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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cellular + 0.49 + can  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Antares Continues to Expand Haquira East Cu-Mo-Au Discovery, Peru
Trading Markets (press release), CA -
Antares Minerals Inc. John Black President and CEO (720) 514-9036 office (303) 618-7797 cellular Email: john.black@antaresminerals.com Antares Minerals Inc. ...CVE:ANM - OTC:CMTX
Linear Technology Achieves Record Quarterly and Annual Revenues ...
TMC Net, CT - Jul 22, 2008
Applications for Linear Technology's high performance circuits include telecommunications, cellular telephones, networking products such as optical switches ...LLTC
RADCOM Announces Q2 2008 Results
PR Newswire (press release), NY - Jul 21, 2008
The Company specializes in next-generation Cellular as well as IMS, Voice, Data and VoIP networks. Its solutions are used in the development and ...RDCM
Markets end in red after 5-day successive rallies
domain-B, India - Jul 24, 2008
The BSE realty index was up 0.49% or 5.53 points at 5224.80. Phoenix Mills, Sobha Developers, Anant Raj Ind, DLF and Parsvnath moved up. ...
Source: Google News

Mast Cells Can Secrete Vascular Permeability Factor/Vascular Endothelial Cell Growth Factor and … -
J Boesiger, M Tsai, M Maurer, M Yamaguchi, LF … - Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1998 - Rockefeller Univ Press
... Cl.MC/C57.1 cells was 3.43 ? 0.49 pg/10 ... recently that incubation with human myeloma
IgE can upregulate HMC ... in enhanced anti-IgE-dependent mast cell release of ...

Cellular Microcystin Content in N-Limited Microcystis aeruginosa Can Be Predicted from Growth Rate -
BM Long, GJ Jones, PT Orr - Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2001 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... 0.49, 2.84 ? 0.34, 19.9 ? 1.8, 75.6 ? 29, 6.3 ? 0.2, 320 ... relationship between Q MCYST
and ? can be described in ... 1 Cellular Q MCYST of M. aeruginosa grown in N ...

… IDENTIFIES KIDNEY TRANSPLANT PATIENTS IN WHOM IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPY CAN BE SAFELY REDUCED1. -
NM van Besouw, BJ van der Mast, P de Kuiper, PJHS … - Transplantation, 2000 - transplantjournal.com
... to assess in whom the immunosuppressive load can safely be ... We studied the T-cell
reactivity from 24 patients of whom ... 0.75?0.58 [P =0.49]; HLA-DR, 0.5?0.53 vs ...

Substrate microtopography can enhance cell adhesive and migratory responsiveness to matrix ligand … -
CS Ranucci, PV Moghe - Journal of Biomedical Materials Research, 2001 - doi.wiley.com
... organization of cell membrane based focal adhe- sion complexes 14 and can thereby
invoke specific sig- naling pathways which may regulate cellular pheno- type ...

Other-cell interference in cellular power-controlled CDMA -
AJ Viterbi, AM Viterbi, E Zehavi, Q Inc, CA San … - Communications, IEEE Transactions on, 1994 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
... 0.67 0.47 0.45 0.45 1.14 0.56 0.49 0.49 2.40 0.77 ... cases, we obtain the total relative
other- cell interference ... 6) and (7), respectively, which can be obtained ...

New cellular schemes for spectral efficiency -
WCY Lee - Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on, 1987 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
... total area of a cell Ao: AI = aR:=0.49Ao ... Then the relation between the cell radius
Ro and the radius R2 ... the requirement of C/I shown in (1) and can be expressed ...

Levamisole and/or Chinese medicinal herbs can modulate the serum level of squamous cell carcinoma … -
A Sun, CP Chiang - Official Publication of The International Association of …, 2001 - Blackwell Synergy
... with major or minor type EOLP can be modulated ... Oral squamous cell carcinoma (stage
I) 12 0.3?4.1 1.38 ... Recurrent aphthous stomatitis 40 0.1?1.0 0.49?0.26 ...

Cell adhesion molecules?can they be used to predict coronary artery disease in patients with … -
JE Paiker, FJ Raal, M Veller, M von Arb, N Chetty, … - Clinica Chimica Acta, 2000 - Elsevier
... 0.63?2.00) mm] compared to 0.49 (0.37?0.88 ... molecules in cardiovascular disease: what
can soluble levels ... Price and J. Loscalzo, Cellular adhesion molecules ...

Prediction of Thermal Conductivity of Vegetable Foods by the Effective Medium Theory
M MATTEA, MJ URBICAIN, E ROTSTEIN - Journal of Food Science, 1986 - Blackwell Synergy
... starch granule can be assumed to be constantly saturated for all practical values
of the cellular water content, since the saturation value is X, = 0.49g HzOlg ...

