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1.
Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand) ; 63(10): 106-115, 2017 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29096750

ABSTRACT

Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) is an autoimmune disease of the nervous system and is the most common acute polyneuropathy. Both cellular and humoral immunity are believed to be involved in the pathogenesis of GBS, and various types of activated CD4+ T cells are thought to orchestrate the onset and progression of GBS. Lymphoplasma exchange (LPE) filtering out activated lymphocytes while exchanging plasma has been used for GBS treatment for years. However the treatment is still not yet optimal. In order to assess the efficacy of this treatment, we evaluate the effect of LPE and determine the appropriate frequency of LPE treatments for GBS patients through comparing the neurological deficit scores and the changes in related immunology indicators of GBS patients before and after LPE treatment. Twenty-four patients with GBS who received LPE were evaluated for immunologic indicants before treatment, on the second day, and the fourth day after the treatment. The immunoglobulin complement and CD4+ T lymphocyte subsets were tested by flow cytometry. The patients' Medical Research Council sum scores were increased from 25.7±10.4 up to. 36.7±10.4 (P=0.019) and their Hughes scores decreased from 3.7±0.76 to 3.1±0.73 (P=0.027) at 7 days after LPE. In the peripheral blood from patients received LPE treatment, the levels of immunoglobulin, complement, monocytes and fibrinogen were significantly reduced. The percentages of Th1 and Th17 cells in the CD4+ T lymphocyte subsets were significantly decreased, whereas the Th2 and Treg cells were increased in patients after treatment. The changes in CD4+T lymphocyte subsets were correlated with patient MRC score changes. Our data indicate that LPE is effective in treating GBS patients by directly removing immunoglobulin, complement, monocytes, and fibrinogen as well as regulating lymphocyte subsets in the peripheral blood.


Subject(s)
Guillain-Barre Syndrome/therapy , Lymphocyte Transfusion , Administration, Intravenous , Adult , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/cytology , Case-Control Studies , Complement C3/analysis , Complement C4/analysis , Female , Fibrinogen/analysis , Flow Cytometry , Guillain-Barre Syndrome/diagnosis , Humans , Immunoglobulins/therapeutic use , Leukocytes, Mononuclear/cytology , Male , Middle Aged , Monocytes/cytology , Th17 Cells/cytology , Treatment Outcome
2.
Nat Commun ; 5: 3311, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24548928

ABSTRACT

The subfamily of the Lemnoideae belongs to a different order than other monocotyledonous species that have been sequenced and comprises aquatic plants that grow rapidly on the water surface. Here we select Spirodela polyrhiza for whole-genome sequencing. We show that Spirodela has a genome with no signs of recent retrotranspositions but signatures of two ancient whole-genome duplications, possibly 95 million years ago (mya), older than those in Arabidopsis and rice. Its genome has only 19,623 predicted protein-coding genes, which is 28% less than the dicotyledonous Arabidopsis thaliana and 50% less than monocotyledonous rice. We propose that at least in part, the neotenous reduction of these aquatic plants is based on readjusted copy numbers of promoters and repressors of the juvenile-to-adult transition. The Spirodela genome, along with its unique biology and physiology, will stimulate new insights into environmental adaptation, ecology, evolution and plant development, and will be instrumental for future bioenergy applications.


Subject(s)
Araceae/growth & development , Araceae/genetics , Genome, Plant/genetics , Fresh Water , Molecular Sequence Data
3.
Mol Biol Evol ; 28(9): 2537-47, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21470968

ABSTRACT

Nine different regions totaling 9.7 Mb of the 4.02 Gb Aegilops tauschii genome were sequenced using the Sanger sequencing technology and compared with orthologous Brachypodium distachyon, Oryza sativa (rice), and Sorghum bicolor (sorghum) genomic sequences. The ancestral gene content in these regions was inferred and used to estimate gene deletion and gene duplication rates along each branch of the phylogenetic tree relating the four species. The total gene number in the extant Ae. tauschii genome was estimated to be 36,371. The gene deletion and gene duplication rates and total gene numbers in the four genomes were used to estimate the total gene number in each node of the phylogenetic tree. The common ancestor of the Brachypodieae and Triticeae lineages was estimated to have had 28,558 genes, and the common ancestor of the Panicoideae, Ehrhartoideae, and Pooideae subfamilies was estimated to have had 27,152 or 28,350 genes, depending on the ancestral gene scenario. Relative to the Brachypodieae and Triticeae common ancestor, the gene number was reduced in B. distachyon by 3,026 genes and increased in Ae. tauschii by 7,813 genes. The sum of gene deletion and gene duplication rates, which reflects the rate of gene synteny loss, was correlated with the rate of structural chromosome rearrangements and was highest in the Ae. tauschii lineage and lowest in the rice lineage. The high rate of gene space evolution in the Ae. tauschii lineage accounts for the fact that, contrary to the expectations, the level of synteny between the phylogenetically more related Ae. tauschii and B. distachyon genomes is similar to the level of synteny between the Ae. tauschii genome and the genomes of the less related rice and sorghum. The ratio of gene duplication to gene deletion rates in these four grass species closely parallels both the total number of genes in a species and the overall genome size. Because the overall genome size is to a large extent a function of the repeated sequence content in a genome, we suggest that the amount and activity of repeated sequences are important factors determining the number of genes in a genome.


