Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this paper we describe the development and the early results of an MRI system designed specifically for imaging of the hand and wrist. The imager takes up little space, uses a small 0.1 Tesla water-cooled electro-magnet with a vertical magnetic field and a 15 cm air gap. The system is based on a PC micro-computer and an integrated image processing board. There is no need for a Faraday cage. The image resolution is less than 1 mm using a 128 x 128 matrix format for a typical slice thickness of 3 mm. It is possible to achieve a 0.2 mm per pixel spatial resolution when imaging the fingers.
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PMID:MRI of hand and wrist with a dedicated low field mini imager: preliminary report. 138 13

Evidence has been found for the existence water at the protein-lipid hydrophobic interface of the membrane proteins, gramicidin and apocytochrome C, using two related fluorescence spectroscopic approaches. The first approach exploited the fact that the presence of water in the excited state solvent cage of a fluorophore increases the rate of decay. For 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) and 1-palmitoyl-2-[[2-[4-(6-phenyl-trans-1,3,5- hexatrienyl)phenyl]ethyl]carbonyl]-3-sn-PC (DPH-PC), where the fluorophores are located in the hydrophobic core of the lipid bilayer, the introduction of gramicidin reduced the fluorescence lifetime, indicative of an increased presence of water in the bilayer. Since a high protein:lipid ratio was used, the fluorophores were forced to be adjacent to the protein hydrophobic surface, hence the presence of water in this region could be inferred. Cholesterol is known to reduce the water content of lipid bilayers and this effect was maintained at the protein-lipid interface with both gramicidin and apocytochrome C, again suggesting hydration in this region. The second approach was to use the fluorescence enhancement induced by exchanging deuterium oxide (D2O) for H2O. Both the fluorescence intensities of trimethylammonium-DPH, located in the lipid head group region, and of the gramicidin intrinsic tryptophans were greater in a D2O buffer compared with H2O, showing that the fluorophores were exposed to water in the bilayer at the protein-lipid interface. In the presence of cholesterol the fluorescence intensity ratio of D2O to H2O decreased, indicating a removal of water by the cholesterol, in keeping with the lifetime data. Altered hydration at the protein-lipid interface could affect conformation, thereby offering a new route by which membrane protein functioning may be modified.
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PMID:Hydration at the membrane protein-lipid interface. 138 44

Wheel-running rhythms were examined in male hamsters with access to 28% ethanol in lieu of water. One group was recorded in a light-dark (LD) cycle that was phase advanced by 8 h on three occasions separated by 23-27 days. On two of the three occasions, hamsters were subjected to a 2- to 3-h cage change procedure designed to stimulate wheel running, which accelerates the rate of reentrainment to 8-h advances. Ethanol and control hamsters showed no group differences in rhythm amplitude, entrained phase, or reentrainment rate. Both groups showed faster reentrainment in the cage change condition. A second group of hamsters recorded in constant dim showed a small but significant lengthening of the free-running period of their wheel-running rhythm when provided with a 28% ethanol solution. Wheel running decreased during ethanol access in this group. Voluntary ethanol consumption evidently can slow the circadian pacemaker regulating activity rhythms in hamsters but has no measurable effect on photic entrainment or pacemaker response to LD shifts or nonphotic manipulations (stimulated activity). Period lengthening may be secondary to decreased activity, but other period-activity correlations obtained did not reveal a strong association between these two variables.
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PMID:Ethanol and circadian rhythms in the Syrian hamster: effects on entrained phase, reentrainment rate, and period. 140 99

Restricting access to alcohol to a short period daily causes rats, in effect, to drink on command. They usually begin drinking alcohol immediately when it is first made available each day and consume a rather constant amount during each access period. The procedure thus has a variety of useful applications. The specific method reported here in detail provides continual access to food and water, but access to unflavored 10% ethanol solution only 1 h/d, all in the home cage, and produces mean alcohol intakes from 0.5-1.0 g/kg in the access hour.
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PMID:The limited access paradigm: description of one method. 141 71

