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Query: UMLS:C0009443 (
cold
)
92,137
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study was conducted to compare the marginal apical leakage of root-end filling materials under vacuum and non-vacuum conditions, and to assess the effect of demineralization by application of citric acid to the root ends on the apical marginal leakage of root end filling materials. The root canals of 148 extracted human canines and premolars were handfiled and sealed with gutta-percha and
Roth
's 801 sealer using
cold
lateral condensation. The teeth were divided into 8 groups that received retrofilling materials. The materials tested were amalgam, IRM and gutta-percha/sealer with and without successive application of citric acid. Half of the specimens were placed under vacuum conditions in methylene blue dye, and the other half were placed in the dye for the same time period without exhausting air from the flask. The teeth were split longitudinally and the extent of dye penetration was determined with a stereomicroscope and eyepiece micrometer. The most evident difference in dye penetration was found between the positive control groups. Under vacuum conditions, the positive controls showed complete penetration of the unobturated canal system with dye. With passive immersion only partial penetration of the unobturated canal system occurred. Application of citric acid to the root end did not adversely affect the seal of amalgam, IRM or gutta-percha/sealer.
...
PMID:A comparison of leakage of filling materials in demineralized and non-demineralized resected root ends under vacuum and non-vacuum conditions. 130 58
Replacement of cysteine at position 543 by tyrosine in the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) protein enables the endocytosis of the mutant protein (Tyr 543) through coated pits (Lazarovits, J., and M. G.
Roth
. 1988. Cell. 53:743-752). To investigate the interactions between Tyr 543 and the clathrin coats in the plasma membrane of live cells, we performed fluorescence photobleaching recovery measurements comparing the lateral mobilities of Tyr 543 (which enters coated pits) and wild-type HA (HA wt, which is excluded from coated pits), following their expression in CV-1 cells by SV-40 vectors. While both proteins exhibited the same high mobile fractions, the lateral diffusion rate of Tyr 543 was significantly slower than that of HA wt. Incubation of the cells in a sucrose-containing hypertonic medium, a treatment that disperses the membrane-associated coated pits, resulted in similar lateral mobilities for Tyr 543 and HA wt. These findings indicate that the lateral motion of Tyr 543 (but not of HA wt) is inhibited by transient interactions with coated pits (which are essentially immobile on the time scale of the lateral mobility measurements). Acidification of the cytoplasm by prepulsing the cells with NH4Cl (a treatment that arrests the pinching-off of coated vesicles from the plasma membrane and alters the clathrin lattice morphology) led to immobilization of a significant part of the Tyr 543 molecules, presumably due to their entrapment in coated pits for the entire duration of the lateral mobility measurement. Furthermore, in both untreated and cytosol-acidified cells, the restrictions on Tyr 543 mobility were less pronounced in the
cold
, suggesting that the mobility-restricting interactions are temperature dependent and become weaker at low temperatures. From these studies we conclude the following. (a) Lateral mobility measurements are capable of detecting interactions of transmembrane proteins with coated pits in intact cells. (b) The interactions of Tyr 543 with coated pits are dynamic, involving multiple entries of Tyr 543 molecules into and out of coated pits. (c) Alterations in the clathrin lattice structure can modulate the above interactions.
...
PMID:Evidence from lateral mobility studies for dynamic interactions of a mutant influenza hemagglutinin with coated pits. 166 31
Our experiments with the hIR protein have been designed to address a very general question of transmembrane receptor structure and function: What are the roles and interactions of the various deduced structural domains of such molecules in the initiation of the response of cells to extracellular signals? All of the evidence to date supports the previous hypothesis based on biochemical data that the IR requires ligand-activated TPK functions to initiate the insulin response by cells (for review, see Kahn 1985). Thus, mutations that compromise hIR TPK activity (site-directed point mutations or deletions) result in a concomitant decrease in at least one aspect of insulin action (glucose uptake; Ellis et al. 1986a). Other studies utilizing microinjection of antibodies to inhibit the receptor kinase have extended this conclusion to include a critical role for the receptor kinase in insulin's ability to stimulate ribosomal protein S6 phosphorylation in CHO cells, glycogen synthetase in hepatoma cells, glucose uptake in adipocytes (Morgan and
Roth
1987), and frog oocyte maturation (Morgan et al. 1986). Second, analyses of cell lines that express experimentally truncated hIR TPKs demonstrate that, when membrane-anchored, this TPK domain is in fact capable of autonomous hormone-independent IR function: Such cells exhibit a constitutively elevated, insulin-independent uptake of 2-deoxyglucose (Ellis et al. 1987). Finally, by substitution of a homologous TPK for that of hIR, we find that although such a hybrid is capable of insulin-dependent transmembrane signaling (phosphorylation of the hybrid beta-subunit on tyrosine residues), the hybrid IR.ros molecule does not function as an IR in such cells: It mediates neither short-term (uptake of 2-deoxyglucose) nor long-term (incorporation of [3H]thymidine) effects of insulin (L. Ellis et al., in prep.). Together, these results suggest that (1) the hIR TPK domain conveys a substrate specificity for the insulin response and (2) that a functional hIR extracellular domain alone is not sufficient for generation of the insulin response (e.g., ligand-induced aggregation, or simple delivery of insulin into the cell). With the linking of the extracellular and cytoplasmic domains of the hIR molecule has evolved a cellular mechanism for the control of hIR TPK activity; the result is that cells which express the IR are now insulin responsive, and the physiological responses associated with the hormone are ligand-activated. Thus, the uncontrolled state of autonomous TPK activity, with the associated constitutive physiological response (e.g., as exhibited by the spBam hIR mutant), is circumvented.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Cold
Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol 1986
PMID:Mechanisms of receptor-mediated transmembrane communication. 347 60
Recovery of cryopreserved in vitro shoot tips of silver birch (Betula pendula
Roth
) was doubled by incorporating abscisic acid (ABA) in the culture medium during
cold
hardening of the mother shoots. The average recovery of shoot tips was over 40% after
cold
hardening for 28 days at +5 degreesC under an 8/16 light/dark photoperiod on medium containing 10(-4) M ABA. ABA was effective in combination with low temperature and short daylength only, although large genotypical differences were noted. ABA had two different effects: it enhanced
cold
hardening and increased callus formation during regeneration of cryopreserved shoot tips. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.
