Influence of multiple injections of vitamin E on intramuscular collagen and bone characteristics in suckling lambs. (33/1958)

We studied the influence of vitamin E on intramuscular collagen characteristics and on metacarpal growth plate evolution in suckling lambs. Twenty-four 5-d-old Ile de France suckling male lambs were divided into four equal weight groups, and weekly i.m. injections of DL-alpha-tocopheryl acetate (Control group, 0 IU; Group 1, 625 IU; Group 2, 1,000 IU; and Group 3, 1,500 IU) were given until the lambs were 33 d old. Blood samples were withdrawn for plasma alpha-tocopherol, cholesterol, and triglyceride analyses when the lambs were slaughtered at 40 d of age. Hot carcass weight, metacarpal and metatarsal bone characteristics, and metacarpal growth plate width were measured. After 24 h at 2 to 4 degrees C, semitendinosus muscles were removed for intramuscular collagen analyses. Weight was not influenced by treatment, but lambs in Group 1 had a higher (P < .01) intramuscular collagen content than the other groups. A positive quadratic correlation was found between total collagen and vitamin E doses (r = .511; P < .05). Amount and percentage of soluble collagen increased in muscles of all three vitamin E-treated groups compared with the control group. However, hydroxylysyl pyridinoline concentration decreased with vitamin E injection, but the difference compared to control lambs was only significant for the group injected with 1,000 IU. Amount of soluble collagen was strongly correlated to total collagen concentration (r = .879; P < .0001). It was also related to the alpha-tocopherol/(cholesterol + triglycerides) ratio in plasma (r = .431; P < .04). However, the correlation between soluble collagen percentage and alpha-tocopherol concentration in plasma was not significant (r = .369; P < .08). Bone length, weight, and diameter did not change, but the thickness of metacarpal growth plate increased as the DL-alpha-tocopheryl acetate dose increased; in Groups 2 and 3, the growth plate was significantly wider than in Group 1 and the controls. Growth plate width correlated with alpha-tocopherol/(cholesterol + triglycerides) ratio in plasma (r = .481; P < .02).  (+info)

Unusual folded conformation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide bound to flavin reductase P. (34/1958)

The 2.1 A resolution crystal structure of flavin reductase P with the inhibitor nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) bound in the active site has been determined. NAD adopts a novel, folded conformation in which the nicotinamide and adenine rings stack in parallel with an inter-ring distance of 3.6 A. The pyrophosphate binds next to the flavin cofactor isoalloxazine, while the stacked nicotinamide/adenine moiety faces away from the flavin. The observed NAD conformation is quite different from the extended conformations observed in other enzyme/NAD(P) structures; however, it resembles the conformation proposed for NAD in solution. The flavin reductase P/NAD structure provides new information about the conformational diversity of NAD, which is important for understanding catalysis. This structure offers the first crystallographic evidence of a folded NAD with ring stacking, and it is the first enzyme structure containing an FMN cofactor interacting with NAD(P). Analysis of the structure suggests a possible dynamic mechanism underlying NADPH substrate specificity and product release that involves unfolding and folding of NADP(H).  (+info)

Length of pregnancy in African Americans: validation of a new predictive rule. (35/1958)

This study evaluated whether a new predictive rule is more accurate for estimating the length of pregnancy in African Americans than Nagele's rule, the accepted standard. After identifying women in early pregnancy, telephone interviews were conducted to obtain information about 16 previously established determinants of gestational length. Based on these data, a linear multivariate regression model was used to predict an estimated delivery date (EDD) for each mother. In addition, the EDD was determined using Nagele's rule. Later, the actual delivery date was compared with the EDD predicted by the new rule and with the EDD predicted by Nagele's rule. Each pregnancy was assigned to its better prediction group, either the new rule's group or the Nagele's rule group. Fifty-seven pregnancies were identified prospectively and monitored. The new rule predicted the actual delivery date more accurately in 66% (37/56) of pregnancies, Nagele's rule was a better predictor in 34% (19/56) of pregnancies, and both rules were equally accurate in predicting the delivery date for one pregnancy. The new rule was more precise than Nagele's rule (P = .022) when the binomial distribution was used. When using the linear regression model rule, a more accurate EDD can be determined for African-American women. Moreover, it is possible to predict the risk of preterm delivery (those occurring > 3 weeks earlier than the EDD).  (+info)

Improved quantitation of DNA curvature using ligation ladders. (36/1958)

It is often desirable to estimate accurately the local shape of DNA molecules. Such measurements are useful in understanding the intrinsic contribution of DNA sequence to curvature, as well as in assessing the effects of chemical modifications. We have been investigating the effects of asymmetric phosphate neutralization on DNA shape using the well-characterized ligation ladder approach developed by Crothers and co-workers [D.M. Crothers and J.Drak (1992) Meth. Enzymol.,212, 46-71]. This technique is remarkably sensitive to differences in DNA shape. We now report a general quantitative assay of DNA curvature that we have validated using a set of phased A(5)tract standards. This approach allows simultaneous estimation of helix axis deflection magnitude and direction when a test sequence is monitored in at least three phasings relative to a reference A(5-6)tract in short DNA duplexes. Analysis using this improved approach confirms our published data on DNA curvature due to electrostatic effects.  (+info)

Role of transurethral resection of the prostate in population-based prostate cancer incidence rates. (37/1958)

