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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
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28,634
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Although a variety of renal lesions may occur in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), a rare but aggressive form of focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis with capillary
collapse
has been considered a possible component of this disorder. It is manifested by heavy proteinuria and progression to renal failure in a short time. We studied renal biopsies from nine patients with HIV infection and the above clinical features and compared the renal tissues to biopsies from HIV-positive individuals with immune complex glomerulonephritis and to biopsies from patients with heroin abuse nephropathy. The HIV-associated nephropathy was characterized by a combination of lesions: focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis, often in an early stage of evolution and with prominent degenerative changes of visceral epithelium; tubular necrosis without identifiable nephrotoxic or hemodynamic etiology; interstitial edema; large plasma protein-containing tubular casts in all segments of the nephron associated with marked tubular dilatation; and widespread tubuloreticular structures in vascular endothelium. In contrast, neither the sclerosing glomerular changes nor the tubulointerstitial abnormalities were present in HIV-infected patients with immune complex glomerulonephritis. Similarly, the tubular and interstitial changes and widespread tubuloreticular structures were absent in heroin-abuse nephropathy. The lesions of HIV-associated nephropathy occurred in patients with AIDS,
AIDS-related complex
, and in individuals clinically asymptomatic for HIV infection. Their morphological features in asymptomatic patients are sufficiently specific to allow for accurate diagnosis of HIV infection.
...
PMID:HIV-associated nephropathy. A unique combined glomerular, tubular, and interstitial lesion. 307 May 50
We present results of a systematic high-resolution transmission electron microscopy study of the thermal evolution of bundled single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) subjected to approximately 4-h high-temperature heat treatment (HTT) in a vacuum at successively higher temperatures up to 2200 degrees C. We have examined purified SWNT material derived from the HiPCO and
ARC
processes. These samples were found to thermally evolve along very different pathways that we propose depend on three factors: (1) initial diameter distribution, (2) concomitant tightness of the packing of the tubes in a bundle, and (3) the bundle size. Graphitic nanoribbons (GNR) were found to be the dominant high-temperature filament in
ARC
material after HTT = 2000 degrees C; they were not observed in any heat-treated HiPCO material. The first two major steps in the thermal evolution of HiPCO and
ARC
material agree with the literature, i.e., coalescence followed by the formation of multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWNTs). However,
ARC
material evolves to bundled MWNTs, while HiPCO evolves to isolated MWNTs. In
ARC
material, we find that the MWNTs
collapse
into multishell GNRs. The thermal evolution of these carbon systems is discussed in terms of the diameter distribution, nanotube coalescence pathways, C-C bond rearrangement, diffusion of carbon and subsequent island formation, as well as the nanotube
collapse
driven by van der Waals forces.
...
PMID:Effect of the tube diameter distribution on the high-temperature structural modification of bundled single-walled carbon nanotubes. 1637 7
Innate immunity in corals is of special interest not only in the context of self-defense but also in relation to the establishment and
collapse
of their obligate symbiosis with dinoflagellates of the genus Symbiodinium. In innate immunity system of vertebrates, approximately 20 tripartite nucleotide oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptor proteins that are defined by the presence of a NAIP, CIIA, HET-E and TP1 (NACHT) domain, a C-terminal leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain, and one of three types of N-terminal effector domain, are known to function as the primary intracellular pattern recognition molecules. Surveying the coral genome revealed not only a larger number of NACHT- and related domain nucleotide-binding adaptor shared by APAF-1, R proteins, and CED-4 (NB-ARC)-encoding loci (~500) than in other metazoans but also surprising diversity of domain combinations among the coral NACHT/NB-
ARC
-containing proteins; N-terminal effector domains included the apoptosis-related domains caspase recruitment domain (CARD), death effector domain (DED), and Death, and C-terminal repeat domains included LRRs, tetratricopeptide repeats, ankyrin repeats, and WD40 repeats. Many of the predicted coral proteins that contain a NACHT/NB-
ARC
domain also contain a glycosyl transferase group 1 domain, a novel domain combination first found in metazoans. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that the NACHT/NB-
ARC
domain inventories of various metazoan lineages, including corals, are largely products of lineage-specific expansions. Many of the NACHT/NB-
ARC
loci are organized in pairs or triplets in the Acropora genome, suggesting that the large coral NACHT/NB-
ARC
repertoire has been generated at least in part by tandem duplication. In addition, shuffling of N-terminal effector domains may have occurred after expansions of specific NACHT/NB-
ARC
-repeat domain types. These results illustrate the extraordinary complexity of the innate immune repertoire of corals, which may in part reflect adaptive evolution to a symbiotic lifestyle in a uniquely complex and challenging environment.
...
PMID:The complex NOD-like receptor repertoire of the coral Acropora digitifera includes novel domain combinations. 2293 19