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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
Rec
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58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A herd of lactating British Friesian cows was divided into two equal groups. After 14 days during which all the cows had free access to water one group (restricted) was allowed only 50 per cent of the voluntary water intake of the other group (control). After four days when the experiment was terminated, the milk yield of the restricted group had fallen to 74 per cent of that of the control group and their mean body-weight was reduced by 14 per cent. In the restricted group there were significant increases in the concentrations of urea, sodium, total protein and
copper
in serum, in the osmolality of serum, in the plasma activities of the enzymes creatine kinase and glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase and in the packed cell volume of blood. The restricted cows behaved very aggressively around their water trough and spent more time in its vicinity. They spent less time lying down than the cows of the control group and some of them were not seen to drink and were withdrawn from the experiment before the end of four days. In a second experiment half the herd was allowed approximately 90 per cent of the water intake of the control group for 14 days. Decreases in milk yield and body-weight and changes in blood composition were much smaller and difficult to detect. However, changes in behaviour were still easily recognised although not as marked as in the first experiment.
Vet
Rec
1980 Jun 28
PMID:Effect of reduced water intake by lactating dairy cows on behaviour, milk yield and blood composition. 719 26
By deep-etching and rotary replication of unfixed, non-cryoprotected tissue frozen on a helium-cooled
copper
block, previously undemonstrable organellar surfaces and intramembranous structures can be examined. Among the more remarkable features of mammalian spermatozoa thus prepared are the highly ordered particulate arrays on the surface of the mitochondrial outer membrane. In the midpiece of the sperm, mitochondria curl around dense fibers and the axoneme. The surface of the mitochondrion that faces the plasmalemma carries closely packed rods in haphazard dispersement, composed of two to four 70-to 80-A particles, less than 20 A apart, while the concave aspect of the organelle contains rods in stepladder pattern. These ladders are parallel, with their particles in neighboring rungs apparently in register at a 40--45 degree angle relative to the mitochondrial axis. This organizational disparity between the convex and concave surfaces of the organelle not only affords evidence of a new mitochondrial substructure, but represents a type of topographical heterogeneity rarely found except within specialized areas of the plasma membrane. Other novel findings in the sperm cell include the observation of "lipid" tracts flanking intramembranous particle-strands in the plasmalemma of the cytoplasmic droplet, and a gridiron design on the cytoplasmic faces of the droplet's microcisternae, as well as both within and atop its plasma membrane--a motif consistent with the presence of exocytotic or endocytotic activity in this portion of the cell. Additional recent observations are the differing internal and external periodicities of axonemal microtubules and the subunit structure of rectangles on the tail surface overlying the intramembranous particles of the zipper.
Anat
Rec
1981 Feb
PMID:Orderly particle arrays on the mitochondrial outer membrane in rapidly-frozen sperm. 721 18
The oral administration of a small dose of cupric oxide "needles" (CuOn), providing 0.5 g
copper
, to hypocupraemic ewes maintained on a
copper
-deficient diet alleviated hypocupraemia for 111 days when the diet was supplemented with molybdenum and sulphate and for 301 days when the diet was not supplemented. The same amount of
copper
given as cupric sulphate was approximately half as effective. The administration of a large dose of CuOn, providing 40 g
copper
, to hypocupraemic steers and heifers alleviated hypocupraemia for not less than 41 days, at which time a substantial reserve of
copper
(428 mg) remained in the liver. The absorbability of
copper
in CuOn was estimated to be 8.3 per cent and 3.8 per cent (depending on diet) for sheep. It was calculated that enough absorbable
copper
could be provided in a single dose to meet the net
copper
requirements of ewes for several years. This new form of
copper
therapy demands a totally different approach from that associated with parenteral
copper
usage.
Vet
Rec
1981 May 09
PMID:Effectiveness of orally administered cupric oxide needles in alleviating hypocupraemia in sheep and cattle. 725 28
The mean (+/- sd) liver
copper
level of 186 red deer (Cervus elaphus) (87 stags and 99 hinds) on the island of Rhum was 51.26 +/- 44.1 ppm dry matter. The level found in the south-east part of the island was significantly higher than elsewhere in hinds, but not in stags. Levels below 20 ppm dry matter, comparable to those found in cases of enzootic ataxia in deer parks, occurred in 18 stags and 20 hinds. Since enzootic ataxia has never been observed on Rhum, it is deduced that low
copper
status is not of itself the causal factor in that disease. No significant correlation was found between liver
copper
levels and stocking rate, age, carcase weight, antler weight, antler specific gravity, hind fertility, natural mortality or transferrin phenotype. It is concluded that above a low but perhaps critical level, the
copper
status of red deer merely reflects the dietary intake of that element.
Vet
Rec
1981 Aug 22
PMID:Copper status of red deer on the island of Rhum. 732 61
Methods for the control of induced or simple hypocupraemia in cattle were tested using a free-choice
copper
supplement or by adding a soluble
copper
salt to the water supply, using a specially designed proportioner. In molybdenum induced hypocupraemia the provision of a free-choice supplement containing 2500 mg Cu per kg resulted in only 10 out of 18 of the cows tested having adequate serum
copper
levels after a five month grazing period. Supplementation of water supplies to a level of 5 mg Cu per litre was effective in raising and maintaining serum
copper
at normal levels in a herd of low
copper
status when offered for a similar period. In experimentally produced molybdenosis, 2 to 3 mg per litre in drinking water corrected the associated diarrhoea and abolished the anomalous blood fractions found at high levels of molybdenum intake in three and five days respectively. It is suggested that water supplementation using a proportioner such as the one described is an effective way of combating both simple and induced hypocupraemia in grazing cattle.
