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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The feasibility of using the Barn Owl (Tyto alba guttata) to monitor environmental quality in the Netherlands was investigated, using Cd, Cu, Pb, Mn, and Fe as indicators for environmental contamination. Throughout 1992, bird-watchers, volunteers, and officials submitted 53 birds. The age and geographical distribution of these birds, formed a representative sample of the population. The following interrelationships were investigated: cause of death, nutrient reserve, age, time of death, place of death, body measurements, sex, condition, and heavy metal concentration in kidney, liver, and tibia. Twenty-eight animals had died after collisions. Fifteen Barn Owls died of
exhaustion
. In total, twenty-four birds were exhausted, with coccidiosis or other parasitic gastrointestinal infections. The condition of the birds showed that as the birds' condition worsened, fat reserves were depleted before protein reserves. Significant linear relationships were found between decreasing protein reserves and decreasing dry weights of the liver, kidney, flight muscle and heart, but not of the tibia. An asymptotic, nonlinear relation was observed between dry organ weight and fat reserve. This suggested that fat reserves were only found when protein reserves exceeded 15% of the body mass at
starvation
. Concentrations of Cu and Fe in liver and kidney rose as protein reserves fell; the total content of Cu and Fe per organ, however, remained constant. The Mn concentration of these organs remained constant; Mn content increased with increasing organ sizes. Neither Cd nor Pb showed a clear relationship with parameters of body condition. The ratio between the organ content of Pb or Cd and the dry organ weight, however, revealed some birds from contaminated habitats. The findings suggested that concentrations of environmental contaminants should be measured on a dry weight basis. Furthermore, depending on the pharmacokinetic characteristics of a contaminant, the total content of that contaminant per organ can be more informative than the concentration. In this one year sample of Barn Owls, no indications were found of toxic levels of Cd, Cu, Pb, Mn, or Fe in the Netherlands. It is concluded that the Barn Owl is a suitable biomonitor. Furthermore, a network of volunteers can produce an informative sample of the Barn Owl population without interfering with the population.
...
PMID:Biomonitoring heavy metals using the barn owl (Tyto alba guttata): sources of variation especially relating to body condition. 775 2
The freeze-thaw tolerance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was examined throughout growth in aerobic batch culture. Minimum tolerance to rapid freezing (immersion in liquid nitrogen; cooling rate, approximately 200 degrees C min-1) was associated with respirofermentative (exponential) growth on glucose. However, maximum tolerance occurred not during the stationary phase but during active respiratory growth on ethanol accumulated during respirofermentative growth on glucose. The peak in tolerance occurred several hours after entry into the respiratory growth phase and did not correspond to a transient accumulation of trehalose which occurred at the point of glucose
exhaustion
. Substitution of ethanol with other carbon sources which permit high levels of respiration (acetate and galactose) also induced high freeze-thaw tolerance, and the peak did not occur in cells shifted directly from fermentative growth to
starvation
conditions or in two respiratorily incompetent mutants. These results imply a direct link with respiration, rather than
exhaustion
of glucose. The role of ethanol as a cryoprotectant per se was also investigated, and under conditions of rapid freezing (cooling rate, approximately 200 degrees C min-1), ethanol demonstrated a significant cryoprotective effect. Under the same freezing conditions, glycerol had little effect at high concentrations and acted as a cryosensitizer at low concentrations. Conversely, under slow-freezing conditions (step freezing at -20, -70, and then -196 degrees C; initial cooling rate, approximately 3 degrees C min-1), glycerol acted as a cryoprotectant while ethanol lost this ability. Ethanol may thus have two effects on the cryotolerance of baker's yeast, as a respirable carbon source and as a cryoprotectant under rapid-freezing conditions.
...
PMID:Role of growth phase and ethanol in freeze-thaw stress resistance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 847 82
The widespread distribution of enzymes classed as semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidases (SSAO enzymes) throughout a very wide range of eukaryotic as well as prokaryotic organisms encourages the aspirations of those who wish to demonstrate physiological, pathological or pharmacological importance. Such enzymes are found in several tissues of mammals, both freely soluble, as in blood plasma, and membrane-bound, for example, in smooth muscle and adipose tissue. While they are capable of deaminating many amines with the production of an aldehyde and hydrogen peroxide, doubt still surrounds the identity of the most important endogenous substrates for these enzymes. At present, methylamine and aminoacetone appear to head the list of candidates. The possibility that SSAO enzymes can convert amine substrates to highly toxic metabolites is illustrated by the production of acrolein from the xenobiotic amine, allylamine and formaldehyde and methylglyoxal from methylamine and aminoacetone, respectively. Activities of SSAO enzymes may be influenced by physiological changes, such as pregnancy or pathologically by disease states, including diabetes, tumours and burns. Increased deamination of aminoacetone by tissue and plasma SSAO enzymes as a result of its increased production from L-threonine in conditions such as
exhaustion
,
starvation
and diabetes mellitus may be harmful. Such dangers could be mitigated either physiologically by a compensatory reduction in SSAO activity or pharmacologically by treatment with inhibitors of SSAO.
