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The patterns of gene expression in spermatocytes and oocytes are quite different from those in somatic cells. The messenger RNAs produced by these cells are not only required to support germ cell development but, in the case of oocytes, they are also used for maturation, fertilization, and early embryogenesis. Recent studies have begun to provide an explanation for how germ-cell-specific programs...
One of the most important aspects of the evolution of development and physiology is the interplay between gene expression and the environment, by which traits become altered in response to environmental triggers. This feature is known as phenotypic plasticity. When different genotypes show different levels of plasticity for a trait, then they show genotype-by-environment interaction, or GEI. It is...
The genomic and cDNA sequences of three PDI homoeologous genes located on chromosomes 4A, 4B and 4D of bread wheat and their promoters were cloned and sequenced. The three sequences showed a very high conservation of the coding region and of the exon/intron structure, which consisted of ten exons. The comparison of wheat sequences with those of rice and Arabidopsis showed a significant conservation...
The study on lysozymes remains open in amphioxus, a cephalochordate. Here we show the existence of c-type lysozyme gene (AmphiLysC) in amphioxus, first such data in the basal chordates including urochordate and cephalochordate. This is in contrast to the absence of c-type lysozyme genes in urochordate. It is found that there exist two copies of c-type lysozyme genes in amphioxus genome, and their...
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia in humans. A pathological hallmark in the brain of an AD patient is extracellular amyloid plaques formed by accumulated β-amyloid protein (Aβ), a metabolic product of amyloid precursor protein (APP). Studies have revealed a strong genetic linkage in the early-onset familial form (<60 years old) of AD. For example, some mutant APPs are...
The Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) has been widely used as a model species in studies of olfactory signal transduction and processing. Here we report the isolation and characterisation of salmon olfactory receptor (SOR) and salmon vomeronasal receptor (SVR) partial sequences from Atlantic salmon. Six groups of SOR sequences (SORA–F) and three groups of SVR sequences (SVRA–C) were identified. All SORB,...
Free d-aspartic acid and NMDA are present in the mammalian central nervous system and endocrine glands at significant concentrations, but their physiological role is still matter of debate. The only enzyme known to metabolize in vitro selectively these d-amino acids is d-aspartate oxidase (DDO). To clarify the role in vivo of the enzyme, we generated mice with targeted deletion of Ddo gene by homologous...
Stromal Cell-derived factor 1 (SDF-1) is a CXC chemokine that binds to the CXCR4 receptor. Recent publication indicates that the SDF-1/CXCR4 signaling pathway plays a pivotal role during development and in many patho-physiological conditions including hematopoiesis, blood vessel formation, cancer metastasis, angiogenesis and HIV infection. Two human SDF-1 isoforms, SDF-1α and SDF-1β, have been reported...
Two unique and fascinating properties of carbonate apatite which are well-known in hard tissue engineering, have been unveiled, for the first time, for the development of the simplest, but most efficient non-viral gene delivery device — ability of preventing the growth of crystals needed for high frequency DNA transfer across a plasma membrane and a fast dissolution rate for effective release of DNA...
In this study we describe the design and implementation of a novel low-density oligonucleotide microarray (the “Mytox-chip”). It consists of 24 mussel genes involving both normalizing elements and stress response related genes, each represented on the array with one or two different 50 mer oligonucleotide-probe reporters spotted in replicated samples on glass-activated slides. Target genes were selected...
Toll-Like Receptors (TLRs) have recently emerged as key sensors of invading microbes, acting through recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns. It has been demonstrated that TLR9 is involved in the recognition of unmethylated CpG motifs in mice, humans, and pigs. We report here the full-length sequence of TLR9 cDNA in the gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L.). The predicted protein (1063...
Metallothioneins (MTs) are typically low molecular weight (6–7 kDa), metal-binding proteins with characteristic repeating cysteine motifs (Cys–X–Cys or Cys–X n –Cys) and a prolate ellipsoid shape containing single α- and β-domains. While functionally diverse, they play important roles in metals homeostasis, detoxification and the stress response. The present study, combined with previous observations...
HAX1 is an ubiquitously expressed human gene. Though a number of cellular and viral proteins are known to interact with HAX1, its function is still not completely understood. On the basis of these identified interaction partners, HAX1 seems to play a role in apoptosis and the organization of the cytoskeleton. The cDNAs for human and mouse Hax1 share 86% identity and 80% identity at the protein level,...
Leucine-rich repeat and fibronectin III domain-containing (Lrfn) has five members in mouse and human (Lrfn1, Lrfn2, Lrfn3, Lrfn4, Lrfn5), and homologues in other vertebrates. Lrfn proteins share leucine-rich repeat (LRR)–immunoglobulin-like (Ig)–fibronectin type III (Fn)–transmembrane domain structure, which is also found in LRR–Ig–Fn superfamily proteins. Mouse Lrfn genes were expressed at adult...
Apparent full-length cDNA sequences coding respectively for mitochondrial (HvGPx41) and nuclear (HvGPx42) phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase were isolated from Hydra vulgaris. The cDNA sequences share total identity in their 3′-end and differ in their 5′-end. The protein-coding regions of the HvGPx41 and HvGPx42 cDNA encode polypeptides of 190 and 168 amino acids, including a TGA-encoded...
Phosphoglucomutase is a key enzyme in glycolysis and has been widely studied in vertebrates and some invertebrates but no molecular information is available in marine invertebrates despite the importance of this marker in ecological and genetical studies. In this work, we isolated a cDNA and the corresponding genomic sequence that encode PGM-2 locus in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. We used...
The difference in cognitive skills between humans and nonhuman primates is one of the major characters that define our own species. It was previously hypothesized that this divergence might be attributable to genetic differences at gene expression level, and the cis-regulating elements of gene 3′UTRs might play important roles in the post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. In this study,...
UAP56 is a eukaryotic RNA helicase that is important for mRNA splicing and nuclear export. Although most eukaryotes have a single protein corresponding to UAP56, we have shown previously that in human and mouse cells there is a second protein, URH49, which is 90% identical to UAP56. Both proteins interact with the mRNA export factor Aly and both are able to rescue the loss of Sub2p (the yeast homolog...
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are a family of recognition receptors playing a crucial role in the innate immune system. Different combinations of TLRs are thought to be crucial for effective immune response, thus insight into the organization and expression of TLRs is important for understanding disease resistance. Mastitis is the most frequent and costly disease in dairy production, and the innate immune...
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