29 results on '"Weaver CA"'
Search Results
2. Guideposts to the future -- an agenda for nursing informatics.
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McCormick KA, Delaney CJ, Brennan PF, Effken JA, Kendrick K, Murphy J, Skiba DJ, Warren JJ, Weaver CA, Weiner B, and Westra BL
- Abstract
As new directions and priorities emerge in health care, nursing informatics leaders must prepare to guide the profession appropriately. To use an analogy, where a road bends or changes directions, guideposts indicate how drivers can stay on course. The AMIA Nursing Informatics Working Group (NIWG) produced this white paper as the product of a meeting convened: 1) to describe anticipated nationwide changes in demographics, health care quality, and health care informatics; 2) to assess the potential impact of genomic medicine and of new threats to society; 3) to align AMIA NIWG resources with emerging priorities; and 4) to identify guideposts in the form of an agenda to keep the NIWG on course in light of new opportunities. The anticipated societal changes provide opportunities for nursing informatics. Resources described below within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the National Committee for Health and Vital Statistics (NCVHS) can help to align AMIA NIWG with emerging priorities. The guideposts consist of priority areas for action in informatics, nursing education, and research. Nursing informatics professionals will collaborate as full participants in local, national, and international efforts related to the guideposts in order to make significant contributions that empower patients and providers for safer health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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3. Bioluminescence-based visualization of CD4 T cell dynamics using a T lineage-specific luciferase transgenic model1
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Zinn Kurt R, Chaudhuri Tandra R, Dugger Kari J, Chewning Joseph H, and Weaver Casey T
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background Rapid clonal expansion of T cells occurs in response to antigenic challenges. The kinetics of the T cell response has previously been described using tissue-based studies performed at defined time points. Luciferase bioluminescence has recently been utilized for non-invasive analysis of in vivo biologic processes in real-time. Results We have created a novel transgenic mouse model (T-Lux) using a human CD2 mini-gene to direct luciferase expression specifically to the T cell compartment. T-Lux T cells demonstrated normal homing patterns within the intact mouse and following adoptive transfer. Bioluminescent signal correlated with T cell numbers in the whole body images as well as within specific organ regions of interest. Following transfer into lymphopenic (RAG2-/-) recipients, homeostatic proliferation of T-Lux T cells was visualized using bioluminescent imaging. Real-time bioluminescent analysis of CD4+ T cell antigen-specific responses enabled real-time comparison of the kinetics and magnitude of clonal expansion and contraction in the inductive lymph node and tissue site of antigen injection. T cell expansion was dose-dependent despite the presence of supraphysiologic numbers of OVA-specific OT-II transgenic TCR T-Lux T cells. CD4+ T cells subsequently underwent a rapid (3–4 day) contraction phase in the draining lymph node, with a delayed contraction in the antigen delivery site, with bioluminescent signal diminished below initial levels, representing TCR clonal frequency control. Conclusion The T-Lux mouse provides a novel, efficient model for tracking in vivo aspects of the CD4+ T cell response to antigen, providing an attractive approach for studies directed at immunotherapy or vaccine design.
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- 2009
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4. Efficient adenovirus-mediated gene transfer into primary T cells and thymocytes in a new coxsackie/adenovirus receptor transgenic model
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Matthews R James, Oliver James, Dzialo-Hatton Robin, Hurez Vincent, and Weaver Casey T
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background Gene transfer studies in primary T cells have suffered from the limitations of conventional viral transduction or transfection techniques. Replication-defective adenoviral vectors are an attractive alternative for gene delivery. However, naive lymphocytes are not readily susceptible to infection with adenoviruses due to insufficient expression of the coxsackie/adenovirus receptor. Results To render T cells susceptible to adenoviral gene transfer, we have developed three new murine transgenic lines in which expression of the human coxsackie/adenovirus receptor (hCAR) with a truncated cytoplasmic domain (hCARΔcyt) is limited to thymocytes and lymphocytes under direction of a human CD2 mini-gene. hCARΔcyt.CD2 transgenic mice were crossed with DO11.10 T cell receptor transgenic mice (DO11.hCARΔcyt) to allow developmental studies in a defined, clonal T cell population. Expression of hCARΔcyt enabled adenoviral transduction of resting primary CD4+ T cells, differentiated effector T cells and thymocytes from DO11.hCARΔcyt with high efficiency. Expression of hCARΔcyt transgene did not perturb T cell development in these mice and adenoviral transduction of DO11.hCARΔcyt T cells did not alter their activation status, functional responses or differentiative potential. Adoptive transfer of the transduced T cells into normal recipients did not modify their physiologic localization. Conclusion The DO11.hCARΔcyt transgenic model thus allows efficient gene transfer in primary T cell populations and will be valuable for novel studies of T cell activation and differentiation.
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- 2002
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5. Challenges associated with the secondary use of nursing data
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Hardiker, NR, Sermeus, W, Janson, K, Saranto, K, Weaver, CA, and Chang, P
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There is a prevailing 'collect once, use many times' view of clinical data and its secondary use. This study challenges this view through an assessment of the degree to which the International Classification for Nursing Practice (ICNP) might be used to provide raw data for the Belgian Nursing Minimum Data Set (B-NMDS). A mapping exercise identified exact matches between ICNP and B-NMDS for just 8% of B-NMDS care descriptions; no matches at all for 23%; possible broader matches in ICNP for 55%; possible narrower matches for 8%; and a possible broader and narrower match for 1%. Refining ICNP content and developing and implementing purposive data sets or catalogues that accommodate both ICNP concepts and B-NMDS care descriptions would lay the foundations for the potential re-use of primary ICNP-encoded data in populating the B-NMDS. One unexpected result of the study was to re-affirm the utility of ICNP as a reference terminology.
