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Item Filling Jars to Measure Time(Sciendo, 10-2021) Le, Tiffany-Chau; Sarkar, Jyotirmoy; Mathematical Sciences, School of ScienceIf water is flowing at the same constant rate through each of H>3 hoses, so that any one hose will fill any one of J>2 available jars in exactly one hour, then what are the fillable fractions of a jar, and what are the measurable fractions of an hour? Learning to systematically answer such questions will not only equip readers to fluently use fractions, but also introduce or reintroduce them gently to the Queen of Mathematics – Number Theory.Item Prenatal diagnosis of cystinosis(1975-10) States, Beatrice; Blazer, Bonnie; Harris, Dorothy; Segal, StantonCystinosis was diagnosed in a small quantity of cultured amniotic cells from a 22-week-old fetus by a modified pulse-labeling technique in which intracellular 55Sl-cystine retention was measured. As a result of the above finding, the pregnancy was terminated by administration of prostaglandin. The diagnosis was confirmed when the nonprotien-free cystine cystine content of the kidney, liver, placenta, spleen, thymus, and gut, as well as that of a large amount of cultured amniotic cells, was found to be 100-fold higher than normal levels.Item Late-onset nonketotic hyperglycinemia and spinocerebellar degeneration(1979-06-01) Steiman, Gerald S.; Yudkoff, Marc; Berman, Peter H.; Blazer-Yost, Bonnie; Segal, StantonInvestigation of a 15-year old boy with progressive optic atrophy and spinocerebellar degeneration revealed elevated plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and urine glycine concentrations. During an oral glycine loading test, the patient's plasma glycine concentration rose to a higher level than control values, although the initial rate of rise was slower; there was no concomitant rise in the plasma serine concentration. An oral serine loading test resulted in a prompt rise of both glycine and serine serum concentrations. The renal glycine clearance was elevated, and the renal tubular glycine reabsorption was diminished. These findings of decreased intestinal uptake and increased renal tubular glycine clearance suggest that a generalized derangement of glycine entry into cells may account for the phenotypic manifestations of the disorder.Item Acetylation of albumin by low doses of aspirin(1981-08) Burch, John W.; Blazer-Yost, BonnieAspirin has a variety of pharmacologic actions, which are expressed at different doses of the drug. An effect on platelet function occurs at very low doses of aspirin (1,2). Indeed, a large number of clinical trials have been carried out to assess whether low to moderate doses of aspirin (180 to 1500 mg per day) taken prophylactically will affect the natural history of a variety of diseases in which thrombosis is thought to play a role (3).Item Aldosterone-induced proteins in renal epithelia(1982-10-28) Blazer-Yost, Bonnie; Geheb, Michael A.; Preston, Alan; Handler, Joel; Cox, MalcolmSimilar aldosterone-induced proteins have been demonstrated in two renal epithelia, the urinary bladder of the toad, Bufo marinus, and epithelia formed by cells of the A6 line derived from the kidney of the toad, Xenopus laevis. The proteins are induced along with the stimulation of Na+ transport but their synthesis is not dependent on Na+ transport per se. In view of the similar characteristics of the aldosterone-induced proteins in these two different epithelia, we suggest that they may have an important role in aldosterone-induced Na+ transport.Item Molecular basis of myosin assembly: coiled-coil interactions and the role of charge periodicities(1991-01) Atkinson, Simon J; Stewart, MurrayComplementation of alternating zones of positive and negative charge in the myosin rod enables molecules to interact in a number of ways. This accounts for the complexity of the molecular organisation of thick filaments. However, directed mutagenesis of expressed LMM cDNA indicated that charge zone complementation is not a major driving force in myosin polymerisation. Instead, it probably serves to prevent unfavourable interaction geometries.Item Expression in Escherichia coli of fragments of the coiled-coil rod domain of rabbit myosin: influence of different regions of the molecule on aggregation and paracrystal formation(1991-08) Atkinson, Simon J; Stewart, MurrayWe have expressed in Escherichia coli a cDNA clone corresponding broadly to rabbit light meromyosin (LMM) together with a number of modified polypeptides and have used this material to investigate the role of different aspects of molecular structure on the solubility properties of LMM. The expressed material was characterized biochemically and structurally to ensure that it retained the coiled-coil conformation of the native molecule. Full-length recombinant LMM retained the general solubility properties of myosin and, although soluble at high ionic strength, precipitated when the ionic strength was reduced below 0.3 M. Constructs in which the ‘skip’ residues (that disrupt the coiled-coil heptad repeat) were deleted had solubility properties indistinguishable