519 results on '"Stern, Alan"'
Search Results
502. Comments on article "Toxicity and carcinogenicity of chromium compounds in humans" by Costa and Klein.
- Author
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Post GB and Stern AH
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Carcinogens, Environmental metabolism, Carcinogens, Environmental standards, Chromium Compounds metabolism, Chromium Compounds standards, Humans, Mice, Neoplasms epidemiology, Toxicity Tests, Ultraviolet Rays, Carcinogens, Environmental toxicity, Chromium Compounds toxicity, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Neoplasms chemically induced, Risk Assessment methods, Water Supply standards
- Abstract
The recent article by Costa and Klein (2006) contains several inaccuracies about the federal drinking water standard for chromium. The federal drinking water standard for chromium is 100 ppb, not 50 ppb as stated by Costa and Klein, and it is based on non-carcinogenic effects, not a one in one million cancer risk level. The question of whether or not hexavalent chromium is carcinogenic via the oral route is the focus of much current interest and has major implications for regulation of chromium in drinking water and soil. The chronic drinking water study of hexavalent chromium currently being conducted by the National Toxicology Program will provide further information that will be useful in addressing this question.
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- 2006
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503. Spectral reconstruction methods in fast NMR: reduced dimensionality, random sampling and maximum entropy.
- Author
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Mobli M, Stern AS, and Hoch JC
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- Artifacts, Carbon Isotopes, Nitrogen Isotopes, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular methods, Ubiquitin chemistry
- Abstract
The need to reduce data acquisition times of multidimensional NMR experiments has fostered considerable interest in novel data acquisition schemes. A recurring theme is that of reduced dimensionality experiments, in which time evolutions in the indirect dimensions are incremented together, rather than independently. Spectral analysis of such data is carried out using methods such as filtered back-projection, GFT, or parametric signal modeling. By using Maximum Entropy reconstruction of reduced-dimensionality data, we show that the artifacts that arise in reduced dimensionality experiments are intrinsic to the data sampling, and are not, in general, the result of the methods used to compute spectra. Our results illustrate that reduced dimensionality is a special case of non-uniform sampling in the time domain. We show that MaxEnt reconstruction yields more accurate spectra for reduced dimensionality data than back-projection reconstruction and that randomly choosing time increments based on an exponentially weighted distribution is more efficient, with fewer artifacts, than the systematic coupling of time increments used in most reduced dimensionality approaches.
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- 2006
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504. A high predisposition to depression and anxiety in mothers and other matrilineal relatives of children with presumed maternally inherited mitochondrial disorders.
- Author
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Boles RG, Burnett BB, Gleditsch K, Wong S, Guedalia A, Kaariainen A, Eloed J, Stern A, and Brumm V
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- Adult, Child, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Family psychology, Family Health, Female, Humans, Mental Disorders etiology, Mental Disorders psychology, Middle Aged, Mitochondrial Diseases complications, Mitochondrial Diseases genetics, Mutation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anxiety psychology, Depression psychology, Mitochondrial Diseases psychology, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
Although mothers of chronically ill children are generally prone to depression and anxiety, clinical observation suggests that these symptoms are relatively increased in mothers of children with maternally inherited mitochondrial disorders (MIMD). In this study, the Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI), the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), and a non-standardized mental health questionnaire were administered to 15 mothers of children with MIMD and 17 mothers of children with autosomal recessive metabolic disorders (ARMD) followed in one clinic. One half of the children in both groups suffer from mental retardation and/or > or = 2 hospitalizations/year related to their genetic disorder, and were labeled as severely affected. BDI and BAI scores were similar between mothers of severely affected MIMD and ARMD children, but BDI and BAI scores were threefold higher in mothers of mildly affected MIMD versus ARMD children (P = 0.001 and P = 0.003, respectively). Any mental health condition was self-reported in 10/15 MIMD and 2/17 ARMD mothers (P = 0.002), while at least one mental health condition per family was reported to be present in a matrilineal first-degree relative of the mother in 8/15 MIMD versus 1/17 ARMD families (P = 0.004). Our data confirm that mental health conditions, particularly depression, are diagnosed at an increased frequency among matrilineal relatives likely sharing the same mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) as the affected proband. While previous studies have demonstrated that mtDNA sequences can affect brain function, our data suggests that in addition mtDNA sequences can predispose individuals towards the development of some "mental health" disorders. Thus, "genome-wide" studies to screen for genes associated with depression and anxiety should not neglect the small, yet important, mitochondrial genome., ((c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
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- 2005
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505. Balancing the risks and benefits of fish consumption.