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- 2014
6. Evidence from sperm whale clans of symbolic marking in non-human cultures.
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Hersh TA, Gero S, Rendell L, Cantor M, Weilgart L, Amano M, Dawson SM, Slooten E, Johnson CM, Kerr I, Payne R, Rogan A, Antunes R, Andrews O, Ferguson EL, Hom-Weaver CA, Norris TF, Barkley YM, Merkens KP, Oleson EM, Doniol-Valcroze T, Pilkington JF, Gordon J, Fernandes M, Guerra M, Hickmott L, and Whitehead H
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- Acoustics, Animals, Culture, Pacific Ocean, Vocalization, Animal, Social Identification, Sperm Whale
- Abstract
Culture, a pillar of the remarkable ecological success of humans, is increasingly recognized as a powerful force structuring nonhuman animal populations. A key gap between these two types of culture is quantitative evidence of symbolic markers-seemingly arbitrary traits that function as reliable indicators of cultural group membership to conspecifics. Using acoustic data collected from 23 Pacific Ocean locations, we provide quantitative evidence that certain sperm whale acoustic signals exhibit spatial patterns consistent with a symbolic marker function. Culture segments sperm whale populations into behaviorally distinct clans, which are defined based on dialects of stereotyped click patterns (codas). We classified 23,429 codas into types using contaminated mixture models and hierarchically clustered coda repertoires into seven clans based on similarities in coda usage; then we evaluated whether coda usage varied with geographic distance within clans or with spatial overlap between clans. Similarities in within-clan usage of both "identity codas" (coda types diagnostic of clan identity) and "nonidentity codas" (coda types used by multiple clans) decrease as space between repertoire recording locations increases. However, between-clan similarity in identity, but not nonidentity, coda usage decreases as clan spatial overlap increases. This matches expectations if sympatry is related to a measurable pressure to diversify to make cultural divisions sharper, thereby providing evidence that identity codas function as symbolic markers of clan identity. Our study provides quantitative evidence of arbitrary traits, resembling human ethnic markers, conveying cultural identity outside of humans, and highlights remarkable similarities in the distributions of human ethnolinguistic groups and sperm whale clans.
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- 2022
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7. A general pattern of trade-offs between ecosystem resistance and resilience to tropical cyclones.
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Patrick CJ, Kominoski JS, McDowell WH, Branoff B, Lagomasino D, Leon M, Hensel E, Hensel MJS, Strickland BA, Aide TM, Armitage A, Campos-Cerqueira M, Congdon VM, Crowl TA, Devlin DJ, Douglas S, Erisman BE, Feagin RA, Geist SJ, Hall NS, Hardison AK, Heithaus MR, Hogan JA, Hogan JD, Kinard S, Kiszka JJ, Lin TC, Lu K, Madden CJ, Montagna PA, O'Connell CS, Proffitt CE, Kiel Reese B, Reustle JW, Robinson KL, Rush SA, Santos RO, Schnetzer A, Smee DL, Smith RS, Starr G, Stauffer BA, Walker LM, Weaver CA, Wetz MS, Whitman ER, Wilson SS, Xue J, and Zou X
- Abstract
Tropical cyclones drive coastal ecosystem dynamics, and their frequency, intensity, and spatial distribution are predicted to shift with climate change. Patterns of resistance and resilience were synthesized for 4138 ecosystem time series from n = 26 storms occurring between 1985 and 2018 in the Northern Hemisphere to predict how coastal ecosystems will respond to future disturbance regimes. Data were grouped by ecosystems (fresh water, salt water, terrestrial, and wetland) and response categories (biogeochemistry, hydrography, mobile biota, sedentary fauna, and vascular plants). We observed a repeated pattern of trade-offs between resistance and resilience across analyses. These patterns are likely the outcomes of evolutionary adaptation, they conform to disturbance theories, and they indicate that consistent rules may govern ecosystem susceptibility to tropical cyclones.
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- 2022
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8. "Sounding Black": Speech Stereotypicality Activates Racial Stereotypes and Expectations About Appearance.
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Kurinec CA and Weaver CA 3rd
- Abstract
Black Americans who are perceived as more racially phenotypical-that is, who possess more physical traits that are closely associated with their race-are more often associated with racial stereotypes. These stereotypes, including assumptions about criminality, can influence how Black Americans are treated by the legal system. However, it is unclear whether other forms of racial stereotypicality, such as a person's way of speaking, also activate stereotypes about Black Americans. We investigated the links between speech stereotypicality and racial stereotypes (Experiment 1) and racial phenotype bias (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, participants listened to audio recordings of Black speakers and rated how stereotypical they found the speaker, the likely race and nationality of the speaker, and indicated which adjectives the average person would likely associate with this speaker. In Experiment 2, participants listened to recordings of weakly or strongly stereotypical Black American speakers and indicated which of two faces (either weakly or strongly phenotypical) was more likely to be the speaker's. We found that speakers whose voices were rated as more highly stereotypical for Black Americans were more likely to be associated with stereotypes about Black Americans (Experiment 1) and with more stereotypically Black faces (Experiment 2). These findings indicate that speech stereotypicality activates racial stereotypes as well as expectations about the stereotypicality of an individual's appearance. As a result, the activation of stereotypes based on speech may lead to bias in suspect descriptions or eyewitness identifications., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Kurinec and Weaver.)
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- 2021
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9. Quantifying how changing mangrove cover affects ecosystem carbon storage in coastal wetlands.
