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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Despite advances in the neuroimaging of the brain, an accurate diagnosis of intrinsic lesion of the brain requires tissue sampling and histological verification. Seventy-one patients with intraparenchymal lesion of the brain underwent CT or MRI-directed stereotactic biopsy at Okayama University Hospital between June, 1987 and March, 1995. There were 32 men and 39 women whose ages ranged between 7 and 78 years (mean 46.1 years). All patients underwent preoperative cerebral angiography, high resolution contrast enhanced CT and MRI. The lesions were located in the hemisphere in 40 cases, the thalamus or basal ganglia in 14, the midline (corpus callosum or ventricle) in 11, the pineal region in 4, the suprasellar in one and multiple sites in one. A Brown-Roberts-Wells (BRW) CT-directed stereotactic system was used for biopsy under CT guidance. For MRI-directed biopsies a prototype modification of the BRW frame was employed. Target localization was performed using either CT or MRI. Usually one or two targets within the lesion were chosen and target coordinates were calculated using the CT or MRI scan soft ware. Positive diagnosis was obtained in 67 cases and the accuracy of the histological diagnosis was 94.4%. There were 53 gliomas, 4 metastasis, 5 germinomas, 3 malignant lymphomas, one pineoblastoma, one infarction and 4 negative biopsies. Bleeding as a complication due to stereotactic intervention occurred in one patient (1.4%). To patients with potentially inoperable lesions or lesions which might be best treated by chemotherapy or irradiation, modern techniques of neurosurgery now offer the option of precise stereotactic biopsy through small twist-drill burr holes as opposed to open biopsy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Image guided stereotactic biopsy for brain tumors: experience of 71 cases]. 747 99

A simple computed tomography- (CT) or magnetic resonance (MR) imaging-guided stereotactic method for guided microsurgical resection of either deep-seated gliomas or tumors adjacent to an eloquent area is described. The technique employs the Brown-Roberts-Wells stereotactic system and twist drills, 2.7 mm in diameter, for the stereotactic placement of 2.4 mm diameter scaled guidance catheters through the calvaria. In a patient with a deep-seated small glioma, less than 2 cm diameter, one catheter was implanted into the center of the enhanced mass through the cerebral cortex. In the other 14 patients, three to six catheters were used which made the tumor border clearer. After implantation of the guidance catheters, the stereotactic frame was removed and a standard open craniotomy performed. Target localization is not affected by brain movement, which is inevitable during open surgery. The tumor involved the frontal lobe in eight patients, the parietal lobe in two, and the thalamus in five. In all cases the lesion was quickly localized and radical removal was achieved. Neurological complications occurred in only one patient who suffered transient hemiparesis after the resection of a lesion in the pyramidal tract. The results demonstrate that microsurgery combined with CT- or MR imaging-guided stereotactic placement of guidance catheters is a new option for surgery of deep-seated gliomas or tumors adjacent to an eloquent area.
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PMID:Resection of deep-seated gliomas using neuroimaging for stereotactic placement of guidance catheters. 777 Jan 8

In the last step of the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle the initial state is regenerated from the O intermediate in an essentially unidirectional reaction. Comparison of the rate of this photocycle step and the rate of deprotonation of Asp-85 in pH jump experiments with various site-specific mutants indicates that recovery of the initial state is influenced by (1) residues such as Glu-204 that affect deprotonation of Asp-85 and (2) residues such as Leu-93 that contact the retinal and therefore must affect its thermal reisomerization from 13-cis to all-trans as suggested by Delaney, Schweiger, and Subramaniam (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 92, 11120-11124, 1995). These results, together with FTIR spectra (Kandori, Hatanaka, Yamazaki, Needleman, Brown, Richter, Lanyi, & Maeda, manuscript in preparation) of the last intermediate in the photocycles of representatives of the two kinds of mutants, E204Q and L93M, suggest the following sequence of events: reisomerization of the retinal from 13-cis to an all-trans configuration that contains a twisted chain (with high amplitude hydrogen out-of-plane vibrational bands) triggers proton transfer from Asp-85 to Glu-204 or directly to the extracellular surface, and the proton transfer in turn triggers relaxation of the twist in the retinal. The involvement of the proton transfer in the kinetics of this sequence suggests the reason for the unidirectionality of the overall reaction: upon reisomerization of the retinal the very low pKa of Asp-85 in the unphotolyzed protein is reestablished and this residue thereby becomes a good proton donor.
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PMID:Relationship of retinal configuration and internal proton transfer at the end of the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. 895 99

A generalized Rapini-Papoular-type anchoring energy formula [J. Phys. (Paris) Colloq. 30, C4-54 (1969)] with two coupling constants is established through a second-order spherical-harmonic expansion. Using this formula, we analyze the threshold and saturation properties of twisted nematic devices with unidirectional planar anchorage, assuming that the azimuthal and polar anchoring strengths are both finite and distinct from each other. We also discuss the voltage-controlled-twist effect [G. P. Bryan-Brown et al., Nature (London) 392, 365 (1998)]. It is shown that the predicted behavior is consistent with the experimental observations.
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PMID:Analysis of weak-anchoring effect in nematic liquid crystals 1108 8