Subject(s)
Genome, Plant , Primulaceae , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Tandem Repeat Sequences , Brachypodium/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Deletion , Gene Duplication , Oryza/genetics , Primulaceae/genetics , Sorghum/genetics
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(37): 15780-5, 2009 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19717446

ABSTRACT

Single-nucleotide polymorphism was used in the construction of an expressed sequence tag map of Aegilops tauschii, the diploid source of the wheat D genome. Comparisons of the map with the rice and sorghum genome sequences revealed 50 inversions and translocations; 2, 8, and 40 were assigned respectively to the rice, sorghum, and Ae. tauschii lineages, showing greatly accelerated genome evolution in the large Triticeae genomes. The reduction of the basic chromosome number from 12 to 7 in the Triticeae has taken place by a process during which an entire chromosome is inserted by its telomeres into a break in the centromeric region of another chromosome. The original centromere-telomere polarity of the chromosome arms is maintained in the new chromosome. An intrachromosomal telomere-telomere fusion resulting in a pericentric translocation of a chromosome segment or an entire arm accompanied or preceded the chromosome insertion in some instances. Insertional dysploidy has been recorded in three grass subfamilies and appears to be the dominant mechanism of basic chromosome number reduction in grasses. A total of 64% and 66% of Ae. tauschii genes were syntenic with sorghum and rice genes, respectively. Synteny was reduced in the vicinity of the termini of modern Ae. tauschii chromosomes but not in the vicinity of the ancient termini embedded in the Ae. tauschii chromosomes, suggesting that the dependence of synteny erosion on gene location along the centromere-telomere axis either evolved recently in the Triticeae phylogenetic lineage or its evolution was recently accelerated.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Genome, Plant , Poaceae/genetics , Centromere/genetics , Chromosome Inversion , Chromosome Mapping , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Expressed Sequence Tags , Models, Genetic , Oryza/genetics , Phylogeny , Poaceae/classification , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Sorghum/genetics , Species Specificity , Synteny , Telomere/genetics , Translocation, Genetic , Triticum/genetics
5.
Theor Appl Genet ; 114(6): 947-59, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17318496

ABSTRACT

The domestication of emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum spp. dicoccoides, genomes BBAA) was one of the key events during the emergence of agriculture in southwestern Asia, and was a prerequisite for the evolution of durum and common wheat. Single- and multilocus genotypes based on restriction fragment length polymorphism at 131 loci were analyzed to describe the structure of populations of wild and domesticated emmer and to generate a picture of emmer domestication and its subsequent diffusion across Asia, Europe and Africa. Wild emmer consists of two populations, southern and northern, each further subdivided. Domesticated emmer mirrors the geographic subdivision of wild emmer into the northern and southern populations and also shows an additional structure in both regions. Gene flow between wild and domesticated emmer occurred across the entire area of wild emmer distribution. Emmer was likely domesticated in the Diyarbakir region in southeastern Turkey, which was followed by subsequent hybridization and introgression from wild to domesticated emmer in southern Levant. A less likely scenario is that emmer was domesticated independently in the Diyarbakir region and southern Levant, and the Levantine genepool was absorbed into the genepool of domesticated emmer diffusing from southeastern Turkey. Durum wheat is closely related to domesticated emmer in the eastern Mediterranean and likely originated there.