...
PMID:Effect of Abscisic Acid, Cold Hardening, and Photoperiod on Recovery of Cryopreserved in Vitro Shoot Tips of Silver Birch 950 Sep 34
This review recapitulates the general principles of the organization of the thermoregulatory system, describes the thermoregulatory reactions of small and large mammals to hot environment and analyzes the probable roles of biogenic amines in these responses. Catecholamines found in peripheral blood plasma or excreted in urine represent a spillover of mediators released partly from sympathetic nerve endings and partly from the adrenal medulla. Since the thermoregulatory efforts differ between small and large mammals in
cold
and hot environments, the peripheral release of catecholamines is also different in these animals. The levels of these signal substances in the blood, as well as their peripheral metabolic and functional effects, serve as feedback signals for the hypothalamic integrative circuitry. The roles of antagonistic modulatory monoaminergic systems, ascending from the lower brain stem to the hypothalamus, in these integrations were discussed only partly, because this was a topic of another recent review (Zeisberger and
Roth
, 1996).
...
PMID:Biogenic amines and thermoregulatory changes. 963 35
We investigated responses of northern and southern ecotypes of silver birch (Betula pendula
Roth
) to exogenous abscisic acid (ABA) under controlled environmental conditions to determine the role of ABA in
cold
acclimation and dormancy development. Abscisic acid was sprayed on the leaves and changes in freezing tolerance, determined by the electrolyte leakage test, and bud dormancy were monitored. Applied ABA induced
cold
acclimation but had no effect on growth cessation in seedlings grown in long day conditions (LD, 24-h photoperiod at 18 degrees C). It enhanced freezing tolerance and accelerated growth cessation in seedlings grown in short day conditions (SD, 12-h photoperiod at 18 degrees C), and slightly enhanced freezing tolerance in seedlings grown at low temperature (LT, 24-h photoperiod at 4 degrees C) in both ecotypes. There were distinct ecotypic differences in ABA-induced
cold
acclimation and dormancy development. The northern ecotype was more responsive to applied ABA than the southern ecotype, resulting in more rapid development of freezing tolerance in all treatments, and earlier dormancy development in SD. When plants were grown in a photoperiod just above the critical photoperiod for the ecotype (defined as the longest photoperiod that induces growth cessation), applied ABA caused growth cessation and dormancy development. Compared with ABA-treated seedlings grown in SD, dormancy development was delayed in ABA-treated seedlings exposed to a near-critical photoperiod, but even in this treatment dormancy developed faster in the northern ecotype than in the southern ecotype.
...
PMID:Different responses of northern and southern ecotypes of Betula pendula to exogenous ABA application. 1267 Aug 2
Chilling induced inhibition of photosynthesis was studied in nine isolates of the marine tropical to warm-temperate green macrophyte Valonia utricularis (
Roth
) C. Agardh. According to their temperature requirements for growth and survival, the isolates belong to a
cold
-tolerant Atlantic/Mediterranean group and a
cold
-sensitive Indo-west Pacific group. After 5 hours exposure to 5 degrees C under moderate light, all isolates experienced similar substantial photoinhibition, which approached steady state levels after a decline in Fv/Fm to about 40% of the initial values. After return to optimal temperature and dim light conditions, Fv/Fm values increased with biphasic kinetics. A fast phase with half-life times of less than 30 minutes (dynamic photoinhibition) was followed by a slow phase lasting a few hours, indicating repair of photodamaged PSII reaction centres (chronic photoinhibition). In the Atlantic/Mediterranean isolates the fast phase accounted for more than 80 % of the recovery response, showing that these isolates were able to cope with the applied low temperature stress by down-regulating their PSII reaction centres. In contrast, the two isolates from the Seychelles were predominantly photodamaged. In a second experiment, three isolates (Corsica, Seychelles, Japan) were exposed to a similar relative amount of
cold
stress (0, 10, 15 degrees C, respectively). The Japanese isolate and the isolate from the Seychelles showed significantly less inhibition compared to 5 degrees C exposure, but no significant difference was found in the Corsican isolate. However, the degree of low temperature stress had no significant influence on the relative contributions of dynamic and chronic photoinhibition. Only two of the seven investigated isolates had a lower final inhibition level when grown at sub-optimal temperatures than at optimal temperatures. However, all sub-optimally grown Atlantic/Mediterranean isolates exhibited faster recovery kinetics from chilling-induced photoinhibition than optimally grown plants. This is related to a faster recovery from chronic photoinhibition than to a higher relative contribution of dynamic photoinhibition. A specific role of the photoprotective pigments of the xanthophyll cycle, leading to an acclimation response in the Atlantic/Mediterranean isolates may be involved. We conclude that ecotypic differentiation in V. utricularis is mirrored in different degrees of susceptibility to low temperature stress.