- Author
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Stern AH
- Subjects
- Animals, Fatty Acids, Omega-3 administration & dosage, Foodborne Diseases complications, Humans, Mercury Poisoning complications, Risk Factors, Diet adverse effects, Fishes
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- 2005
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506. An examination of the trade-offs in public health resulting from the use of default exposure assumptions in fish consumption advisories.
- Author
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Mariën K and Stern AH
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- Animals, California, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Indians, North American, Mercury adverse effects, Mercury pharmacokinetics, Mercury Poisoning etiology, New Jersey, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Species Specificity, Washington, Water Pollutants, Chemical adverse effects, Water Pollutants, Chemical pharmacokinetics, Diet, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Fishes metabolism, Food Contamination, Mercury Poisoning prevention & control
- Abstract
Efforts to provide for public health protection from environmental contaminants in fish have resulted in various advisories or recommendations with regard to fish consumption from local, state, and federal agencies. These advisories are based on measured levels of contaminants in fish that are combined with values for body weight and portion size to produce an estimate of an "acceptable" consumption frequency (e.g., eat no more than once per month). Because values for body weight and portion size are generally generic default values, they do not necessarily relate to a specific population or to any individual in that population. Thus, the use of default values may result in underprotection or overprotection in any given case. Given the benefits of fish consumption and the risks from overexposure to various toxicants, vigilance is required by custodians of public health to ensure that populations are protected while being cautious not to over- or underprotect them. In this analysis, we examine the "acceptable" consumption limits derived for fish species/groups consumed by three specific populations and determine the extent of public health protection afforded by these limits. To accomplish this, the "acceptable" consumption frequencies are derived based, in part, on default assumptions and are compared to intakes calculated from empirically derived species-specific individual consumption and demographic data. Sensitivity analyses and population-specific probabilistic assessments of exposure are conducted to identify those values and/or assumptions which might significantly influence the resulting fish consumption advisories. Three populations were chosen for study based on their ability to represent populations of greatest concern: those most sensitive and/or those most exposed. We conclude from this investigation that consumption pattern data, contaminant data and body weight data together can be used to make fish consumption advisories more focused and, therefore, less likely to be under- or overprotective.
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- 2005
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507. A review of the studies of the cardiovascular health effects of methylmercury with consideration of their suitability for risk assessment.
- Author
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Stern AH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Animals, Blood Pressure drug effects, Blood Pressure physiology, Child, Fatty Acids, Omega-3 metabolism, Female, Fishes metabolism, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Assessment methods, Cardiovascular Diseases chemically induced, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Methylmercury Compounds poisoning, Water Pollutants, Chemical poisoning
- Abstract
In the 2000 report of the National Research Council's Committee on the Toxicological Effects of Methylmercury (MeHg), various adverse health effects potentially associated with MeHg exposure including cardiovascular effects were considered. At that time, the committee concluded that neurodevelopmental toxicity was the most sensitive endpoint but recognized emerging evidence of potential cardiovascular effects at low levels of exposure. The committee recommended that these potential effects be addressed through the uncertainty factors applied to the development of the neurodevelopmental reference dose (RfD). This approach was adopted by the US EPA in its derivation of the methylmercury RfD. Since that time, additional studies have become available. The available studies addressing the broad categories of heart disease (including myocardial infarction (MI) and ischemic heart disease), hypertension, and heart rate variability are critically reviewed here. Overall, the evidence linking realistic rates of MeHg exposure from fish consumption to cardiovascular disease suggests an association with heart disease, particularly MI. The apparent antagonistic interaction of MeHg and n-3 fatty acids contained in fish suggests a causal mechanism. As different individuals and populations characteristically consume different species of fish, the risk of cardiovascular effects may not be a simple function of MeHg exposure but its assessment may well need to take n-3 fatty acid intake into account also. The case for significant adverse effects of MeHg on blood pressure at current levels of exposure is weaker. This effect, observed in childhood, does not appear to persist into adolescence, and animal studies are difficult to interpret given the high doses employed. The decrease in heart rate variability related to fetal exposure to MeHg in the same cohort appears to persist into early adolescence and may reflect developmental neurophysiological alterations that are consistent with the developmental neuropsychological effects also observed in that cohort. However, the cardiovascular significance of this effect with regard to its direct effect on health or its ability to predict other, more direct, health effects is unclear. At present, the studies of the Finnish cohort relating MeHg exposure to acute MI and coronary heart disease appear to provide the strongest basis for a formal quantitative risk assessment of the cardiovascular effects of MeHg.
