethalin + oxyfluorfen were safe on all evaluated ornamentals except allamanda. Flumioxazin damaged philodendron and bird of paradise but was safe on all other ornamentals tested. Trifluralin + isoxaben and prodiamine + isoxaben were safe on hibiscus, firebush, and bird of paradise but prodiamine + isoxaben damaged allamanda. We have identified multiple PRE herbicides that can safely be used on multiple tropical ornamentals grown in containers.


Author(s):  
James A. Murdoch

SynopsisLeading order approximations are given by a patching method for passage through resonance in the case when the resonance zone contains saddle points. The approximations are uniformly valid regardless of the length of time required to pass through the resonance. Accuracy for extended time periods is obtained by asking not for approximate solutions with specified initial values, but for approximate solutions which are “shadowed” by exact solutions in the resonance zone.


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