Subject(s)
Crops, Agricultural , Gene Flow , Genetics, Population , Geography , Triticum/genetics , Analysis of Variance , Asia , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Plant , Genetic Markers , Genetic Variation , Genome, Plant , Genotype , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Species Specificity , Triticum/anatomy & histology , Triticum/classification , Turkey
6.
Genetics ; 174(1): 17-27, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16702426

ABSTRACT

Pairing between wheat (Triticum turgidum and T. aestivum) homeologous chromosomes is prevented by the expression of the Ph1 locus on the long arm of chromosome 5B. The genome of Aegilops speltoides suppresses Ph1 expression in wheat x Ae. speltoides hybrids. Suppressors with major effects were mapped as Mendelian loci on the long arms of Ae. speltoides chromosomes 3S and 7S. The chromosome 3S locus was designated Su1-Ph1 and the chromosome 7S locus was designated Su2-Ph1. A QTL with a minor effect was mapped on the short arm of chromosome 5S and was designated QPh.ucd-5S. The expression of Su1-Ph1 and Su2-Ph1 increased homeologous chromosome pairing in T. aestivum x Ae. speltoides hybrids by 8.4 and 5.8 chiasmata/cell, respectively. Su1-Ph1 was completely epistatic to Su2-Ph1, and the two genes acting together increased homeologous chromosome pairing in T. aestivum x Ae. speltoides hybrids to the same level as Su1-Ph1 acting alone. QPh.ucd-5S expression increased homeologous chromosome pairing by 1.6 chiasmata/cell in T. aestivum x Ae. speltoides hybrids and was additive to the expression of Su2-Ph1. It is hypothesized that the products of Su1-Ph1 and Su2-Ph1 affect pairing between homeologous chromosomes by regulating the expression of Ph1 but the product of QPh.ucd-5S may primarily regulate recombination between homologous chromosomes.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Mapping/methods , Triticum/genetics , Chromosome Pairing , Chromosomes, Plant , Crosses, Genetic , Crossing Over, Genetic , Genes, Plant , Hybrid Cells , Poaceae/genetics , Quantitative Trait Loci
7.
Micron ; 35(6): 475-80, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15120133

ABSTRACT

Polycrystalline GaN thin films have been deposited epitaxially on a ZnO-buffered (111)-oriented Si substrate by molecular beam epitaxy. The microstructural and compositional characteristics of the films were studied by analytical transmission electron microscopy (TEM). A SiO(2) amorphous layer about 3.5 nm in thickness between the Si/ZnO interface has been identified by means of spatially resolved electron energy loss spectroscopy. Cross-sectional and plan-view TEM investigations reveal (GaN/ZnO/SiO(2)/Si) layers exhibiting definite a crystallographic relationship: [111](Si)//[111](ZnO)//[0001](GaN) along the epitaxy direction. GaN films are polycrystalline with nanoscale grains ( approximately 100 nm in size) grown along [0001] direction with about 20 degrees between the (1l00) planes of adjacent grains. A three-dimensional growth mode for the buffer layer and the film is proposed to explain the formation of the as-grown polycrystalline GaN films and the functionality of the buffer layer.

8.
Genetics ; 154(3): 1301-8, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10757771

ABSTRACT

Recombination of chromosomes 3A(m) and 5A(m) of Triticum monococcum with closely homeologous chromosomes 3A and 5A of T. aestivum was compared with recombination across corresponding homologous chromosome pairs. Differentiation between the homeologues impacted recombination in the proximal regions of the long arms the most and in the distal regions of the long arms the least. It is concluded that this variation principally reflects allocation of multiple crossovers across an arm and positive crossover interference across chromosome arms. Recombination rates between homeologous chromosomes 5A(m) and 5A differed in the opposite sexes.


Subject(s)
Recombination, Genetic , Triticum/genetics
9.
Genetics ; 149(2): 1105-13, 1998 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9611218

ABSTRACT

Homeologous wheat chromosome arms that differ by the presence or absence of a Nor locus or greatly differ in the numbers of copies of rRNA genes per Nor locus show conspicuous differences in the distribution of recombination. To assess directly the position effects of Nor loci on recombination across chromosome arms, a Triticum monococcum Nor9 haplotype was substituted for Triticum aestivum Nor9 haplotypes on two T. aestivum 1A chromosomes in the isogenic background of cv Chinese Spring. The numbers of rRNA genes in the 1A Nor9 haplotypes are greatly reduced relative to the T. monococcum haplotype. The substitution resulted in reduced recombination rate in the vicinity of the Nor9 locus. An intra-arm compensatory increase was observed in the proximal region of the arm so that the genetic length of the chromosome arm was unchanged. These findings suggest that Nor loci suppress recombination in their vicinity and change recombination patterns in Nor-bearing chromosome arms.