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Charles SP, Kominoski JS, Armitage AR, Guo H, Weaver CA, and Pennings SC
- Subjects
- Carbon, Climate Change, Ecosystem, Avicennia, Wetlands
- Abstract
Despite overall global declines, mangroves are expanding into and within many subtropical wetlands, leading to heterogeneous cover of marsh-mangrove coastal vegetation communities near the poleward edge of mangroves' ranges. Coastal wetlands are globally important carbon sinks, yet the effects of shifts in mangrove cover on organic-carbon (OC) storage remains uncertain. We experimentally maintained black mangrove (Avicennia germinans) or marsh vegetation in patches (n = 1,120, 3 × 3 m) along a gradient in mangrove cover (0-100%) within coastal wetland plots (n = 10, 24 × 42 m) and measured changes in OC stocks and fluxes. Within patches, above and belowground biomass (OC) was 1,630% and 61% greater for mangroves than for recolonized marshes, and soil OC was 30% greater beneath mangrove than marsh vegetation. At the plot scale, above and belowground biomass increased linearly with mangrove cover but soil OC was highly variable and unrelated to mangrove cover. Root ingrowth was not different in mangrove or marsh patches, nor did it change with mangrove cover. After 11 months, surface OC accretion was negatively related to plot-scale mangrove cover following a high-wrack deposition period. However, after 22 months, accretion was 54% higher in mangrove patches, and there was no relationship to plot-scale mangrove cover. Marsh (Batis maritima) leaf and root litter had 1,000% and 35% faster breakdown rates (k) than mangrove (A. germinans) leaf and root litter. Soil temperatures beneath mangroves were 1.4°C lower, decreasing aboveground k of fast- (cellulose) and slow-decomposing (wood) standard substrates. Wood k in shallow soil (0-15 cm) was higher in mangrove than marsh patches, but vegetation identity did not impact k in deeper soil (15-30 cm). We found that mangrove cover enhanced OC storage by increasing biomass, creating more recalcitrant organic matter and reducing k on the soil surface by altering microclimate, despite increasing wood k belowground and decreasing allochthonous OC subsidies. Our results illustrate the importance of mangroves in maintaining coastal OC storage, but also indicate that the impacts of vegetation change on OC storage may vary based on ecosystem conditions, organic-matter sources, and the relative spatiotemporal scales of mangrove vegetation change., (© 2019 by the Ecological Society of America.)
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- 2020
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10. Nutrient enrichment shifts mangrove height distribution: Implications for coastal woody encroachment.
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Weaver CA and Armitage AR
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- Climate Change, Ecosystem, Food, Gulf of Mexico, Wetlands, Avicennia growth & development, Poaceae growth & development
- Abstract
Global changes, such as increased temperatures and elevated CO2, are driving shifts in plant species distribution and dominance, like woody plant encroachment into grasslands. Local factors within these ecotones can influence the rate of regime shifts. Woody encroachment is occurring worldwide, though there has been limited research within coastal systems, where mangrove (woody shrub/tree) stands are expanding into salt marsh areas. Because coastal systems are exposed to various degrees of nutrient input, we investigated how nutrient enrichment may locally impact mangrove stand expansion and salt marsh displacement over time. We fertilized naturally co-occurring Avicennia germinans (black mangrove) and Spartina alterniflora (smooth cordgrass) stands in Port Aransas, TX, an area experiencing mangrove encroachment within the Northern Gulf of Mexico mangrove-marsh ecotone. After four growing seasons (2010-2013) of continuous fertilization, Avicennia was more positively influenced by nutrient enrichment than Spartina. Most notably, fertilized plots had a higher density of taller (> 0.5 m) mangroves and mangrove maximum height was 46% taller than in control plots. Fertilization may promote an increase in mangrove stand expansion within the mangrove-marsh ecotone by shifting Avicennia height distribution. Avicennia individuals, which reach certain species-specific height thresholds, have reduced negative neighbor effects and have higher resilience to freezing temperatures, which may increase mangrove competitive advantage over marsh grass. Therefore, we propose that nutrient enrichment, which augments mangrove height, could act locally as a positive feedback to mangrove encroachment, by reducing mangrove growth suppression factors, thereby accelerating the rates of increased mangrove coverage and subsequent marsh displacement. Areas within the mangrove-marsh ecotone with high anthropogenic nutrient input may be at increased risk of a regime shift from grass to woody dominated ecosystems.
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- 2018
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11. X Chromosome Dose and Sex Bias in Autoimmune Diseases: Increased Prevalence of 47,XXX in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Sjögren's Syndrome.
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Liu K, Kurien BT, Zimmerman SL, Kaufman KM, Taft DH, Kottyan LC, Lazaro S, Weaver CA, Ice JA, Adler AJ, Chodosh J, Radfar L, Rasmussen A, Stone DU, Lewis DM, Li S, Koelsch KA, Igoe A, Talsania M, Kumar J, Maier-Moore JS, Harris VM, Gopalakrishnan R, Jonsson R, Lessard JA, Lu X, Gottenberg JE, Anaya JM, Cunninghame-Graham DS, Huang AJW, Brennan MT, Hughes P, Illei GG, Miceli-Richard C, Keystone EC, Bykerk VP, Hirschfield G, Xie G, Ng WF, Nordmark G, Eriksson P, Omdal R, Rhodus NL, Rischmueller M, Rohrer M, Segal BM, Vyse TJ, Wahren-Herlenius M, Witte T, Pons-Estel B, Alarcon-Riquelme ME, Guthridge JM, James JA, Lessard CJ, Kelly JA, Thompson SD, Gaffney PM, Montgomery CG, Edberg JC, Kimberly RP, Alarcón GS, Langefeld CL, Gilkeson GS, Kamen DL, Tsao BP, McCune WJ, Salmon JE, Merrill JT, Weisman MH, Wallace DJ, Utset TO, Bottinger EP, Amos CI, Siminovitch KA, Mariette X, Sivils KL, Harley JB, and Scofield RH
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- Autoimmune Diseases epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Chromosomes, Human, X, Female, Gene Dosage, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Prevalence, Sarcoidosis epidemiology, Sex Chromosome Aberrations, Sex Distribution, Trisomy, Arthritis, Rheumatoid epidemiology, Liver Cirrhosis, Biliary epidemiology, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic epidemiology, Sex Chromosome Disorders of Sex Development epidemiology, Sjogren's Syndrome epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: More than 80% of autoimmune disease predominantly affects females, but the mechanism for this female bias is poorly understood. We suspected that an X chromosome dose effect accounts for this, and we undertook this study to test our hypothesis that trisomy X (47,XXX; occurring in ∼1 in 1,000 live female births) would be increased in patients with female-predominant diseases (systemic lupus erythematosus [SLE], primary Sjögren's syndrome [SS], primary biliary cirrhosis, and rheumatoid arthritis [RA]) compared to patients with diseases without female predominance (sarcoidosis) and compared to controls., Methods: All subjects in this study were female. We identified subjects with 47,XXX using aggregate data from single-nucleotide polymorphism arrays, and, when possible, we confirmed the presence of 47,XXX using fluorescence in situ hybridization or quantitative polymerase chain reaction., Results: We found 47,XXX in 7 of 2,826 SLE patients and in 3 of 1,033 SS patients, but in only 2 of 7,074 controls (odds ratio in the SLE and primary SS groups 8.78 [95% confidence interval 1.67-86.79], P = 0.003 and odds ratio 10.29 [95% confidence interval 1.18-123.47], P = 0.02, respectively). One in 404 women with SLE and 1 in 344 women with SS had 47,XXX. There was an excess of 47,XXX among SLE and SS patients., Conclusion: The estimated prevalence of SLE and SS in women with 47,XXX was ∼2.5 and ∼2.9 times higher, respectively, than that in women with 46,XX and ∼25 and ∼41 times higher, respectively, than that in men with 46,XY. No statistically significant increase of 47,XXX was observed in other female-biased diseases (primary biliary cirrhosis or RA), supporting the idea of multiple pathways to sex bias in autoimmunity., (© 2016, American College of Rheumatology.)
