Selective Criterion
Mostrando 13-24 de 24 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. Composition of bronchopulmonary secretions from patients with bronchiectasis.
Pulmonary function tests were carried out on 17 patients with bronchiectasis and six indices were selected to grade severity. Average concentrations of nine plasma proteins were determined by quantitative immunoelectrophoresis in specimens of sputum and serum from each patients. Wide patient-to-patient variation in concentration was encountered which appeare
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14. Remodeling of synaptic architecture during hippocampal "kindling".
The "kindling" phenomenon is associated with long-lasting facilitation of synaptic transmission. A possible mechanism of such facilitation could involve changes in the number of synaptic contacts. However, previous attempts to demonstrate a synaptic morphological alteration that could account for the long-term effects of kindling had failed, possibly due to
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15. Analysis of tests used to differentiate Trichophyton rubrum from Trichophyton mentagrophytes.
Differential identification of Trichophyton rubrum and Trichophyton mentagrophytes was evaluated by using the standard in vitro hair perforation test as a criterion for identification and comparing its effectiveness with that of nine other tests used to differentiate these two taxa. Correlation and multiple regression analysis showed that no single test or c
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16. Evaluation of 9-chloro-9-[4-(diethylamino)phenyl]- 9,10-dihydro-10-phenylacridine hydrochloride (C-390) in broth and agar media for identification of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Brain heart infusion broth and Mueller-Hinton agar containing the compound 9-chloro-9-[4-(diethylamino)phenyl]- 9,10-dihydro-10-phenylacridine hydrochloride (C-390) were evaluated as selective media for identifying Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Of the 192 Pseudomonas spp. and 68 additional oxidase-positive or glucose-nonfermenting gram-negative organisms tested, o
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17. Selective Toxicity of Diphtheria Toxin for Malignant Cells
Purified diphtheria toxin is shown to inhibit protein synthesis in Ehrlich-Lettré ascites carcinoma cells in vitro. Protein synthesis in Ehrlich-Lettré cells is at least 10,000 times more sensitive to toxin than protein synthesis in normal mouse spleen or thymus cells. This sensitivity correlates with the observation that Ehrlich-Lettré tumors regress in
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18. A mutant alpha subunit of Gi2 induces neoplastic transformation of Rat-1 cells.
In a recently discovered class of oncogenes, GTPase-inhibiting mutations constitutively activate alpha subunits of signal-transducing guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins). Somatic mutations in a subclass of endocrine tumors are found in the arginine-179 codon of the alpha subunit of Gi2 (alpha i2), creating the putative gip2 oncogene. We have tes
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19. Contribution of human short-wave cones to luminance and motion detection.
1. Human short-wave S cone signals are important for colour vision and here we examine whether the S cone signals also contribute to motion and luminance. 2. Detection was measured with moving patterns that selectively stimulated S cones-violet sine-wave gratings of 1 cycle deg-1 on an intense yellowish field. For rates up to 12 Hz, detection was governed by
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20. Streptomycin Dependence in Escherichia coli: Effects of Antibiotic Deprivation on Ribosomes
The inhibition of cell division and the ultimate loss of viability after removal of streptomycin from growing cultures of streptomycin-dependent bacteria are not the result of “unbalanced growth” or of the breakdown of ribosomes. The streptomycin-dependent strain of Escherichia coli K-12 studied continued to synthesize ribonucleic acid (RNA) and protein
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21. Demonstration that monocytes rather than lymphocytes are the insulin-binding cells in preparations of humah peripheral blood mononuclear leukocytes: implications for studies of insulin-resistant states in man.
Insulin receptors have been demonstrated on mononuclear leukocytes prepared by centrifugation of buffy coats from normal blood donors on Ficoll-Hypaque gradients. The cell type that specifically binds insulin in this mixture of lymphocytes and monocytes has never been clearly identified, although it was assumed to be the lymphocyte since this cell constitute
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22. Genetic Variation in Natural Populations of Five Drosophila Species and the Hypothesis of the Selective Neutrality of Protein Polymorphisms
We have studied genetic variation at 30–32 loci coding for enzymes in natural populations of five species of Drosophila. The average proportion of heterozygous loci per individual is 17.7 ± 0.4%. The average proportion of polymorphic loci per population is 69.2 ± 2.6% or 49.8 ± 2.2%, depending on what criterion of polymorphism is used. The following gen
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23. Activating mutations of the c-Ha-ras protooncogene in chemically induced hepatomas of the male B6C3 F1 mouse.
Activated c-Ha-ras protooncogenes have recently been identified in the DNA of some spontaneous hepatic tumors found in 2-year-old B6C3 F1 mice. Activation of c-Ha-ras has now been demonstrated in DNA from well-differentiated hepatomas initiated by a single dose of carcinogen given to male B6C3 F1 mice at 12 days of age. DNA from each of 25 hepatomas, induced
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24. Evidence of incomplete neural control of motor unit properties in cat tibialis anterior after self-reinnervation.
1. The mechanical, morphological and biochemical properties of single motor units from the anterior compartment of the tibialis anterior muscle in adult cats were studied six months after the nerve branches to that compartment were cut and resutured in close proximity to the muscle. 2. In these self-reinnervated muscles, the maximum tetanic tensions were low