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Query: UMLS:C0016632 (
Fox
)
1,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fox
and Woese (1975a) have shown that a model of 5S RNA secondary structure similar to the one originally derived for Chlorella 5S RNA can be generalized with relatively minor variations to all sequenced 5S RNA molecules, i.e. that corresponding base paired regions can be formed at approximately the same positions. We present experimental data in favour of this hypothesis and show that the points at which ribonucleases T1, T2 and pancreatic ribonuclease cleave six different 5S RNA molecules under 'mild' conditions (high ionic strength, low temperature, low RNAase concentration) nearly always fall in the proposed single-stranded regions. We conclude that this model is a good approximation to the conformation of 5S RNA in solution.
J Mol Evol 1977
Sep
20
PMID:Partial enzyme digestion studies on Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas, Chlorella, Drosophila, HeLa and yeast 5S RNAs support a general class of 5S RNA models. 40 50
The author reports on the advantages of
Fox
's technique in the surgery of senile entropion on the basis of experiences with 30 interventions on 26 patients. In the evolution of senile entropion the structural changes in the orbicularis oculi muscle plays a decisive role, which leads to the malfunction of the muscle. The degenerative changes of the muscle are shown with electron microscopy. The author recommends the
Fox
technique because this type of intervention aims to abolish the cause of the aging process and not only the consequences of it as other methods do.
Ophthalmic Surg 1979
Sep
PMID:Experiences with the Fox technique for the repair of senile entropion. 52 74
Controlled trials to evaluate mass screening programs for cancer detection have been singularly lacking. High cost, lack of medical manpower, and low yield have contributed to this problem. A new program in cancer detection (CANSCREEN) has been developed jointly by The
Fox
Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia and the Preventive Medicine Institute in New York City. This program attempts to provide a quality cancer-detection examination with increased cost effectiveness. Features include: 1) a self-administered questionnaire on medical history, symptoms, and risk factors; 2) nonphysican examiners; 3) risk-facotr analysis with a predetermined decision logic to determine type and periodicity of examination; and 4) primary intervention (health education). This collaborative program between two institutions in two cities demonstrates the feasibility of introducing similar programs elsewhere. A data base shared by cooperating centers permits information on all patients to be used for evaluation of new techniques, end results, etc. A randomized controlled trial has been designed to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of the questionnaire alone and of the questionnaire and examination.
Cancer 1976
Sep
PMID:Population cancer screening. 95 74
The detergent-insoluble cytoskeleton of the resting human blood platelet contains approximately 2,000 actin filaments approximately 1 micron in length crosslinked at high angles by actin-binding protein and which bind to a spectrin-rich submembrane lamina (
Fox
, J., J. Boyles, M. Berndt, P. Steffen, and L. Anderson. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 106:1525-1538; Hartwig, J., and M. DeSisto. 1991. J. Cell Biol. 112:407-425). Activation of the platelets by contact with glass results within 30 s in a doubling of the polymerized actin content of the cytoskeleton and the appearance of two distinct new actin structures: bundles of long filaments within filopodia that end at the filopodial tips (filopodial bundles) and a circumferential zone of orthogonally arrayed short filaments within lamellipodia (lamellipodial network). Neither of these structures appears in cells exposed to glass with cytochalasin B present; instead the cytoskeletons have numerous 0.1-0.3-microns-long actin filament fragments attached to the membrane lamina. With the same time course as the glass-induced morphological changes, cytochalasin-sensitive actin nucleating activity, initially low in cytoskeletons of resting platelets, increases 10-fold in cytoskeletons of thrombin-activated platelets. This activity decays with a time course consistent with depolymerization of 0.1-0.3-microns-long actin filaments, and phalloidin inhibits this decay. Cytochalasin-insensitive and calcium-dependent nucleation activity also increases markedly in platelet extracts after thrombin activation of the cells. Prevention of the rise in cytosolic Ca2+ normally associated with platelet activation with the permeant Ca2+ chelator, Quin-2, inhibits formation of lamellipodial networks but not filopodial bundles after glass contact and reduces the cytochalasin B-sensitive nucleation activity by 60% after thrombin treatment. The filopodial bundles, however, are abnormal in that they do not end at the filopodial tips but form loops and return to the cell body. Addition of calcium to chelated cells restores lamellipodial networks, and calcium plus A23187 results in cytoskeletons with highly fragmented actin filaments within seconds. Immunogold labeling with antibodies against gelsolin reveals gelsolin molecules at the ends of filaments attached to the submembrane lamina of resting cytoskeletons and at the ends of some filaments in the lamellipodial networks and filopodial bundles of activated cytoskeletons. Addition of monomeric actin to myosin subfragment 1-labeled activated cytoskeletons leads to new (undecorated) filament growth off the ends of filaments in the filopodial bundles and the lamellipodial network. The simplest explanation for these findings is that gelsolin caps the barbed ends of the filaments in the resting platelet. Uncapping some of these filaments after activation leads to filopodial bundles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
J Cell Biol 1992
Sep
PMID:Mechanisms of actin rearrangements mediating platelet activation. 132 75
The follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) of the germinal center are known to absorb antigens in the form of immune complexes and to express them on the cell surface for long periods of time. Here, Cecil
Fox
and Michele Cottler-
Fox
propose that, as a result of FDC binding of immune-complexed viruses, lymphoid organs are the major reservoirs of HIV, and that FDCs play a key role in infection of CD4+ T cells.