The extensive pool of asymptomatic prostate disease in the population, which increases substantially with age, suggests that the frequent use of transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) in recent decades has had a large effect on prostate cancer incidence. The authors identified the effect of TURP-detected prostate cancer on the observed incidence rates between 1973 and 1993 for men aged 65 years and older. They linked population-based cancer registry data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program to Medicare records between 1986 and 1993 to determine whether a TURP occurred sufficiently close to the time of a prostate cancer diagnosis for them to assume that it led to the diagnosis. TURP-detected cases prior to 1986 were calculated using an indirect method that involved multiplying the TURP procedure rate in the general population (from the National Hospital Discharge Survey) by estimates of the proportion of TURPs resulting in a prostate cancer diagnosis (from Medicare data and the literature). TURP explained much of the observed increase in overall prostate cancer incidence between 1973 and 1986 and possibly all of it in men aged 70 years and older. However, its influence on the trend and overall magnitude of the rates diminished between 1987 and 1993. The changing role of TURP in detecting prostate cancer is attributed to changes in medical technology and screening practices. The declining influence of TURP on prostate cancer incidence is likely to have continued beyond the study period due to the recent introduction and increasing use of medications for treating obstructive uropathy.  (+info)

Kinetic modeling of N-[11C]methylpiperidin-4-yl propionate: alternatives for analysis of an irreversible positron emission tomography trace for measurement of acetylcholinesterase activity in human brain. (38/1958)

N-[11C]Methylpiperidin-4-yl propionate ([11C]PMP) is a substrate for hydrolysis by acetylcholinesterase (AChE). This work evaluates kinetic analysis alternatives for estimation of relative AChE activity using dynamic positron emission tomography (PET) studies of [11C]PMP. The PET studies were performed on three groups of subjects: (1) 12 normal volunteer subjects, aged 20 to 45 years, who received a single intravenous injection of 16 to 32 mCi of [11C]PMP; (2) six subjects, aged 21 to 44 years, who received two 16-mCi injections of [11C]PMP (baseline and visual stimulation, respectively); and (3) five subjects, aged 24 to 40 years, who received two 16-mCi injections separated by 200 minutes (baseline and after a 1-hour constant infusion of 1.5 mg of physostigmine, respectively). Dynamic acquisition consisted of a 17-frame sequence over 80 minutes. All analysis methods were based on a first-order kinetic model consisting of two tissue compartments with the parameter k3, representing PMP hydrolysis, being the index of AChE activity. Four different schemes were used to estimate k3: (1) an unconstrained non-linear least-squares fit estimating blood-brain barrier transport parameters, K1 and k2, in addition to the hydrolysis rate constant k3; (2) and (3), two methods of constraining the fit by fixing the volume of distribution of free tracer (DVfree); and (4), a direct estimation of k3 without use of an arterial input function based on the shape of the tissue time-activity curve alone. Results showed that k3 values from the unconstrained fitting and no input methods were estimated with similar accuracy, whereas the two methods using DVfree constraints yielded similar results. The authors conclude that the optimal analysis method for [11C]PMP differs as a function of AChE activity. All four methods gave precise measures of k3 in regions with low AChE activity (approximately 10% coefficient of variation in cortex), but surprisingly, with unconstrained methods yielding estimates with lower variability than constrained methods. In regions with moderate to high AChE activity, constrained methods were required to yield meaningful estimates and were superior to the unconstrained methods.  (+info)

Lactobacillus salivarius CTC2197 prevents Salmonella enteritidis colonization in chickens. (39/1958)

A rifampin-resistant Lactobacillus salivarius strain, CTC2197, was assessed as a probiotic in poultry, by studying its ability to prevent Salmonella enteritidis C-114 colonization in chickens. When the probiotic strain was dosed by oral gavage together with S. enteritidis C-114 directly into the proventriculus in 1-day-old Leghorn chickens, the pathogen was completely removed from the birds after 21 days. The same results were obtained when the probiotic strain was also administered through the feed and the drinking water apart from direct inoculation into the proventriculus. The inclusion of L. salivarius CTC2197 in the first day chicken feed revealed that a concentration of 10(5) CFU g(-1) was enough to ensure the colonization of the gastrointestinal tract of the birds after 1 week. However, between 21 and 28 days, L. salivarius CTC2197 was undetectable in the gastrointestinal tract of some birds, showing that more than one dose would be necessary to ensure its presence till the end of the rearing time. Freeze-drying and freezing with glycerol or skim milk as cryoprotective agents, appeared to be suitable methods to preserve the probiotic strain. The inclusion of the L. salivarius CTC2197 in a commercial feed mixture seemed to be a good way to supply it on the farm, although the strain showed sensitivity to the temperatures used during the feed mixture storage and in the chicken incubator rooms. Moreover, survival had been improved after several reinoculations in chicken feed mixture.  (+info)

The association between state housing policy and lead poisoning in children. (40/1958)

OBJECTIVES: This study examined the effect of an active program of household lead paint hazard abatement, applied over 22 years, on childhood lead poisoning in Massachusetts. METHODS: A small areas analysis was used to compare screening blood lead levels of children in Worcester County, Mass (n = 27,590), with those in Providence County, RI (n = 19,071). Data were collapsed according to census tract. RESULTS: The percentage of children with lead poisoning (blood lead level > or = 20 micrograms/dL [Pe20]) was, on average, 3 times higher in Providence County census tracts (3.2% vs 0.9% in Worcester County census tracts, P < .0001), despite similar percentages of pre-1950s housing in both counties. The ratio of Pe20 in Providence vs Worcester County census tracts was 2.2 (95% confidence interval = 1.8, 2.7), after adjustment for differences in housing, sociodemographic, and screening characteristics. This estimate was robust to alternative regression methods and sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Massachusetts policy, which requires lead paint abatement of children's homes and places liability for lead paint poisoning on property owners, may have substantially reduced childhood lead poisoning in that state.  (+info)