Subject(s)
Meiosis/genetics , RNA, Plant/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Recombination, Genetic , Triticum/genetics , Chromosomes/genetics , Crosses, Genetic , Gene Dosage , Nucleolus Organizer Region/genetics
10.
Genetics ; 148(1): 423-34, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9475752

ABSTRACT

RFLP was investigated at 52 single-copy gene loci among six species of Aegilops, including both cross-fertilizing and self-fertilizing species. Average gene diversity (H) was found to correlate with the level of outcrossing. No relationship was found between H and the phylogenetic status of a species. In all six species, the level of RFLP at a locus was a function of the position of the locus on the chromosome and the recombination rate in the neighborhood of the locus. Loci in the proximal chromosome regions, which show greatly reduced recombination rates relative to the distal regions, were significantly less variable than loci in the distal chromosome regions in all six species. Variation in recombination rates was also reflected in the haplotype divergence between closely related species; loci in the chromosome regions with low recombination rates were found to be diverged less than those in the chromosome regions with high recombination rates. This relationship was not found among the more distantly related species.


Subject(s)
DNA, Plant/genetics , Genetic Variation , Poaceae/genetics , Models, Genetic , Phylogeny , Poaceae/classification , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Recombination, Genetic
11.
Genetics ; 144(3): 1195-203, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8913760

ABSTRACT

Chromosome 1A(m) of Triticum monococcum is closely homeologous to T. aestivum chromosome 1A but recombines with it little in the presence of the wheat suppressor of homeologous chromosome pairing, Ph1. In the absence of Ph1, the two chromosomes recombine as if they were completely homologous. Chromosomes having either terminal or interstitial segments of chromosome 1A(m) in 1A were constructed and their recombination with 1A was investigated in the presence of Ph1. No recombination was detected in the homeologous (1A(m)/1A) segments, irrespective of whether terminally or interstitially positioned in a chromosome, whereas the levels of recombination in the juxtaposed homologous (1A/1A) segments was normal or close to normal relative to completely homologous 1A chromosomes. These observations show that Phl does not regulate chromosome pairing by premeiotic chromosome alignment and a mitotic spindle-centromere interaction, as has been suggested, but processes homology along the entire length of chromosomes.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Mapping , Triticum/genetics , Chromosomes , Recombination, Genetic
12.
Genetics ; 143(2): 983-99, 1996 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8725244

ABSTRACT

A genetic map of diploid wheat, Triticum monococcum L., involving 335 markers, including RFLP DNA markers, isozymes, seed storage proteins, rRNA, and morphological loci, is reported. T. monococcum and barley linkage groups are remarkably conserved. They differ by a reciprocal translocation involving the long arms of chromosomes 4 and 5, and paracentric inversions in the long arm of chromosomes 1 and 4; the latter is in a segment of chromosome arm 4L translocated to 5L in T. monococcum. The order of the markers in the inverted segments in the T. monococcum genome is the same as in the B and D genomes of T. aestivum L. The T. monococcum map differs from the barley maps in the distribution of recombination within chromosomes. The major 5S rRNA loci were mapped on the short arms of T. monococcum chromosomes 1 and 5 and the long arms of barley chromosomes 2 and 3. Since these chromosome arms are colinear, the major 5S rRNA loci must be subjected to positional changes in the evolving Triticeae genome that do not perturb chromosome colinearity. The positional changes of the major 5S rRNA loci in Triticeae genomes are analogous to those of the 18S-5.8S-26S rRNA loci.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Mapping , Genes, Plant , Hordeum/genetics , Triticum/genetics , Genetic Linkage , Recombination, Genetic
13.
Theor Appl Genet ; 93(7): 1180-4, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24162500

ABSTRACT

Targeted homoeologous recombination mediated by the absence of the Ph1 locus is currently the most efficient technique by which foreign genes can be introgressed into polyploid wheat species. Because intra-arm homoeologous double cross-overs are rare, introgressed foreign genes are usually on terminal foreign chromosome segments. Since the minimum length of such a segment is determined by the position of a gene in the chromosome, large chromosome segments with undesirable genetic effects are often introgressed. Introgression of foreign genes on short interstitial segments based on two cycles of homoeologous recombination is described here. The utility of the technique is demonstrated by the introgression of the Kna1 locus, which controls K(+)/Na(+) selectivity in T. aesivum L., on short interstitial segments of chromosome 4D into chromosome 4B of Triticum turgidum L. The level of recombination in a homoeologous segment is not significantly affected by a juxtaposed proximal homologous segment in the absence of the Ph1 locus.