Immunol Today 1992
Sep
PMID:The pathobiology of HIV infection. 136 26
We analyzed the complications in 310 patients with pathologically documented endometrial carcinoma who received adjuvant radiation therapy (RT) at
Fox
Chase Cancer Center between 1970 and 1986. Variables included timing of treatment, technique, total dose, age, diabetes, previous abdominal surgery, hypertension, prior bowel pathology, and lymphadenectomy. According to the FIGO (1985) system, 258 patients had Stage I disease, 48 had Stage II, and one had Stage III. One hundred seventy patients received preoperative (preop) RT, 138 received postoperative (postop) RT, and 2 received preop and postop RT. A 4-field technique was used for 212 of 235 patients receiving external-beam (EX) RT, and 75 patients were treated with intracavitary (IC) RT only. Median follow-up was 5.5 years. Actuarial survival of all 310 patients was 78% at 5 years. Thirty-two complications occurred, involving the rectum, small bowel, femur, or lower extremity. Complications were graded according to the ECOG scoring system as grade 2 (mild) and grades 3, 4, or 5 (serious). One of 75 patients treated with IC RT only experienced a grade-2 complication (proctitis). Of 71 patients receiving 4-field EX RT only, 25 preop (16%) and 14 postop (14%) patients had complications. Of 139 patients treated with both EX and IC RT, grade-2 complications were seen in 5% of 87 preop patients and 12% of 52 postop patients (p = 0.17), whereas serious complications were observed in 4% of each group. Univariate analysis of the variables of interest revealed that the incidence of complications was associated with a lymphadenectomy (p = .03), use of external RT (p less than .01), and decreasing age (p = .04). Multivariate analysis confirmed that use of external RT was the most significant predictor for complications. In conclusion, similar complication rates were found in patients treated with either preop or postop 4-field EX RT. While pelvic RT clearly decreases pelvic relapse in patient with endometrial carcinoma, the risk benefit ratio for treatment of these patients should be carefully considered when recommending adjuvant RT for pelvic control.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1991
Sep
PMID:Analysis of complications in patients with endometrial carcinoma receiving adjuvant irradiation. 191 20
We have found that mildly mentally retarded adults are impaired in their perception of global stereoscopic forms (
Fox
& Oross, 1988) in ways that cannot be attributed to peripheral visual deficits or failures to comprehend. To assess the generality of that result, we measured the ability of mentally retarded adults to perceive kinematographic forms. Mentally retarded and nonretarded adults were presented with a two-choice, forced-choice detection task requiring the location of a target's spatial position. The discriminability of the forms was varied by systematic reductions in both element density and temporal correlation. We found that, relative to nonretarded adults, mentally retarded adults exhibited large qualitative deficits in their ability to discriminate these kinematographic forms when either density or correlation was reduced. After considering a number of alternative interpretations of these data based on factors such as peripheral visual impairment and a failure to attend, we could find none more compelling than a perceptual interpretation, which posits a deficit within the short-range motion system.
Percept Psychophys 1990
Sep
PMID:Mental retardation and perception of global motion. 221 52
Using social class standardization
Fox
and Adelstein found that 18% of all mortality was attributed to work, while 82% was attributable to lifestyle.
Fox
and Adelstein had access to 25 occupational orders. We have made similar calculations on Danish mortality statistics including 146 occupational groups. Our results are very different: more than 50% of all mortality among Danish men seems to be related to work. Of 51,317 work-related deaths in 10 years, one third were due to cancer, and half due to cardiovascular diseases (CVD). The marked differences in results have lead to considerations on the applicability of the model and the underlying assumptions. One conclusion is that social differences and differences in mortality between social groups are so small in Denmark that a few subgroups with "deviant" mortality and/or lifestyle will be determinants of the results. Inclusion of more occupational groups increases the percentage of deaths associated with work.