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- 2016
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12. The future state of clinical data capture and documentation: a report from AMIA's 2011 Policy Meeting.
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Cusack CM, Hripcsak G, Bloomrosen M, Rosenbloom ST, Weaver CA, Wright A, Vawdrey DK, Walker J, and Mamykina L
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- Continuity of Patient Care, Efficiency, Organizational, Electronic Health Records trends, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Information Dissemination, Research, United States, Workflow, Documentation trends, Electronic Health Records organization & administration, Information Storage and Retrieval trends, Public Policy, Quality Assurance, Health Care
- Abstract
Much of what is currently documented in the electronic health record is in response toincreasingly complex and prescriptive medicolegal, reimbursement, and regulatory requirements. These requirements often result in redundant data capture and cumbersome documentation processes. AMIA's 2011 Health Policy Meeting examined key issues in this arena and envisioned changes to help move toward an ideal future state of clinical data capture and documentation. The consensus of the meeting was that, in the move to a technology-enabled healthcare environment, the main purpose of documentation should be to support patient care and improved outcomes for individuals and populations and that documentation for other purposes should be generated as a byproduct of care delivery. This paper summarizes meeting deliberations, and highlights policy recommendations and research priorities. The authors recommend development of a national strategy to review and amend public policies to better support technology-enabled data capture and documentation practices.
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- 2013
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13. Treatment of early seropositive rheumatoid arthritis: doxycycline plus methotrexate versus methotrexate alone.
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O'Dell JR, Elliott JR, Mallek JA, Mikuls TR, Weaver CA, Glickstein S, Blakely KM, Hausch R, and Leff RD
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- Adult, Aged, Arthritis, Rheumatoid blood, Arthritis, Rheumatoid physiopathology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Drug Therapy, Combination, Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Metalloproteases antagonists & inhibitors, Middle Aged, Rheumatoid Factor blood, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Antirheumatic Agents therapeutic use, Arthritis, Rheumatoid drug therapy, Doxycycline therapeutic use, Methotrexate therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the efficacy of doxycycline plus methotrexate (MTX) versus MTX alone in the treatment of early seropositive rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and to attempt to differentiate the antibacterial and antimetalloproteinase effects of doxycycline., Methods: Sixty-six patients with seropositive RA of <1 year's duration who had not been previously treated with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs were randomized to receive 100 mg of doxycycline twice daily with MTX (high-dose doxycycline group), 20 mg of doxycycline twice daily with MTX (low-dose doxycycline group), or placebo with MTX (placebo group), in a 2-year double-blind study. Treatment was started with an MTX dosage of 7.5 mg/week, which was titrated every 3 months until remission was reached (maximum dosage of 17.5 mg/week). The primary end point was an American College of Rheumatology 50% improvement (ACR50) response at 2 years., Results: ACR50 responses were observed in 41.6% of patients in the high-dose doxycycline group, 38.9% of those in the low-dose doxycycline group, and 12.5% of patients in the placebo group. Results of chi-square analysis of the ACR50 response in the high-dose doxycycline group versus that in the placebo group were significantly different (P = 0.02). Trend analysis revealed that the ACR20 response and the ACR50 response were significantly different between groups (P = 0.04 and P = 0.03, respectively). MTX doses at 2 years were not different among groups. Four patients in the high-dose doxycycline group, 2 patients in the low-dose doxycycline group, and 2 patients in the placebo group were withdrawn because of toxic reactions., Conclusion: In patients with early seropositive RA, initial therapy with MTX plus doxycycline was superior (based on an ACR50 response) to treatment with MTX alone. The therapeutic responses to low-dose and high-dose doxycycline were similar, suggesting that the antimetalloproteinase effects were more important than the antibacterial effects. Further studies to evaluate the mechanism of action of tetracyclines in RA are indicated.
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- 2006
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14. Bedside, classroom and bench: collaborative strategies to generate evidence-based knowledge for nursing practice.