...
PMID:Some aspects of the pathophysiology of semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase enzymes. 858 67
Conditions were optimized for the batch growth of Pseudomonas putida S-313 under sulfur-limited conditions. P. putida grew exponentially with sulfate as the sole source of sulfur, and growth was concomitant with the utilization of sulfate until it was exhausted. A further 20% of protein was synthesized after the apparent disappearance of sulfate. A mass balance for the utilized sulfate in cell material was calculated, given the observed molar growth yield of about 3.6 kg protein (mol S)-1 and a sulfur content of 0.41% S in dry matter. Similar data were obtained for growth with cysteine and thiocyanate. The organism also grew exponentially with 4-toluenesulfonate (TS) as sulfur source, essentially as observed with sulfate, except that negligible protein formation after
exhaustion
of TS was observed. Similar data were also obtained with 4-nitrocatecholsulfate (NCS) and ethanesulfonate. Any substrate pair selected from sulfate, cysteine and thiocyanate was utilized simultaneously, and although one of the pair of substrates was always preferred, growth continued at the same rate when only one substrate remained. Growth after substrate
exhaustion
was observed. Any substrate pair selected from TS, NCS and ethanesulfonate gave similar data, but with less growth after
exhaustion
of the sulfur sources. If a mixed substrate pair was chosen from the two groups, the sulfur source from the first-named group was initially used exclusively, and the second source of sulfur was utilized subsequently, after a lag phase. The data are considered to reflect the control of scavenging for sulfur and of distribution of sulfur in the cell exerted by the sulfate-
starvation
-induced stimulon.
...
PMID:The assimilation of sulfur from multiple sources and its correlation with expression of the sulfate-starvation-induced stimulon in Pseudomonas putida S-313. 880 Aug 15
The 739-codon rel(Seq) gene of Streptococcus equisimilis H46A is bifunctional, encoding a strong guanosine 3',5'-bis(diphosphate) 3'-pyrophosphohydrolase (ppGppase) and a weaker ribosome-independent ATP:GTP 3'-pyrophosphoryltransferase [(p)ppGpp synthetase]. To analyze the function of this gene, (p)ppGpp accumulation patterns as well as protein and RNA synthesis were compared during amino acid deprivation and glucose
exhaustion
between the wild type and an insertion mutant carrying a rel(Seq) gene disrupted at codon 216. We found that under normal conditions, both strains contained basal levels of (p)ppGpp. Amino acid deprivation imposed by pseudomonic acid or isoleucine hydroxamate triggered a rel(Seq)-dependent stringent response characterized by rapid (p)ppGpp accumulation at the expense of GTP and abrupt cessation of net RNA accumulation in the wild type but not in the mutant. Tetracycline added to block (p)ppGpp synthesis caused the accumulated (p)ppGpp to degrade rapidly, with a concomitant increase of the GTP pool (decay constant of ppGpp, approximately 0.7 min(-1)). Simultaneous addition of pseudomonic acid and tetracycline to mimic a relaxed response caused wild-type RNA synthesis to proceed at rates approximating those seen under either condition in the mutant. Glucose
exhaustion
provoked the (p)ppGpp accumulation response in both the wild type and the rel(Seq) insertion mutant, consistent with the block of net RNA accumulation in both strains. Although the source of (p)ppGpp synthesis during glucose
exhaustion
remains to be determined, these findings reinforce the idea entertained previously that rel(Seq) fulfils functions that reside separately in the paralogous reL4 and spoT genes of Escherichia coli. Analysis of (p)ppGpp accumulation patterns was complicated by finding an unknown phosphorylated compound that comigrated with ppGpp under two standard thin-layer chromatography conditions. Unlike ppGpp, this compound did not adsorb to charcoal and did not accumulate appreciably during isoleucine deprivation. Like ppGpp, the unknown compound did accumulate during energy source
starvation
.
...