Scand J Soc Med 1990
Sep
PMID:Work and "lifestyle" in occupational mortality in Denmark. 223 25
NADPH-sulfite reductase flavoprotein (SiR-FP) was purified from a Salmonella typhimurium cysG strain that does not synthesize the hemoprotein component of the sulfite reductase holoenzyme. cysJ, which codes for SiR-FP, was cloned from S. typhimurium LT7 and Escherichia coli B, and both genes were sequenced. Physicochemical analyses and deduced amino acid sequences indicate that SiR-FP is an octamer of identical 66-kDa peptides and contains 4 FAD and 4 FMN per octamer. Potentiometric titrations of SiR holoenzyme, SiR-FP, and FMN-depleted SiR-FP yielded the following redox potentials for the prosthetic groups at pH 7.7: E'1 (FMNH./FMN) = -152 mV; E'2 (FMNH2/FMNH.) = -327 mV; E'3 (FADH./FAD) = -382 mV; E'4 (FADH2/FADH.) = -322 mV. Microcoulometric titration of SiR-FP at 25 degrees C yielded data which were in full agreement with these potentials. Spectroscopic and catalytic studies of native SiR-FP and of SiR-FP depleted of FMN support the following electron flow sequence: NADPH----FAD----FMN. FMN can then contribute electrons to the hemoprotein component of sulfite reductase, as well as to cytochrome c and various diaphorase acceptors. The FMN is postulated to cycle between the FMNH2 and FMNH. oxidation states during catalysis; in this sense SiR-FP shares a catalytic mechanism with NADPH-cytochrome P-450 oxidoreductase. SiR-FP domains involved in binding FMN, FAD, and NADPH are proposed from amino acid sequence homologies with Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin (Dubourdieu, M., and
Fox
, J.L. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 1453-1463) and spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase (Karplus, P.A., Walsh, K.A., and Herriott, J. R. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 6576-6583). Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of SiR-FP and NADPH-cytochrome P-450 oxidoreductase (Porter, T. D., and Kasper, C.B. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S.A. 82, 973-977) also showed identities that suggest these two proteins are descended from a common precursor, which contained binding regions for both FMN and FAD.
J Biol Chem 1989
Sep
25
PMID:Characterization of the flavoprotein moieties of NADPH-sulfite reductase from Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli. Physicochemical and catalytic properties, amino acid sequence deduced from DNA sequence of cysJ, and comparison with NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase. 255 Apr 23
In a previous report, we localized the gene for a 130-kilodalton envelope glycoprotein (gI) of bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) to a 3.6-kilobase HpaI-KpnI restriction endonuclease fragment from the long unique region of the BHV-1 genome (map position 0.405 to 0.432) and showed that a herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein B (gB) probe uniquely hybridized to this BHV-1 restriction fragment. Here we present the complete nucleotide sequence of the BHV-1 gI gene and the predicted 932-amino-acid sequence of the gI primary translation product. Comparison with the published nucleotide sequence of the HSV-1 (KOS) gB gene (D. J. Bzik, B. A.
Fox
, N. A. DeLuca, and S. Person, Virology 133:301-314, 1984) reveals a similarity of 56.3% at the nucleotide level and 45.9% at the amino acid level. Upstream of the proposed gI coding region are potential mRNA transcriptional promoter elements including a TATA box and multiple Sp1 binding sites (GC boxes). Downstream of the gI coding region are two sequence elements associated with mRNA cleavage and polyadenylation (AATAAA and a GT-rich region roughly 30 nucleotides further downstream). Like HSV-1 gB, the predicted gI amino acid sequence exhibits two broad hydrophobic regions likely to represent a transient amino-terminal signal sequence and a transmembrane anchor domain (near the carboxyl terminus). Additional features shared with gB include 6 potential N-linked glycosylation sites and 10 highly conserved cysteine residues in the gI extracellular domain. Two regions of nonsimilarity between gI and gB are a centrally located 22-amino-acid region of gI for which there is essentially no gB counterpart and the transient amino-terminal leaders which differ in both size and sequence. The hydrophobic signal sequence of the gI leader, unlike that of gB, is preceded by an unusually large region of predominantly hydrophilic amino acids. The unusual length of the gI leader may result from an overlap between that portion of the gI coding region and a potential upstream coding region.
J Virol 1988
Sep
PMID:Comparison of the bovine herpesvirus 1 gI gene and the herpes simplex virus type 1 gB gene. 284 84
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