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Weaver CA, Warren JJ, and Delaney C
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- Education, Nursing organization & administration, Evidence-Based Medicine organization & administration, Nursing Informatics organization & administration, Teaching organization & administration, United States, Cooperative Behavior, Education, Nursing methods, Evidence-Based Medicine methods, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Nursing Informatics methods, Nursing Process organization & administration, Teaching methods
- Abstract
The rise of evidence-base practice (EBP) as a standard for care delivery is rapidly emerging as a global phenomenon that is transcending political, economic and geographic boundaries. Evidence-based nursing (EBN) addresses the growing body of nursing knowledge supported by different levels of evidence for best practices in nursing care. Across all health care, including nursing, we face the challenge of how to most effectively close the gap between what is known and what is practiced. There is extensive literature on the barriers and difficulties of translating research findings into practical application. While the literature refers to this challenge as the "Bench to Bedside" lag, this paper presents three collaborative strategies that aim to minimize this gap. The Bedside strategy proposes to use the data generated from care delivery and captured in the massive data repositories of electronic health record (EHR) systems as empirical evidence that can be analysed to discover and then inform best practice. In the Classroom strategy, we present a description for how evidence-based nursing knowledge is taught in a baccalaureate nursing program. And finally, the Bench strategy describes applied informatics in converting paper-based EBN protocols into the workflow of clinical information systems. Protocols are translated into reference and executable knowledge with the goal of placing the latest scientific knowledge at the fingertips of front line clinicians. In all three strategies, information technology (IT) is presented as the underlying tool that makes this rapid translation of nursing knowledge into practice and education feasible.
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- 2005
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15. Consolidation-like effects in flashbulb memories: evidence from September 11, 2001.
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Weaver CA 3rd and Krug KS
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Life Change Events, Memory, September 11 Terrorist Attacks
- Abstract
After September 11, 2001, we distributed flashbulb memory questionnaires at 5 different dates: within 48 hr (T1) and at 1 week (T2), 1 month (T3), 3 months (T4), and 1 year (T5). We scored responses for self-reported memory (veracity unverified), memory accuracy (recollection-matched T1 response), and memory consistency (recollection-matched prior responses other than T1). Self-reported memory and subjective confidence remained near ceiling, although the accuracy declined. However, memories given a week or more after September 11 were consistent throughout. We hypothesize that flashbulb memories follow a consolidation-like process: Some details learned later are incorporated into the initial memory, and many others are discarded. After this process, memories stabilize. Therefore, the best predictor of flashbulb memories at long intervals is not the memory as initially reported but memories reported a week or more after the event.
- Published
- 2004
16. Distinct missense mutations of the FGFR3 lys650 codon modulate receptor kinase activation and the severity of the skeletal dysplasia phenotype.
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Bellus GA, Spector EB, Speiser PW, Weaver CA, Garber AT, Bryke CR, Israel J, Rosengren SS, Webster MK, Donoghue DJ, and Francomano CA
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- Adolescent, Adult, Amino Acid Sequence, Amino Acid Substitution, Base Sequence, Body Height, Bone Diseases, Developmental physiopathology, Carpal Bones abnormalities, Child, Child, Preschool, Enzyme Activation, Exons genetics, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Phenotype, Phosphorylation, Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 3, Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor chemistry, Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor metabolism, Bone Diseases, Developmental genetics, Codon genetics, Lysine genetics, Mutation, Missense genetics, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases, Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor genetics
- Abstract
The fibroblast growth factor-receptor 3 (FGFR3) Lys650 codon is located within a critical region of the tyrosine kinase-domain activation loop. Two missense mutations in this codon are known to result in strong constitutive activation of the FGFR3 tyrosine kinase and cause three different skeletal dysplasia syndromes-thanatophoric dysplasia type II (TD2) (A1948G [Lys650Glu]) and SADDAN (severe achondroplasia with developmental delay and acanthosis nigricans) syndrome and thanatophoric dysplasia type I (TD1) (both due to A1949T [Lys650Met]). Other mutations within the FGFR3 tyrosine kinase domain (e.g., C1620A or C1620G [both resulting in Asn540Lys]) are known to cause hypochondroplasia, a relatively common but milder skeletal dysplasia. In 90 individuals with suspected clinical diagnoses of hypochondroplasia who do not have Asn540Lys mutations, we screened for mutations, in FGFR3 exon 15, that would disrupt a unique BbsI restriction site that includes the Lys650 codon. We report here the discovery of three novel mutations (G1950T and G1950C [both resulting in Lys650Asn] and A1948C [Lys650Gln]) occurring in six individuals from five families. Several physical and radiological features of these individuals were significantly milder than those in individuals with the Asn540Lys mutations. The Lys650Asn/Gln mutations result in constitutive activation of the FGFR3 tyrosine kinase but to a lesser degree than that observed with the Lys540Glu and Lys650Met mutations. These results demonstrate that different amino acid substitutions at the FGFR3 Lys650 codon can result in several different skeletal dysplasia phenotypes.
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- 2000
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17. Dual functions of Streptococcus salivarius urease.
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Chen YY, Weaver CA, and Burne RA
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- Gene Deletion, Kinetics, Restriction Mapping, Streptococcus genetics, Streptococcus growth & development, Urease genetics, Streptococcus enzymology, Urease metabolism
- Abstract
A urease-deficient derivative of Streptococcus salivarius 57.I was constructed by allelic exchange at the ureC locus. The wild-type strain was protected against acid killing through hydrolysis of physiologically relevant concentrations of urea, whereas the mutant was not. Also, S. salivarius could use urea as a source of nitrogen for growth exclusively through a urease-dependent pathway.
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- 2000
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18. Inactivation of the ptsI gene encoding enzyme I of the sugar phosphotransferase system of Streptococcus salivarius: effects on growth and urease expression.