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- 2005
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508. High-resolution aliphatic side-chain assignments in 3D HCcoNH experiments with joint H-C evolution and non-uniform sampling.
- Author
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Sun ZY, Hyberts SG, Rovnyak D, Park S, Stern AS, Hoch JC, and Wagner G
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Proteins chemistry, Software, Carbon chemistry, Hydrogen chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular methods
- Abstract
We describe an efficient NMR triple resonance approach that correlates, at high resolution, protein side-chain and backbone resonances. It relies on the combination of two strategies: joint evolution of aliphatic side-chain proton/carbon coherences using a backbone N-H based HCcoNH reduced dimensionality (RD) experiment and non-uniform sampling (NUS) in two indirect dimensions. A typical data set containing such correlation information can be acquired in 2 days, at very high resolution unfeasible for conventional 4D HCcoNH-TOCSY experiments. The resonances of the aliphatic side-chain protons are unambiguously assigned to their attached carbons through the analysis of the 'sum' and 'difference' spectra. This approach circumvents the tedious process of manual resonance assignments using HCcH-TOCSY data, while providing additional resolving power of backbone N-H signals. A simple peak-list based algorithm has been implemented in the IBIS software for rapid automated backbone and side-chain assignments.
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- 2005
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509. Mercury in commercial fish: optimizing individual choices to reduce risk.
- Author
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Burger J, Stern AH, and Gochfeld M
- Subjects
- Animals, Diet, Fisheries, Flounder, Humans, Information Services, New Jersey, Perciformes, Public Health, Risk Assessment, Seafood, State Government, Tissue Distribution, Tuna, Decision Making, Food Contamination, Mercury analysis, Water Pollutants analysis
- Abstract
Most attention to the risks from fish consumption has focused on recreational anglers and on fish caught by individuals, but the majority of fish that people eat are purchased from commercial sources. We examined mercury levels in three types of fish (tuna, flounder, bluefish) commonly available in New Jersey stores, sampling different regions of the state, in communities with high and low per capita incomes, and in both supermarkets and specialty fish markets. We were interested in species-specific levels of mercury in New Jersey fish and whether these levels were similar to data generated nationally by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA; mainly from 1990 to 1992) on the same types of fish. Such information is critical for providing public health advice. We were also interested in whether mercury levels in three common species of fish differed by region of the state, economic neighborhood, or type of store. We found significant species differences, with tuna having the highest levels and flounder the lowest levels. There were no significant differences in mercury levels as a function of type of store or economic neighborhood. There was only one regional difference: flounder from fish markets along the Jersey shore had higher mercury levels than flounder bought in other markets. We also examined mercury levels in six other commonly available fish and two shellfish from central New Jersey markets. There were significant differences in availability and in mercury levels among fish and shellfish. Both shrimp and scallops had total mercury levels < 0.02 ppm (wet weight). Large shrimp had significantly lower levels of mercury than small shrimp. For tuna, sea bass, croaker, whiting, scallops, and shrimp, the levels of mercury were higher in New Jersey samples than those reported by the FDA. Consumers selecting fish for ease of availability (present in > 50% of markets) would select flounder, snapper, bluefish, and tuna (tuna had the highest mercury value), and those selecting only for price would select whiting, porgy, croaker, and bluefish (all with average mercury levels < 0.3 ppm wet weight). Flounder was the fish with the best relationship among availability, cost, and low mercury levels. We suggest that state agencies responsible for protecting the health of their citizens should obtain information on fish availability in markets and fish preferences of diverse groups of citizens and use this information to select fish for analysis of contaminant levels, providing data on the most commonly eaten fish that will help people make informed decisions about risks from fish consumption.