...
PMID:Chilling-induced photoinhibition in nine isolates of Valonia utricularis (Chlorophyta) from different climate regions. 1296 64
Tetraploid plantlets were regenerated from cultured apical and axillary buds of a 23-year-old colchicine-polyploid and irradiation-mutant Betula pendula
Roth
tree. Bud explants were grown on modified Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 2.0 mg l(-1) benzylaminopurine (BAP) and 0.01 mg l(-1) 1-naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA). The medium allowed both induction of adventitious buds and development of shoots. The cut ends of new shoots produced new buds and shoots during a 4-week culture period. The micropropagated shoots were rooted on modified Murashige and Skoog medium containing 0.1 mg l(-1) NAA as the sole growth regulator. Plantlets were transferred to a peat/soil mixture (1:1) in the greenhouse, acclimated and then transplanted to a
cold
frame. The regenerated plantlets had a tetraploid chromosome set (4n = 56) and an altered leaf morphology typical of colchicine-polyploid birches. The leaves were hypertrophied and asymmetrical, with curly leaf margins. The mutant nature of the parent tree was also evident in the light-green color of the leaves of the plantlets.
...
PMID:Micropropagation of a mature colchicine-polyploid and irradiation-mutant of Betula pendula Roth. 1497 27
Development of winter hardiness in trees is a two-stage process involving sequential perception of distinct environmental cues, short-day (SD) photoperiod and low temperature (LT). We have shown that both SD and LT are recognized by leaves of silver birch (Betula pendula cv
Roth
) leading to increased freezing tolerance, and thus leaves can be used as an experimental model to study the physiological and molecular events taking place during
cold
acclimation. To obtain a molecular marker for the acclimation process in birch we cloned a gene, designated Bplti36, encoding a 36-kD acidic SK2 type of dehydrin. The gene was responsive to LT, drought, salt, and exogenous abscisic acid. This responsiveness to abiotic stresses and abscisic acid was retained when Bplti36 was introduced to Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). The LT induction of the gene appeared to be under the control of the C-repeat-binding factor pathway as suggested by the presence of several C-repeat/dehydration-responsive element/LT-responsive elements in the Bplti36 promoter and its constitutive expression in C-repeat-binding factor overproducing Arabidopsis. In birch SD photoperiod at normal-growth temperature did not result in significant induction of Bplti36. However, preexposure to SD followed by LT treatment resulted in a remarkable increase in Bplti36 transcript accumulation as compared to LT-treated plants grown at long-day photoperiod. This suggests that SD photoperiod potentiates the LT response by conditioning the leaf tissue to be more responsive to the LT stimulus.
...
PMID:Short-day potentiation of low temperature-induced gene expression of a C-repeat-binding factor-controlled gene during cold acclimation in silver birch. 1556 24
We investigated interrelations of dormancy and freezing tolerance and the role of endogenous abscisic acid (ABA) in the development of silver birch (Betula pendula
Roth
) ecotypes in controlled environments. Short-day treatment induced growth cessation, bud set and dormancy development, as well as initiation of
cold
acclimation and an increase in freezing tolerance. Subsequent low temperature and short days (12-h photoperiod) resulted in a significant increase in freezing tolerance, whereas bud dormancy was gradually released. The concentration of ABA increased in response to short days and then remained high, but ABA concentrations fluctuated irregularly when the dormant plants were subsequently exposed to low temperature during short days. Although there was a parallel development of freezing tolerance and bud dormancy in response to short days, subsequent exposure to low temperature had opposite effects on these processes, enhancing freezing tolerance and releasing dormancy. Compared with the southern ecotype, the northern ecotype was more responsive to short days and low temperature, exhibiting earlier initiation of
cold
acclimation, growth cessation and an increase in ABA concentrations in short days, and higher freezing tolerance, faster dormancy release and greater alteration in ABA concentrations when subsequently exposed to low temperature during short days. The rates and extent of the increases in ABA concentration may be related to increases in freezing tolerance and dormancy development during short days, whereas the extent of the fluctuations in ABA concentration may play an important role in enhancing freezing tolerance and releasing dormancy during a subsequent exposure to low temperature during short days.
...
PMID:Differential responses of silver birch (Betula pendula) ecotypes to short-day photoperiod and low temperature. 1613 42
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