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Weaver CA, Chen YM, and Burne RA
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- Blotting, Western, Culture Media, Fructose, Galactose, Gene Silencing, Glucose, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Lactose, Mutation, Phosphoenolpyruvate Sugar Phosphotransferase System deficiency, Phosphoenolpyruvate Sugar Phosphotransferase System metabolism, Phosphotransferases (Nitrogenous Group Acceptor) deficiency, Phosphotransferases (Nitrogenous Group Acceptor) metabolism, Plasmids, Streptococcus enzymology, Streptococcus growth & development, Time Factors, Urease metabolism, Genes, Bacterial, Phosphoenolpyruvate Sugar Phosphotransferase System genetics, Phosphotransferases (Nitrogenous Group Acceptor) genetics, Streptococcus genetics
- Abstract
The urease genes of Streptococcus salivarius 57.1 are tightly repressed in cells growing at neutral pH. When cells are cultivated at acidic pH values, the urease genes become derepressed and transcription is enhanced when cells are growing under carbohydrate-excess conditions. Previously, the authors proposed that the bacterial sugar:phosphotransferase system (PTS) modulated the DNA-binding activity by phosphorylation of the urease repressor when carbohydrate was limiting. The purpose of this study was to assess whether enzyme I (EI) of the PTS could be involved in modulating urease expression in response to carbohydrate availability. An EI-deficient strain (ptsI18-3) of S. salivarius 57.1 was constructed by insertional inactivation of the ptsI gene. The mutant had no measurable PTS activity and lacked EI, as assessed by Western analysis. The mutant grew as well as the wild-type strain on the non-PTS sugar lactose, and grew better than the parent when another non-PTS sugar, galactose, was the sole carbohydrate. The mutant was able to grow with glucose as the sole carbohydrate, but displayed a 24 h lag time and had a generation time some threefold longer than strain 57.1. The mean OD600 attained after 48 h by ptsI18-3 supplied with fructose was 0.16, with no additional growth observed even after 3 d. Urease expression in the wild-type and mutant strains was assessed in continuous chemostat culture. Repression of urease at neutral pH was seen in both strains under all conditions tested. Growth of wild-type cells on limiting concentrations of lactose resulted in very low levels of urease expression compared with growth on PTS sugars. In contrast, under similar conditions, urease expression in ptsI18-3 was restored to levels seen in the parent growing on PTS sugars. Growth under conditions of lactose excess resulted in further derepression of urease, but ptsI18-3 expressed about threefold higher urease activity than 57.1. The results support a role for EI in urease regulation, but also indicate that additional factors may be important in regulating urease gene expression.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Transcriptional regulation of the Streptococcus salivarius 57.I urease operon.
- Author
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Chen YY, Weaver CA, Mendelsohn DR, and Burne RA
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins isolation & purification, Base Sequence, DNA, Bacterial, Enzyme Precursors genetics, Enzyme Precursors metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Multigene Family, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Streptococcus genetics, Transcription, Genetic, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic, Membrane Transport Proteins, Operon, Streptococcus enzymology, Urease genetics
- Abstract
The Streptococcus salivarius 57.I ure cluster was organized as an operon, beginning with ureI, followed by ureABC (structural genes) and ureEFGD (accessory genes). Northern analyses revealed transcripts encompassing structural genes and transcripts containing the entire operon. A sigma70-like promoter could be mapped 5' to ureI (PureI) by primer extension analysis. The intensity of the signal increased when cells were grown at an acidic pH and was further enhanced by excess carbohydrate. To determine the function(s) of two inverted repeats located 5' to PureI, transcriptional fusions of the full-length promoter region (PureI), or a deletion derivative (PureIDelta100), and a promoterless chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene were constructed and integrated into the chromosome to generate strains PureICAT and PureIDelta100CAT, respectively. CAT specific activities of PureICAT were repressed at pH 7.0 and induced at pH 5.5 and by excess carbohydrate. In PureIDelta100CAT, CAT activity was 60-fold higher than in PureICAT at pH 7.0 and pH induction was nearly eliminated, indicating that expression was negatively regulated. Thus, it was concluded that PureI was the predominant, regulated promoter and that regulation was governed by a mechanism differing markedly from other known mechanisms for bacterial urease expression.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The orphan nuclear receptor NGFI-B regulates expression of the gene encoding steroid 21-hydroxylase.
- Author
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Wilson TE, Mouw AR, Weaver CA, Milbrandt J, and Parker KL
- Subjects
- Adrenal Cortex cytology, Adrenal Cortex metabolism, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone physiology, Animals, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Blotting, Northern, CHO Cells, Cells, Cultured, Cricetinae, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, In Situ Hybridization, Mice, Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 4, Group A, Member 1, Promoter Regions, Genetic, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear, Receptors, Steroid, Steroid 21-Hydroxylase metabolism, Transcription Factors genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic, Steroid 21-Hydroxylase genetics, Transcription Factors metabolism
- Abstract
As part of its trophic action to maintain the steroidogenic capacity of adrenocortical cells, corticotropin (ACTH) increases the transcription of the cytochrome P-450 steroid hydroxylase genes, including the gene encoding steroid 21-hydroxylase (21-OHase). We previously identified several promoter elements that regulate 21-OHase gene expression in mouse Y1 adrenocortical tumor cells. One of these elements, located at nucleotide -65, closely resembles the recognition sequence of the orphan nuclear receptor NGFI-B, suggesting that NGFI-B regulates this essential steroidogenic enzyme. To explore this possibility, we first used in situ hybridization to demonstrate high levels of NGFI-B transcripts in the adrenal cortex of the adult rat. In cultured mouse Y1 adrenocortical cells, treatment with ACTH, the major regulator of 21-OHase transcription, rapidly increased NGFI-B expression. Gel mobility shift and DNase I footprinting experiments showed that recombinantly expressed NGFI-B interacts specifically with the 21-OHase -65 element and identified one complex formed by Y1 extracts and the 21-OHase -65 element that contains NGFI-B. Expression of NGFI-B significantly augmented the activity of the intact 21-OHase promoter, while mutations of the -65 element that abolish NGFI-B binding markedly diminished NGFI-B-mediated transcriptional activation. Specific mutations of NGFI-B shown previously to impair either DNA binding or transcriptional activation diminished the effect of NGFI-B coexpression on 21-OHase expression. Finally, an oligonucleotide containing the NGFI-B response element conferred ACTH response to a core promoter from the prolactin gene, showing that this element is sufficient for ACTH induction. Collectively, these results identify a cellular promoter element that is regulated by NGFI-B and implicate NGFI-B in the transcriptional induction of 21-OHase by ACTH.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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21. Domains regulating transcriptional activity of the inducible orphan receptor NGFI-B.