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- 2005
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510. A revised probabilistic estimate of the maternal methyl mercury intake dose corresponding to a measured cord blood mercury concentration.
- Author
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Stern AH
- Subjects
- Environmental Monitoring, Environmental Pollutants blood, Female, Humans, Maternal-Fetal Exchange, Methylmercury Compounds blood, Models, Biological, Monte Carlo Method, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, Third, Probability, Uncertainty, Environmental Pollutants pharmacokinetics, Fetal Blood chemistry, Maternal Exposure, Mercury blood, Methylmercury Compounds pharmacokinetics, Risk Assessment
- Abstract
In 2001, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) adopted a revised reference dose (RfD) for methyl mercury (MeHg) of 0.1 microg/kg/day. The RfD is based on neurologic developmental effects measured in children associated with exposure in utero to MeHg from the maternal diet. The RfD derivation proceeded from a point of departure based on measured concentration of mercury in fetal cord blood (micrograms per liter). The RfD, however, is a maternal dose (micrograms per kilogram per day). Reconstruction of the maternal dose corresponding to this cord blood concentration, including the variability around this estimate, is a critical step in the RfD derivation. The dose reconstruction employed by the U.S. EPA using the one-compartment pharmacokinetic model contains two areas of significant uncertainty: It does not directly account for the influence of the ratio of cord blood: maternal blood Hg concentration, and it does not resolve uncertainty regarding the most appropriate central tendency estimates for pregnancy and third-trimester-specific model parameters. A probabilistic reassessment of this dose reconstruction was undertaken to address these areas of uncertainty and generally to reconsider the specification of model input parameters. On the basis of a thorough review of the literature and recalculation of the one-compartment model including sensitivity analyses, I estimated that the 95th and 99th percentiles (i.e., the lower 5th and 1st percentiles) of the maternal intake dose corresponding to a fetal cord blood Hg concentration of 58 microg/L are 0.3 and 0.2 microg/kg/day, respectively. For the 99th percentile, this is half the value previously estimated by the U.S. EPA.
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- 2005
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511. Fish availability in supermarkets and fish markets in New Jersey.
- Author
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Burger J, Stern AH, Dixon C, Jeitner C, Shukla S, Burke S, and Gochfeld M
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- Animals, Animals, Wild, Aquaculture, Commerce, Fishes, Humans, New Jersey, Public Policy, Risk Assessment, Community Participation, Food Contamination, Product Labeling, Seafood standards
- Abstract
There is considerable interest in fish consumption, contaminant loads in edible fish, and the risk from consuming fish. Both the benefits and the risks from eating fish are publicized. Most of this attention has focused on recreational anglers and self-caught fish, although the vast majority of fish that people eat are purchased from commercial sources: fish markets and supermarkets. We examined the availability of fish in supermarkets and specialty fish markets in New Jersey, including three regions of the state in communities with high and low per capita incomes (upscale vs. downscale neighborhoods). We were particularly interested in examining whether consumers could determine what type of fish they were buying and whether it was farm-raised or wild. Flounder and salmon were the most commonly available fish, followed by bluefish and tilapia. There were few significant differences in the availability of fish as a function of region. Fish were equally available in fish markets and supermarkets, although snappers were more available in fish markets. The most common fish (found in over 60% of stores) were equally available in upscale and downscale neighborhood stores. However, there were some significant differences in less common fish; butterfish, croaker, monkfish, porgy, and whiting were more available in downscale markets, and halibut, sole, and swordfish were more available in upscale markets. Information available to consumers on labels varied markedly: (1) most labels were generic but some indicated species (e.g., Spanish vs. Boston mackerel, Chilean vs. Black sea bass, mako vs. black-tip shark, rainbow vs. steelhead trout); (2) in many cases, labels indicated whether catfish or salmon were farmed or wild, but usually that information was lacking; (3) sometimes, the labels indicated the location where fish were caught (salmon); and (4) sometimes, there was information on both species and type (e.g., farm/wild for salmon). In most cases, labels gave only a fish name and price. Consumers would be able to make more informed choices if the provenance of fish was clearly stated. State agencies might improve information available to consumers by providing distributors and markets with guidelines about the types of information necessary for consumers to make informed decisions about the fish they eat. When asked, counter staff often could not answer where fish originated from. Finally, there should be partnerships between government agencies responsible for public health, risk assessors, and consumers to ascertain the types of information consumers want and to provide the best available information to consumers.