Valinomycin, cyclo-[(L-Val-D-Hyv-D-Val-L-Lac)3-], was crystallized from aqueous dioxane solvent as a monohydrate complex in which water molecules were found within the ion-binding cavity of the ionophore: monoclinic P2(1), a = 14.377 (3), b = 41.554 (14), c = 14.080 (3) A, beta = 118.27 (2) degrees, Z = 4. There are two non-equivalent valinomycin-water complexes and three dioxane molecules in the asymmetric unit. The ionophore molecules adopt two similar but non-identical, octahedral, bracelet, cage conformations that are a consequence of two distinct ways in which the complexed water molecules can deform the normal octahedral coordinate geometry of the metal binding site. In the first complex the water molecule forms hydrogen donor bonds to the carbonyl oxygens of two L-valine residues on one facial side of the cavity, while in the second complex the water molecule is trigonal-planar coordinate and binds to two L-valine residues on one entrant face of the cavity plus a third D-valine residue from the opposite side of the cavity.
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PMID:Crystal structure of valinomycin-monohydrate cage complexes crystallized from dioxane. 142 20

Abnormalities of rib cage-abdominal motion are common in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but the basis of the abnormal motion has not been completely determined. Although airway obstruction has been shown to be a major factor in causing abnormal chest wall motion, the effect of hyperinflation (which has numerous adverse effects on respiratory muscle function) has not been systematically examined. We induced graded levels of hyperinflation in six healthy volunteers using continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) levels of 10, 20, and 30 cm H2O. Chest wall motion was measured by a calibrated inductive plethysmograph. Rib cage-abdominal asynchrony and paradox were quantitated by the Konno-Mead method of analysis. CPAP levels of 10, 20, and 20 cm H2O produced increases in end-expiratory lung volume of 0.98 +/- 0.14 (SE), 1.90 +/- 0.31, and 2.42 +/- 0.37 L, respectively (p < 0.0001). This corresponded to an increase in the ratio of functional residual capacity to predicted total lung capacity from 0.38 +/- 0.08 at baseline to 0.74 +/- 0.14 at 30 cm H2O CPAP-comparable to that seen in patients with COPD. Hyperinflation induced an increase in inspiratory abdominal paradox, 1.0 +/- 0.7% at baseline versus 3.6 +/- 1.7% at 30 cm H2O (p < 0.05), but this is unlikely to be clinically significant. A significant increase in asynchrony or rib cage paradox did not develop with hyperinflation. In conclusion, the primary factor contributing to abnormal chest wall motion in patients with COPD is likely to be increased airway resistance, and hyperinflation makes only a minor contribution.
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PMID:The effect of hyperinflation on rib cage-abdominal motion. 145 51

California has 12% of the U.S. population. In 1991, the newly diagnosed cancer cases in California represented 10% of all new cancer cases in the country, and the yearly toll was 10% of all cancer deaths. Relative to all new cancer cases in the U.S., California had 10, 9.8, 9.8, and 9.3% of breast, lung, prostate, and colorectal cancers, respectively. Because of its large population and cancer incidence, the epidemiology of cancer in California is of particular interest. Epidemiological factors reviewed in this article include ethnicity, lifestyle, occupation, and environmental conditions. Ethnic factors: There is an increased incidence of cervical and gallbladder cancer among Hispanic women, and of stomach cancer in Hispanic men and women. In U.S.-born Chinese men, the most prevalent cancers are those of the lung and colon, which is also seen in American white men. In U.S.-born Chinese women, there is an upward displacement of breast cancer incidence. In U.S.-born Japanese men and women, the mortality rate is closer to that of American whites. Life-style: Members of the Mormon Church and Seventh-Day Adventists have only 50% of the U.S. standardized mortality rate for cancer associated with smoking. Increased coffee consumption has been found to be associated with increased occurrence of colon and bladder cancer; alcohol use has been reported to have a positive association with colorectal cancer. The large AIDS population in San Francisco has a 144-fold odds ratio of Kaposi's sarcoma and a fivefold odds ratio of lymphoma when compared with the general U.S. population. Occupational factors: An increased incidence of mesothelioma in asbestos workers, of gastric cancer, skin cancer, and lymphoma in men working in dusty environments, and of astrocytoma in individuals with prolonged exposure to low-frequency electric and magnetic fields has been recorded. Environmental factors: The drinking-water pool in northern California is contaminated with asbestos of the serpentine type, which is associated with mesothelioma of the peritoneum and carcinoma of the lung, gallbladder, and pancreas. Petrochemical fumes in the heavily industrialized San Francisco Bay area have not been associated with an increased occurrence of cancer. No significant incidence in cancer has been noted in the counties surrounding the nuclear power plant at San Onofre during 18 years of close observation.
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PMID:Epidemiological factors of cancer in California. 146 11