- Author
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Paulsen RE, Weaver CA, Fahrner TJ, and Milbrandt J
- Subjects
- 3T3 Cells, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Cell Line, Chromosome Deletion, Codon genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Drosophila, Genes, Regulator, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 4, Group A, Member 1, Oligodeoxyribonucleotides, PC12 Cells, Reading Frames, Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear, Receptors, Steroid, Recombinant Fusion Proteins metabolism, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Transcription Factors genetics, Transcriptional Activation, Transfection, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
NGFI-B is an early response gene which encodes a protein that has strong homology with nuclear receptors in the DNA binding domain and in carboxyl-terminal domains responsible for ligand binding and regulation of transcriptional activity. Previously, we have demonstrated that NGFI-B is transcriptionally active in cells grown in vitro in the absence of exogenously added ligand. However, the ligand for NGFI-B does not appear to be a component of cell culture medium, as NGFI-B remained active when expressed in cells grown in medium lacking phenol red, serum, essential vitamins, or essential amino acids. To define the transactivation domains, a mutational analysis was conducted which revealed that a serine/threonine-rich area of 18 amino acids within the amino terminus, termed TAB-1, is an important transcriptional activation domain. The mutation of two adjacent serine and threonine residues within TAB-1 significantly decreased transactivation by NGFI-B. An examination of the role of the carboxyl terminus in regulating NGFI-B transcriptional activity revealed that, in accordance with other nuclear receptors, mutants lacking portions of the carboxyl terminus had greatly decreased activity. The similarity with other receptors was further supported by studies with the mutant B delta 414-597 which encodes a fully active, truncated receptor analogous to a hormone-independent, constitutively active glucocorticoid receptor truncation mutant. This NGFI-B truncation mutant had activity similar to wild type NGFI-B in a number of mammalian cell lines; however, in contrast, it was 8-fold more active than the wild type receptor in the Drosophila S2 cell line, suggesting that insect cells either lack the NGFI-B ligand or obligatory accessory factors.
- Published
- 1992
22. Methanol dissimilation in Xanthobacter H4-14: activities, induction and comparison to Pseudomonas AM1 and Paracoccus denitrificans.
- Author
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Weaver CA and Lidstrom ME
- Subjects
- Alcohol Dehydrogenase, Alcohol Oxidoreductases biosynthesis, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Enzyme Induction, Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria growth & development, Paracoccus denitrificans enzymology, Paracoccus denitrificans growth & development, Pseudomonas enzymology, Pseudomonas growth & development, Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria enzymology, Methanol metabolism
- Abstract
Methanol dissimilatory enzymes detected in the methanol autotroph Xanthobacter H4-14 were a typical phenazine methosulphate-linked methanol dehydrogenase, a NAD+-linked formate dehydrogenase, and a dye-linked formaldehyde dehydrogenase that could be assayed only by activity stains of polyacrylamide gels. This same methanol dehydrogenase activity was found in ethanol-grown cells and was apparently utilized for ethanol oxidation. Formaldehyde dehydrogenase activities were investigated in Paracoccus denitrificans, Xanthobacter H4-14, and Pseudomonas AM1. P. denitrificans contained a previously reported NAD+-linked, GSH-dependent activity, but both Xanthobacter H4-14 and Pseudomonas AM1 contained numerous activities detected by activity stains of polyacrylamide gels. Induction studies showed that in Xanthobacter H4-14, a 10 kDal polypeptide, probably a dehydrogenase-associated cytochrome c, was co-induced with methanol dehydrogenase, but the formaldehyde and formate dehydrogenases were not co-regulated. Analogous induction experiments revealed similar patterns in P. denitrificans, but no evidence for co-regulation of dissimilatory activities in Pseudomonas AM1.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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23. Isolation, complementation and partial characterization of mutants of the methanol autotroph Xanthobacter H4-14 defective in methanol dissimilation.
- Author
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Weaver CA and Lidstrom ME
- Subjects
- Alcohol Oxidoreductases metabolism, Aldehyde Oxidoreductases metabolism, Cloning, Molecular, DNA, Bacterial, Genetic Complementation Test, Mutation, Phenotype, Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria genetics, Methanol metabolism
- Abstract
Seven mutants of Xanthobacter H4-14, unable to grow on methanol but capable of growth on formate, were isolated and complemented with a chromosomal clone bank constructed in the broad-host-range cosmid pVK100. One mutant could not be complemented but the others fell into four distinct complementation groups that involved three different recombinant clones. All of the complementing regions were separated by at least 10 kbp. The five complementation classes had different phenotypic characteristics and were defective in different aspects of methanol and formaldehyde oxidation. Class I mutants were defective in methanol oxidation, class II mutants were impaired in formaldehyde oxidation, class III mutants appeared to be defective in a regulatory element involving the methanol oxidation system, and class IV mutants appeared to be defective in a regulatory element involving formaldehyde oxidation. Class V mutants exhibited a methanol-sensitive phenotype, which was correlated with an imbalance between methanol and formaldehyde dehydrogenase activities. Analysis of this class suggested it was defective in a repressor that regulated methanol dissimilation functions.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Plasmid-determined immunity of Escherichia coli K-12 to colicin Ia Is mediated by a plasmid-encoded membrane protein.