from the wild type, which indicated that the skip residues did not play a major role in determining the molecular interactions involved in assembly. Deletions from the N terminus of LMM did not alter the solubility properties of the expressed material, but deletion of 92 residues from the C terminus caused a large increase in solubility at low ionic strength, indicating that a determinant important for interaction between LMM molecules was located in this region. The failure of deletions from the molecule's N terminus to alter its solubility radically suggested that the periodic variation of charge along the myosin rod may not be as important as proposed for determining the strength of binding between molecules and thus the solubility of myosin.Item Role of insulin and IGF1 receptors in proliferation of cultured renal proximal tubule cells(1992-02-03) Blazer-Yost, Bonnie; Watanabe, Melanie; Haverty, Thomas P.; Ziyadeh, Fuad N.We have used a murine proximal tubule cell line (MCT cells) to determine the presence and binding characteristics of insulin and IGF1 receptors and to correlate these parameters with the concentration-response relationships for ligand-induced cellular proliferation. Separate insulin and IGF1 receptors were identified by equilibrium binding assays. Half-maximal displacement of either peptide occurred at 3-10 nM; crossover binding to the alternate receptor occurred with a 10- to 100-fold lower affinity. Peptide effects on cellular proliferation were determined by measuring [3H]thymidine incorporation. Both insulin and IGF1 stimulate thymidine incorporation in a dose-dependent manner with similar increases above the basal level. The estimated half-maximal stimulation (EC50) occurred at 4 nM for IGF1 and 8 nM for insulin. A comparison of the receptor binding affinities with the dose-response relationships for [3H]thymidine incorporation reveals that each growth factor appears to be exerting its effect via binding to its own receptor. Therefore, in this cell line, physiologic concentrations of either insulin or IGF1 can modulate cellular growth. To our knowledge this is the first demonstration of a mitogenic effect which may be modulated by ligand binding to the insulin receptor in proximal tubule epithelia.Item Differential effects of brefeldin A on hormonally regulated Na + transport in a model renal epithelial cell line(1994) Blazer-Yost, Bonnie; Coupaye-Gerard, Brigitte; Kim, Hyun Jin; Singh, AnupNa+ transport in renal epithelia is regulated by a wide variety of endogenous and exogenous cellular factors. Although most natriferic agents have an action on the amiloride-sensitive Na+ channel, the biochemical pathways which precede activation of the channel remain incompletely defined. One approach to dissecting such intricate pathways is to perturb a specific cellular process and determine its importance in the postulated mechanism. The current studies examine the effect of brefeldin A (BFA), an inhibitor of the central vacuolar system, on basal as well as aldosterone-, insulin-, and forskolin-stimulated Na+ transport. In the A6 cell line, BFA had a time-dependent effect on basal transport. Aldosterone-induced Na+ transport was sensitive to BFA while insulin's action was only partially blocked and forskolin-stimulated Na+ transport was relatively resistant to the action of the inhibitor. These studies highlight differences as well as points of convergence in the natriferic pathways.Item Purification of a Cortical Complex Containing Two Unconventional Actins from Acanthamoeba by Affinity Chromatography on Profilin-Agarose(1994-10) Machesky, Laura M; Atkinson, Simon J; Ampe, Christophe; Vandekerckhove, Joel; Pollard, Thomas DWe identified four polypeptides of 47, 44, 40, and 35 kD that bind to profilin-Sepharose and elute with high salt. When purified by conventional chromatography using an antibody to the 47-kD polypeptide, these four polypeptides copurified as a stoichiometric complex together with three additional polypeptides of 19, 18, and 13 kD that varied in their proportions to the other polypeptides. Partial protein sequences showed that the 47-kD polypeptide is a homologue of S. pombe act2 and the 44-kD polypeptide is a homologue of S. cerevisiae ACT2, both unconventional actins. The 40-kD polypeptide contains a sequence similar to the WD40 motif of the G beta subunit of a trimeric G-protein from Dictyostelium discoideum. From partial sequences, the 35-, 19-, and 18-kD polypeptides appear to be novel proteins. On gel filtration the complex of purified polypeptides cochromatograph with a Stokes' radius of 4.8 nm, a value consistent with a globular particle of 220 kD containing one copy of each polypeptide. Cell extracts also contain components of the complex that do not bind the profilin column. Affinity purified antibodies localize 47- and 18/19-kD polypeptides in the cortex and filopodia of Acanthamoeba. Antibodies to the 47-kD unconventional actin cross-react on immunoblots with polypeptides of similar size in Dictyostelium, rabbit muscle, and conventional preparations of rabbit muscle actin but do not react with actin.