Heat Shock Proteins Delivered With a Virus Vector Can Protect Cardiac Cells Against Apoptosis As … -
BK Brar, A Stephanou, MJD Wagstaff, RS Coffin, MS … - Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1999 - Elsevier
... can induce apoptosis or programmed cell death in cardiac cells ... 137 m? NaCl, 12 m?
KCl, 0.49 m? MgCl 2 ... cells were harvested and analysed for cell death by ...

Source: Google Scholar

Suppressing a cellular cleanup-mechanism known as autophagy can accelerate the accumulation of protein aggregates that leads to neural degeneration. In an upcoming issue of Autophagy, scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies report for the first time that the opposite is true as well: Boosting autophagy in the nervous system of fruit flies prevented the age-dependent accumulation of cellular damage in neurons and promoted longevity.

“We discovered that levels of several key pathway members are reduced in Drosophila neural tissue as a normal part of aging,” says senior author Kim Finley, Ph.D., a scientist in the Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory, “which suggests there is an age-dependent suppression of autophagy that may be a contributing factor for human neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s disease.”

As the American population grows older, questions regarding the aging process and how it can be positively influenced are increasingly becoming the focus of scientific research and public interest. The age-related accumulation of proteins and lipids damaged by chemically aggressive forms of oxygen is considered by most in the geriatrics field to be a normal part of the aging process. As a result in most age-associated diseases, such as Alzheimer’s, damaged proteins accumulate in excessive amounts, which leads to progressive cell death in the brain.

All cells undergo autophagy — literally self-eating, — which requires the assembly of specialized vesicles called autophagosomes. These vesicles surround or engulf damaged cellular proteins or structures and then traffic the “bagged garbage” to a second group of vesicles, which disposes of the trash with the help of digestive enzymes. This process can be enhanced when animals are placed on a calorie-restricted diet, a regime known to extend lifespan.

“The activation of autophagy facilitates the removal of damaged molecules that accumulate during cellular aging,” says Finley. “This may be particularly important in the nervous system since neurons produce damaged molecules at a much higher rate than most cell types.” Keeping cells free of damaged molecules is critical for neurons because unlike many cells, they do not divide or replace themselves once created at birth. “They rely on autophagy together with other clearance and detoxification pathways to keep themselves healthy and functioning for decades,” explains Finley.

For their studies, the Salk researchers turned to the fruit fly Drosophila, a powerful model organism, whose genetics can easily be manipulated. When initial experiments indicated that the expression of several autophagy genes decreased over the normal lifespan of fruit flies, the Salk researchers focused on one particular protein, Atg8a. This protein is an essential component needed for the formation of new autophagosomes. Finley and her team found that levels of Atg8a were significantly reduced by four weeks of age, a time when the flies are considered middle aged. At the same time, protein aggregates were not efficiently cleared by the cellular clean-up crew and started to accumulate.

Without Atg8a, things went from bad to worse. Damaged proteins tagged for degradation started to pile up early and life expectancy plummeted. “The abnormal accumulation of protein aggregates had striking similarities to those seen in the most common human neurodegenerative diseases,” says first author Anne Simonsen, Ph.D., a visiting scientist from the University of Oslo, Norway.

When the researchers kept the neuronal levels of Atg8a high, the genetically engineered flies were spared the ravages of time. Promoting the pathway not only prevented the accumulation of protein aggregates but also significantly extended the average lifespan. “Our experiments show for the first time genetically that autophagy can sequester and eliminate misfolded and damaged proteins, which accumulate in neurons as normal part of the aging process,” says Simonsen, “but most importantly they demonstrate that enhancing the clearance of damaged proteins and protein aggregates increases longevity.”

Insulin signaling and caloric restriction are two major determinants of longevity and they also impact the activity level of autophagy. Therefore, regulating autophagy, the pathway that directly does the cleanup work, may be the key factor in controlling the aging process, the researchers say. “By maintaining the expression of a rate-limiting autophagy gene in the aging nervous system there is a dramatic extension of lifespan and resistance to age-associated oxidative stress,” says Finley.

Researchers who also contributed to the study include post-doctoral researcher and co-first author Robert C. Cumming, formerly in the Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory at the Salk Institute and now at the University of Western Ontario, Canada, and researchers Andreas Brech, Ph.D., and Pauline Isakson, Ph.D., both at the University of Oslo, Norway, and professor David R. Schubert in the Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory.

The Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California, is an independent nonprofit organization dedicated to fundamental discoveries in the life sciences, the improvement of human health and the training of future generations of researchers. Jonas Salk, M.D., whose polio vaccine all but eradicated the crippling disease poliomyelitis in 1955, opened the Institute in 1965 with a gift of land from the City of San Diego and the financial support of the March of Dimes.

 
 
 
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