- Author
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Weaver CA, Redborg AH, and Konisky J
- Subjects
- Bacterial Proteins genetics, Cloning, Molecular, DNA Transposable Elements, Escherichia coli physiology, Membrane Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins physiology, Bacteriocin Plasmids, Colicins pharmacology, Escherichia coli genetics, Membrane Proteins physiology, Plasmids
- Abstract
The colicin Ia structural (cia) and immunity (iia) genes of plasmid pColIa-CA53 have been cloned into the cloning vector pBR322. These two genes are closely linked, and both of them can be isolated on a deoxyribonucleic acid fragment approximately 4,800 base pairs long. An analysis of the polypeptides synthesized in ultraviolet-irradiated cells containing these cloned genes led to the conclusion that the iia gene product is a polypeptide with a molecular weight of approximately 14,500. Insertion of transposon Tn5 into the iia gene led to a concomitant loss of the immune phenotype and the ability to produce this protein. Fractionation of ultraviolet-irradiated cells harboring a plasmid carrying the iia gene showed that the immunity protein is a component of the inner (cytoplasmic) membrane. Furthermore, the mechanism of immunity to colicin Ia appears to operate at the level of the cytoplasmic membrane. This conclusion is based on our finding that membrane vesicles prepared from colicin Ia-immune cells could be depolarized by colicins E1 and Ib but not by colicin Ia.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Introduction by molecular cloning of artifactual inverted sequences at the 5' terminus of the sense strand of bovine parathyroid hormone cDNA.
- Author
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Weaver CA, Gordon DF, and Kemper B
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Cattle, Chromosome Inversion, Cloning, Molecular methods, DNA Restriction Enzymes metabolism, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase metabolism, DNA genetics, Parathyroid Hormone genetics
- Abstract
To study the structure and function of the gene for parathyroid hormone, we obtained recombinant plasmids containing bovine parathyroid hormone cDNA. The nucleotide sequence at the 5' terminus (relative to the sense strand) of the cDNA insert in a recombinant plasmid, pPTHi4, was different from that previously reported for the bovine parathyroid hormone cDNA insert of another recombinant plasmid, pPTHm1 [Kronenberg, H. M., McDevitt, B. F., Majzoub, J. A., Nathans, J., Sharp, P. A., Potts, J. T., Jr. & Rich, A. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 76, 4981-4985]. The first 50 nucleotides of the pPTHm1 insert were an inverted complement of nucleotides 2-51 of the pPTHi4 insert. the cDNA insert of another plasmid, pPTHi8, contained a sequence identical to nucleotides 2-51 of the pPTHi4 insert but also contained an additional 42 bases at the 5' terminus. The first 41 bases of the pPTHi8 insert were an inverted repeat of an internal sequence of the pPTHi4 insert corresponding to nucleotides 184-224. Restriction endonuclease analysis of pPTHi8 indicated that the internal sequence corresponding to this region was retained. The nucleotide sequence of a restriction fragment hybridized to parathyroid hormone mRNA and extended toward the 5' terminus of the mRNA with reverse transcriptase confirmed that the sequence at the 5' terminus of the pPTHi4 insert was an accurate copy of the parathyroid hormone mRNA sequence. These data suggest that two types of sequence rearrangements may occur at the 5' terminus, as occurred in pPTHm1, and (ii) an inverted repeat of an internal sequence, as occurred in pPTHi8.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Isolation and complete nucleotide sequence of the gene for bovine parathyroid hormone.
- Author
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Weaver CA, Gordon DF, Kissil MS, Mead DA, and Kemper B
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Cloning, Molecular, DNA genetics, DNA Restriction Enzymes, DNA, Recombinant, Genes, Humans, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Rats, Species Specificity, Cattle genetics, Parathyroid Hormone genetics
- Abstract
The structure of the bovine parathyroid hormone (PTH) gene has been analyzed by Southern blot hybridization of genomic DNA and by nucleotide sequence analysis of a cloned PTH gene. In the Southern analysis, several restriction enzymes produced single fragments that hybridized to PTH cDNA suggesting that there is a single bovine PTH gene. The restriction map of the cloned gene is the same as that determined by Southern blot analysis of bovine DNA. The sequence of 3154 bp of the cloned gene has been determined including 510 bp and 139 bp in the 5' and 3' flanking regions, respectively. The gene contains two introns which separate three exons that code primarily for: (i) the 5' untranslated region, (ii) the pre-sequence of preProPTH, and (iii) PTH and the 3' untranslated region. The gene contains 68% A + T and unusually long stretches of 100- to 150-bp sequences containing alternating A and T nucleotides in the 5' flanking region and intron A. The 5' flanking region contains two TATA sequences, both of which appear to be functional as determined by S1 nuclease mapping. Compared to the rat and human genes, the locations of the introns are identical but the sizes differ. Comparable human and bovine sequences in the flanking regions and introns are about 80% homologous.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. EAPs--how they improve the bottom line.
- Author
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Weaver CA
- Subjects
- Efficiency, Humans, Personnel Management economics, Risk, United States, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Counseling, Occupational Health Services economics
- Published
- 1979
28. tonB-independent ferrichrome-mediated iron transport in Escherichia coli spheroplasts.
- Author
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Weaver CA and Konisky J
- Subjects
- Biological Transport, Active, Cell Membrane physiology, Escherichia coli genetics, Genes, Mutation, Escherichia coli metabolism, Ferrichrome metabolism, Hydroxamic Acids metabolism, Spheroplasts metabolism
- Abstract
Although a functional tonB gene product was required for ferrichrome-mediated iron transport in whole cells of Escherichia coli K-12, such transport did not require the tonB+ function in spheroplasts. We suggest that in spheroplasts ferrichrome has direct access to the cytoplasmic membrane and that this is reflected in tonB-independent accumulation of ferrichrome iron. Therefore, the tonB gene product does not function in the translocation of ferrichrome iron across the inner membrane.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Characterization of murine sarcoma virus (Kirsten) transformation of mouse and human cells.
- Author
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Aaronson SA and Weaver CA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Clone Cells, Culture Media, Culture Techniques, Fibroblasts microbiology, Helper Viruses isolation & purification, Humans, Kidney, Mice, Rats, Skin, Virus Cultivation, Virus Replication, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic, Leukemia Virus, Murine growth & development, Moloney murine leukemia virus growth & development
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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