The effects of wheel running on the food intake of rats, and on the extent to which rats defend their daily food intake against increases in the instrumental cost of food, were studied in a closed economy. Rats lived in cages that were attached to running wheels. Within each cage, water was freely available and lever pressing was required for access to food; a fixed number of presses was required for the delivery of a single food pellet. All cages were located in an environmental chamber where a 12-h light/dark cycle was continuously maintained. During stage I, the entrance to each running wheel was blocked and two series (series 1 and 2) of progressively increasing fixed ratios (FRs) of presses per pellet were imposed. Each FR was used for a single day. During stage II, the entrance to each wheel was unblocked and wheel running and food intake were allowed to stabilize. During stage III, the running wheels remained available and the FR was again increased (series 3). In stage I, increases in the FR reduced food intake proportionally more rapidly during the light than during the dark, and this reduction in the light was greater during series 1 than series 2. During stage II, food intake was transiently reduced during the first week of access to running wheels, but recovered by the end of the second week. During stage III, increases in the FR again reduced food intake proportionally more rapidly during the light than during the dark. Wheel running did not affect the extent to which food intake was reduced within light and dark periods.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The effects of wheel running, a light/dark cycle, and the instrumental cost of food on the intake of food in a closed economy. 148 63

A single crystal X-ray diffraction study of the title complex carried out at room temperature revealed space group P2(1), a = 21.199(12), b = 9.973(3), c = 15.271(8) A, beta = 110.87(3) degrees, V = 3017(3) A3, 4681 unique reflections with Fo greater than 1 sigma (Fo). The structure was refined to R = 0.069, resolution lambda/2sin theta max = 0.89 A. The crystal packing is of the cage type and is isomorphous to that of beta-cyclodextrin (beta CD) dodecahydrate. One 1,4-butanediol and approximately 1.25 water molecules are enclosed in each beta CD cavity. The hydroxyl groups of the 1,4-butanediol molecule are located at each end of the cavity and form hydrogen bonds with neighboring water and beta CD molecules. The flexible (CH2)4 moiety vibrates extensively in the central part of the cavity. Water molecules and hydroxyl groups are chelated between O-6 and O-5 of at least five glucose residues.
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PMID:A vibrating flexible chain in a molecular cage: crystal structure of the complex cyclomaltoheptaose (beta-cyclodextrin)-1,4-butanediol.6.25H2O. 152 80

Mice were housed in a cage with a maze. A water tap was placed at the entrance of the maze. The exit of the maze connected with another cage (home cage). Food was placed in the home cage. Three different multiple mazes (types 1-3) were placed. 1) Mice were housed for 10 h a day in the apparatus and then removed to a normal cage for fasting. One trial per day was carried out after fasting for 13 h. In each trial, a mouse was put at the entrance of the maze and then the number of errors and the time till it reached the home cage was counted. Mice reached a learning criterion at Trial 2. 2) Administering scopolamine (0.125-0.5 mg/kg) 30 min before Trial four disturbed the maze work dose dependently in a type 3 maze, the most complex maze among the three, but did not in type 1 and 2 mazes. 3) Administering scopolamine (0.25-1.0 mg/kg) 30 min before Trial 11 to the mouse of the type 3 maze did not disturb the maze work. These results show that a mouse housed in a cage with a maze learns the maze without explicit training and scopolamine can differentially effect performance based upon the degree of training.
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PMID:Mice housed in a cage with a maze learn the maze without explicit training. 152 33


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