PMID:Characterization of the stringent and relaxed responses of Streptococcus equisimilis. 909 65
Wild-type cells of the budding yeast Saccharbmyces cerevisiae arrest in G1 upon nutrient
exhaustion
. Cell cycle arrest requires the WHI2 gene since whi2 mutants continue to divide and become abnormally small as nutrients are depleted. Here we show that CLN1 and CLN2 transcript levels in a whi2 strain are higher during exponential growth, and persist longer upon
starvation
, than in an isogenic wild-type strain. In contrast to CLN1 and CLN2, CLN3 levels declined only at very high cell density and were unaffected by the whi2 mutation. Elevated CLN expression is sufficient to explain the whi2 phenotype since ectopic expression of CLN1 in a nutrient-depleted culture caused cells to continue dividing and interfered with the acquisition of heat resistance. These observations show that, either directly or indirectly, Whi2 negatively regulates G1 cyclin expression. Interestingly extremely high levels of Cln1 induced filamentous growth upon nutrient deprivation, suggesting a direct connection between G1 cyclin activity and morphological responses to poor nutrient conditions.
...
PMID:Deregulation of CLN1 and CLN2 in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae whi2 mutant. 921 35
Prolonged penile prolapse in horses has been reported in association with administration of phenothiazine tranquilizers, trauma, neuropathies, severe general debilitation or
exhaustion
,
starvation
, rabies, herpes myeloencephalitis, equine infectious anemia, and purpura hemorrhagica. A 5-year-old gelding was admitted for treatment of prolonged penile prolapse of 12 days' duration that developed after acepromazine maleate was administered to allow examination of a laceration that had resulted in severe blood loss. The horse was sedated, and the penis was replaced in the preputial cavity by use of a combination of massage and bandaging. Treatment was successful, and recovery was complete.
...
PMID:Persistent penile prolapse associated with acute blood loss and acepromazine maleate administration in a horse. 929 Aug 25
We investigated the survival of Enterococcus faecalis following
starvation
provoked by energy source glucose
exhaustion
. Inhibition of protein synthesis by chloramphenicol before 3 h of
starvation
resulted in a dramatic decrease in viable bacteria. Antibiotic treatment of cells after 3 or 6 h of
starvation
had a progressively lesser influence on bacterial survival. During the first 24 h of deprivation, a total of 42 proteins were identified as glucose-
starvation
-inducible; 4 temporal classes of proteins (A, B, C and D) were defined in relation to their enhanced synthesis after glucose
exhaustion
. Our results show that proteins from the two early classes (A and B) seem to be the most important for long-term survival in E. faecalis. One protein of each of these classes was analysed at the molecular level. The N-terminal sequence of one of them, belonging to class A, showed strong homology with the N-terminal sequence of carbamate kinase from Streptococcus faecium. This enzyme could be implicated in the development of alternative metabolic pathways of energy production and could be compared to the Cst proteins of Escherichia coli.
...
PMID:Glucose starvation response in Enterococcus faecalis JH2-2: survival and protein analysis. 940 2
In July 1995 about 15,000 people attempted to walk from the enclave of Srebrenica to free territory in Bosnia. Two-thirds were captured or killed. Many of the remainder experienced hallucinations on the march, leading them to believe they were the victims of chemical weapons. This paper reports extended structured interviews with 35 survivors, including three doctors, carried out a year later on behalf of Human Right Watch. The literature on the likeliest CW agent, 3-quinuclidinyl benzilate (BZ), and on stress as a cause of hallucinations, is reviewed. While CW exposure cannot be ruled out, it is concluded that the hallucinations can be ascribed to the consequence of multiple stresses--artillery attacks,
exhaustion
due to lack of sleep,
starvation
, thirst and the effects of drinking unpurified water.
...
PMID:Surviving the impossible: the long march from Srebrenica. An investigation of the possible use of chemical warfare agents. 963 68
The rhizosphere is a continuously fluctuating environment in which severe stresses are put on its inhabitants, and glutathione, a reducing tripeptide, and related compounds probably have important roles in cellular protection. In the present study the metabolism of glutathione was examined in rhizobacteria subjected to stress. The plant-growth-promoting rhizobacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens 5.014 and its mutant 5-2/4 were exposed to
starvation
, either by resuspension or
exhaustion
, and to cadmium. Glutathione levels, cell protein, and viable count were determined and compared in different conditions. Both
starvation
and cadmium exposure decreased the amount of glutathione in the cell. No changes of the glutathione concentration in the medium were observed with or without the presence of rhizobacteria, indicating that there was no transport over the cell membrane. The glutathione levels within the rhizobacteria may give valuable information on how different stresses affect the bacteria. In this study, the involvement of glutathione in the increased stress resistance earlier observed in nutrient-starved P. fluorescens was not supported. The concentration of bacterial glutathione is suggested as a possible marker for rhizosphere competence, which, however, needs to be further evaluated with several strains of rhizobacteria.
...
PMID:Rhizobacterial glutathione levels as affected by starvation and cadmium exposure. 976 8
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