Vet
Rec
1980 Apr 19
PMID:Control of hypocupraemia in cattle by addition of copper to water supplies. 737 93
Factors influencing the incidence of hypocupraemia and responses to
copper
therapy were investigated in three beef suckler herds calving in spring and early summer. On farm A hypocupraemia was most severe (plasma
copper
less than 0.4 mg per litre) in March for the cows and in October/November for their calves. On farm B plasma
copper
levels were 30 per cent lower in five to eight-year-old cows than in two-year-old cows in late November. Administration of
copper
(100 mg) in late pregnancy significantly increased plasma
copper
in the suckled calves on farm A but not in their dams after parturition. Growth of the calves was not increased. The alleviation of severe hypocupraemia on a third farm (C) by injecting the calf with
copper
did not improve growth rate. It is concluded that in some areas a severe seasonal hypocupraemia may be tolerated without loss of productivity.
Vet
Rec
1980 Apr 05
PMID:Some problems in assessing the physiological and economic significance of hypocupraemia in beef suckler herds. 741 19
The three-dimensional arrangement of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum in the red muscle fiber was studied both in thick sections of the rat diaphragm fixed in glutaraldehyde and impregnated with uranyl acetate followed by lead and
copper
citrate, and in thin sections of glutaraldehyde fixed tissue treated with ferrocyanide-reduced osmium. The mitochondria were located either at the periphery of the fiber, where they were spherical, or between the myofibrils, where they formed longitudinal columns of rectangular, slightly flattened elements. From both types of mitochondria, thin, elongated branches arose at right angles that formed transversely oriented mitochondrial pairs at the I band level. At the periphery of the fiber, the endoplasmic reticulum took the appearance of a subsarcolemmal network of tubular cisternae oriented parallel to the cell surface. In the juxtanuclear region, it was made up of spherical masses composed of tightly knitted tubules that were interconnected by more loosely anastomosed tubules. In between the myofibrils, it was composed of longitudinally oriented repetitive units whose structure varied according to their position in from of the A or I bands of the myofibrils. In front of the A band, the endoplasmic reticulum appeared as a single sheet of anastomotic tubules compressed between the adjacent myofibrils, whereas at the I band level, its tubular elements passed in front and behind the transverse expansions of the mitochondria to form an intricate ultilayered network in from of the Z line.
Anat
Rec
1980 May
PMID:Three-dimensional electron microscopy of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum in the red muscle fiber of the rat diaphragm. 742 5
Clinical and pathological findings from instances of ataxia in a group of wildebeeste (Connochaetes taurinus), two llamas (Llama glama) and one Arabian camel (Camelus dromedarius) are presented. Clinically, all the affected animals showed a non-febrile, progressive ataxia. Neuropathologically, Wallerian degeneration was diffuse in the spinal cord of the camel and llamas but was focal in the wildebeeste. Degeneration was present in the cervical dorsal roots in the wildebeeste and in the ventral nerve roots at all levels of the cord in the llamas. Peripheral nerve were affected in all the species. The possible roles of
copper
deficiency and plant poisons in the aetiology of the condition are discussed.
Vet
Rec
1980 Jul 05
PMID:Ataxia and spinal cord degeneration in llama, wildebeeste and camel. 743 34
The ultrastructural and oxidative metabolic effects of D-penicillamine were examined in hepatocytes of mice fed various concentrations of the drug for periods up to 11 days. In virtually all animals studied, membranous material in the form of whorls, sheaves, and irregular networks was observed in some bile canaliculi. In several mice a few mitochondria were substantially enlarged, with diameters of 4-6 micron. In other animals some mitochondria became quite elongated, measuring 10 micron in length but only 0.5 micron in width. Certain mitochondria had small deposits of dense material in their outer compartment. Lysosomes contained numerous small dense particles; aggregates of these particles were also observed free in the cytosol. Despite these alterations, the vast majority of hepatocytes showed no changes whatsoever. Study of isolated hepatic mitochondria derived from the experimental animals showed no alterations in oxidative metabolism. It may be concluded that, unlike other
copper
-chelating agents, D-penicillamine has little significant morphological and biochemical effect on mouse hepatocytes, even when its concentration exceeds standard clinical dosages.
Anat
Rec
1980 Jul
PMID:Ultrastructural and biochemical effects of D-penicillamine on mouse hepatocytes. 743 6
The antibacterial and antifungal properties of five 2,6-diacetylpyridine bis(acylhydrazones) (acyl:benzoyl, H2dapb; 2-aminobenzoyl, H2dapab; salicyloyl, H2daps; picolinoyl, H2dappc; 2-thenoyl, H2dapt) and of a series of metal complexes were investigated. The x-ray crystal structure of the [Cu(dapt)]2 complex was also determined. It consists of dimeric units in which both
copper
atoms have sixfold coordination. The evaluation of in vitro antimicrobial properties showed some compounds to exhibit good activity against Gram positive bacteria. In most cases, complexes showed a similar or reduced activity as compared to the ligand itself. Only the iron complexes were found to be more active than the chelating agent involved. None of the compounds showed any significant antifungal activity. The genotoxicity of the compounds described was studied in vitro with Bacillus subtilis
rec
-assay and Salmonella-microsome reversion assay. No DNA-damaging activity was detected in the Bacillus subtilis
rec
-assay. H2dapb, H2dapb, and H2dappc were active in the Salmonella test. In several cases, the genotoxic properties of the ligands disappeared in the complexes.
...
PMID:Antimicrobial and genotoxic activity of 2,6-diacetylpyridine bis(acylhydrazones) and their complexes with some first transition series metal ions. X-ray crystal structure of a dinuclear copper(II) complex. 787 34
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