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- 2004
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512. Optimization of 13C direct detection NMR methods.
- Author
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Shimba N, Kovacs H, Stern AS, Nomura AM, Shimada I, Hoch JC, Craik CS, and Dötsch V
- Subjects
- Carbon Isotopes, Leucine chemistry, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sodium Chloride pharmacology, Solutions chemistry, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods
- Abstract
(13)C-detected experiments are still limited by their inherently lower sensitivity, as compared to the equivalent (1)H-detected experiments. Improving the sensitivity of (13)C detection methods remains a significant area of NMR research that may provide better means for studying large macromolecular systems by NMR. In this communication, we show that (13)C-detected experiments are less sensitive to the salt concentration of the sample solution than (1)H-detected experiments. In addition, acquisition can be started with anti-phase coherence, resulting in higher sensitivity due to the elimination of the final INEPT transfer step.
- Published
- 2004
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513. More on mercury content in fish.
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Stern AH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cysteine analysis, Cysteine toxicity, Humans, Mercury analysis, Methylmercury Compounds toxicity, Cysteine analogs & derivatives, Fishes, Food Contamination, Methylmercury Compounds analysis, Public Health, Seafood analysis
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- 2004
- Full Text
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514. Do recent data from the Seychelles Islands alter the conclusions of the NRC Report on the toxicological effects of methylmercury?
- Author
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Stern AH, Jacobson JL, Ryan L, and Burke TA
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- Animals, Biomarkers blood, Child, Developmental Disabilities epidemiology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Mercury Poisoning epidemiology, Methylmercury Compounds blood, National Academy of Sciences, U.S., Polychlorinated Biphenyls blood, Polychlorinated Biphenyls toxicity, Pregnancy, Risk Assessment, Seychelles epidemiology, United States, Developmental Disabilities chemically induced, Food Contamination, Maternal Exposure adverse effects, Mercury Poisoning etiology, Methylmercury Compounds toxicity, Public Health, Seafood toxicity, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity, Water Pollution, Chemical adverse effects
- Abstract
In 2000, the National Research Council (NRC), an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, released a report entitled, "Toxicological Effects of Methylmercury." The overall conclusion of that report was that, at levels of exposure in some fish- and marine mammal-consuming communities (including those in the Faroe Islands and New Zealand), subtle but significant adverse effects on neuropsychological development were occurring as a result of in utero exposure. Since the release of that report, there has been continuing discussion of the public health relevance of current levels of exposure to Methylmercury. Much of this discussion has been linked to the release of the most recent longitudinal update of the Seychelles Island study. It has recently been posited that these findings supercede those of the NRC committee, and that based on the Seychelles findings, there is little or no risk of adverse neurodevelopmental effects at current levels of exposure. In this commentary, members of the NRC committee address the conclusions from the NRC report in light of the recent Seychelles data. We conclude that no evidence has emerged since the publication of the NRC report that alters the findings of that report.
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- 2004
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515. Molecular dynamics of the long neurotoxin LSIII.