14.
Theor Appl Genet ; 92(3-4): 448-54, 1996 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24166270

ABSTRACT

In saline environments, bread wheat, Triticum aestivum L. (genomes AABBDD), accumulates less Na(+) and more K(+) in expanding and young leaves than durum wheat, T. turgidum L. (genomes AABB). Higher K(+)/Na(+) ratios in leaves of bread wheat correlate with its higher salt tolerance. Chromosome 4D from bread wheat was shown in previous work to play an important role in the control of this trait and was recombined with chromosome 4B in the absence of the Ph1 locus. A population of plants disomic for 4D/4B recombined chromosomes in the genetic background of T. turgidum was developed to investigate the genetic control of K(+)/Na(+) discrimination by chromosome 4D. Evidence was obtained that the trait is controlled by a single locus, designated Kna1, in the long arm of chromosome 4D. In the present work, K(+)/Na(+) discrimination was determined for additional families with 4D/4B chromosomes. The concentrations of Na(+) and K(+)/Na(+) ratios in the youngest leaf blades clustered in two nonoverlapping classes, and all recombinant families could be unequivocally assigned to Kna1 and kna1 classes. The Kna1 locus scored this way was mapped on a short region in the 4DL arm and was completely linked to Xwg199, Xabc305, Xbcd.402, Xpsr567, and Xpsr375; it was also mapped as a quantitative trait. The results of the QTL analysis, based on the K(+)/Na(+) ratios in the young leaves of greenhousegrown plants and flag leaves of field-grown plants, agreed with the position of Knal determined as a qualitative trait. Several aspects of gene introgression by manipulation of the Ph1 locus are discussed.

15.
Genome ; 38(6): 1139-47, 1995 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18470237

ABSTRACT

A linkage map based on homoeologous recombination, induced by the absence of the Ph1 locus, between chromosome 4D of Triticum aestivum L. (genomes AABBDD) and chromosome 4B of T. turgidum L. (genomes AABB) was compared with a linkage map of chromosome 4Am of T. monococcum L. and a consensus map of chromosomes 4B and 4D of T. aestivum based on homologous recombination. The 4D/4B homoeologous map was only one-third the length of the homologous maps and all intervals were reduced relative to the 4B-4D consensus map. After the homoeologous map was corrected for this overall reduction in recombination, the distribution of recombination in the short arm was similar in both types of maps. In the long arm, homoeologous recombination declined disproportionally in the distal to proximal direction. This gradient was shown to be largely caused by severe segregation distortion reflecting selection against 4D genetic material. The segregation distortion had a maximum that coincided with the centromere and likely had a polygenic cause. Chromosomes 4D and 4B were colinear and recombination between them occurred in almost all intervals where homologous recombination occurred. These findings suggest that these chromosomes are not differentiated structurally and that the differentiation is not segmental. In the presence of Ph1, metaphase I chromosome pairing between chromosomes composed of homologous and differentiated regions correlated with the lengths of the homologous regions. No compensatory allocation of crossovers into the homologous regions was detected. In this respect, the present results are in dramatic contrast with the crossover allocation into the pseudoautosomal region in the mammalian male meiosis.

16.
Theor Appl Genet ; 91(5): 795-801, 1995 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24169919

ABSTRACT

Linkage relationships among genes responding to water-deficit, salt stress, and heat shock were investigated in diploid wheat, Triticum monococcum L. The position of these gene loci relative to closely linked markers and the centromeres is reported. It is proposed to continue to use the present T. monococcum mapping population and the genetic maps based thereon as a framework for future determination of relationships among other genes related to environmental stress in the tribe Triticeae.

17.
Int J Radiat Biol ; 55(4): 679-88, 1989 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2564876

ABSTRACT

The removal of 238Pu and 241Am by five chelating agents prepared in China was compared in pilot experiments with removal by Ca-DTPA and LICAM(C). The most promising substance is quinamic acid (a methyliminodiacetic polyquinoline derivative, code name 811 or 703-73), especially in combination with Ca-DTPA. However, the best over-all reduction of both 238Pu and 241Am in all the organs studied was achieved by Ca-DTPA-administered at a ten-fold human equivalent dosage.


Subject(s)
Americium/metabolism , Chelating Agents/administration & dosage , Isoquinolines/administration & dosage , Plutonium/metabolism , Animals , Female , Pentetic Acid/administration & dosage , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Spermidine/administration & dosage , Spermidine/analogs & derivatives , Tissue Distribution
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