[structures: see text] A gas-phase B3LYP/6-31+G(d) study of substituent effects on the stereochemistry of both intramolecular Diels-Alder (IMDA) reactions of 9-E- and 9-Z-substituted pentadienyl acrylates and intermolecular Diels-Alder (DA) reactions between butadiene and monosubstituted alkenes and 3-substituted acrylates is reported and involves the calculation of 230 transition structures. It was found that, although exo ("anti-Alder") addition of monosubstituted ethenes to butadiene is the norm, Alder endo selectivity is more widely predicted for 3-substituted methyl acrylate dienophiles, and this was explained in terms of secondary orbital interactions (SOIs). Whereas cis/trans selectivity for IMDA reactions involving 9-E-substituted pentadienyl acrylates generally follows the normal pattern found for the corresponding intermolecular DA reactions, the 9-Z-substituted stereoisomers generally displayed trans selectivity that was much stronger than can be attributed to effects of the isolated substituent. This is strikingly so with unsaturated electron-withdrawing substituents whose endo selectivities, displayed in intermolecular DA reactions, are reversed in the IMDA reactions of pentadienyl acrylates. The origin of this anomalous Z-effect is explained in terms of the twist-mode asynchronicity concept of Brown and Houk. These ideas are used to explain the stereochemical outcomes of IMDA reactions of other triene systems.
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PMID:On the origin of cis/trans stereoselectivity in intramolecular Diels-Alder reactions of substituted pentadienyl acrylates: a comprehensive density functional study. 1635 7

Many recent studies have raised interest in the nuclear associations of coregulated genes from different chromosomes, often evoking interpretations of gene-gene interactions, communication, and even "romance." However, in some cases, the associations may be indirect and infrequent and may reflect the segregation of active and inactive genes into different nuclear compartments. The study by Brown et al. (see p. 1083 of this issue) reports that the apparent association of erythroid genes is not a direct interaction nor colocalization to one tiny transcription factory but arises as a result of the known clustering of many active genes with larger splicing factor-rich speckles (a.k.a., SC35-defined domains). This clustering appears largely stochastic but is impacted by the chromosomal neighborhood of the gene as well as its transcriptional status. The study adds a new twist by examining the same gene in a foreign chromosomal context, providing evidence that this impacts a gene's propensity to form gene-domain (or apparent gene-gene) associations within nuclei.
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PMID:Gene associations: true romance or chance meeting in a nuclear neighborhood? 1880 24

Brown fat is specialized for energy expenditure, a process that is principally controlled by the transcriptional coactivator PGC-1alpha. Here, we describe a molecular network important for PGC-1alpha function and brown fat metabolism. We find that twist-1 is selectively expressed in adipose tissue, interacts with PGC-1alpha, and is recruited to the promoters of PGC-1alpha's target genes to suppress mitochondrial metabolism and uncoupling. In vivo, transgenic mice expressing twist-1 in the adipose tissue are prone to high-fat-diet-induced obesity, whereas twist-1 heterozygous knockout mice are obesity resistant. These phenotypes are attributed to their altered mitochondrial metabolism in the brown fat. Interestingly, the nuclear receptor PPARdelta not only mediates the actions of PGC-1alpha but also regulates twist-1 expression, suggesting a negative-feedback regulatory mechanism. These findings reveal an unexpected physiological role for twist-1 in the maintenance of energy homeostasis and have important implications for understanding metabolic control and metabolic diseases.
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PMID:Twist-1 is a PPARdelta-inducible, negative-feedback regulator of PGC-1alpha in brown fat metabolism. 1934 81

Most microorganisms maintain strict control of nutrient assimilation pathways to ensure that they preferentially use compounds that generate the most energy or are most efficiently catabolized. In doing so, they avoid potentially inefficient conflicts between parallel catabolic and metabolic pathways. The regulation of carbon source utilization in a wide array of bacterial and fungal species involves both transcriptional and posttranscriptional mechanisms, and while the details can vary significantly, carbon catabolite control is widely conserved. In many fungi, the posttranslational aspect (carbon catabolite inactivation [CCI]) involves the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of catabolic enzymes for poor carbon sources when a preferred one (glucose) becomes available. A recent article presents evidence for a surprising exception to CCI in the fungal pathogen Candida albicans, an organism that makes use of gluconeogenic carbon sources during infection (D. Sandai, Z. Yin, L. Selway, D. Stead, J. Walker, M. D. Leach, I. Bohovych, I. V. Ene, S. Kastora, S. Budge, C. A. Munro, F. C. Odds, N. A. Gow, and A. J. Brown, mBio 3[6]:e00495-12). In vitro, addition of glucose to cells grown in a poor carbon source rapidly represses transcripts encoding gluconeogenic and glyoxylate cycle enzymes, such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (Pck1p) and isocitrate lyase (Icl1p), in both C. albicans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yet, uniquely, the C. albicans proteins persist, permitting parallel assimilation of multiple carbon sources, likely because they lack consensus ubiquitination sites found in the yeast homologs. Indeed, the yeast proteins are rapidly degraded when expressed in C. albicans, indicating a conservation of the machinery needed for CCI. How this surprising metabolic twist contributes to fungal commensalism or pathogenesis remains an open question.
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PMID:Carbon catabolite control in Candida albicans: new wrinkles in metabolism. 2323 17

Plants are constantly challenged by a wide range of pathogens and have therefore evolved an array of mechanisms to defend against them. In response to these defense systems, pathogens have evolved strategies to avoid recognition and suppress plant defenses (Brown and Tellier, 2011). Three recent reports dealing with the resistance of rice to Xanthomonas oryzae have added a new twist to our understanding of this fascinating co-evolutionary arms race (Ji et al., 2016; Read et al., 2016; Triplett et al., 2016). They show that pathogens also develop sophisticated effector mimics to trick recognition.
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PMID:Effector Mimics and Integrated Decoys, the Never-Ending Arms Race between Rice and Xanthomonas oryzae. 2840 Jul 86