- Author
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Connolly PJ, Stern AS, Turner CJ, and Hoch JC
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Elapid Venoms metabolism, Models, Molecular, Neurotoxins metabolism, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Receptors, Cholinergic chemistry, Reptilian Proteins, Structural Homology, Protein, Thermodynamics, Elapid Venoms chemistry, Neurotoxins chemistry
- Abstract
Long neurotoxins bind tightly and specifically to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in postsynaptic membranes and are useful for exploring the biology of synapses. In crystallographic studies of long neurotoxins the principal binding loop appears disordered, but the NMR solution structure of the long neurotoxin LSIII revealed significant local order, even though the loop is disordered with respect to the globular core. A possible mechanism for conferring global disorder while preserving local order is rigid-body motion of the loop about a hinge region. Here we report investigations of LSIII dynamics based on (13)C(alpha) magnetic relaxation rates and molecular dynamics simulation. The relaxation rates and MD simulation both confirm the hypothesis of rigid-body motion of the loop and place bounds on the extent and time scale of the motion. The bending motion of the loop is slow compared to the rapid fluctuations of individual dihedral angles, reflecting the collective nature and largely entropic free energy profile for hinge bending. The dynamics of the central binding loop in LSIII illustrates two distinct mechanisms by which molecular dynamics directly impacts biological activity. The relative rigidity of key residues involved in recognition at the tip of the central binding loop lowers the otherwise substantial entropic cost of binding. Large excursions of the loop hinge angle may endow the protein with structural plasticity, allowing it to adapt to conformational changes induced in the receptor.
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- 2003
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516. COXIBs: interpreting the swell of phase IV data.
- Author
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Stern AG
- Published
- 2003
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517. An assessment of the cord blood:maternal blood methylmercury ratio: implications for risk assessment.
- Author
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Stern AH and Smith AE
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Monte Carlo Method, Pregnancy, Reference Values, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Assessment, Environmental Pollutants pharmacokinetics, Fetal Blood chemistry, Maternal-Fetal Exchange, Methylmercury Compounds pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
In the current U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reference dose (RfD) for methylmercury, the one-compartment pharmacokinetic model is used to convert fetal cord blood mercury (Hg) concentration to a maternal intake dose. This requires a ratio relating cord blood Hg concentration to maternal blood Hg concentration. No formal analysis of either the central tendency or variability of this ratio has been done. This variability contributes to the overall variability in the dose estimate. A ratio of 1.0 is implicitly used in the model, but an uncertainty factor adjustment is applied to the central tendency estimate of dose to address variability in that estimate. Thus, incorporation of the cord:maternal ratio and its variability into the estimate of intake dose could result in a significant change in the value of the RfD. We analyzed studies providing data on the cord:maternal blood Hg ratio and conducted a Monte Carlo-based meta-analysis of 10 studies meeting all inclusion criteria to generate a comprehensive estimate of the central tendency and variability of the ratio. This analysis results in a recommended central tendency estimate of 1.7, a coefficient of variation of 0.56, and a 95th percentile of 3.4. By analogy to the impact of the similar hair:blood Hg ratio on the overall variability in the dose estimate, incorporation of the cord:maternal ratio may support a 3-fold uncertainty factor adjustment to the central tendency estimate of dose to account for pharmacokinetic variability. Whether the information generated in this analysis is sufficient to warrant a revision to the RfD will depend on the outcome of a comprehensive reanalysis of the entire one-compartment model. We are currently engaged in such an analysis.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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518. Concepts in developing health-based indicators for ozone.
- Author
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Weisel CP, Cody RP, Georgopoulos PG, Purushothaman V, Weiss SH, Bielory L, Gregory P, and Stern AH
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- Asthma chemically induced, Epidemiological Monitoring, Female, Humans, Male, New Jersey epidemiology, Prevalence, Air Pollutants adverse effects, Asthma epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Environmental Monitoring methods, Health Status Indicators, Ozone adverse effects, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: The traditional manner to evaluate whether regulatory controls meet their public health goals of reducing adverse health effects associated with exposure to environmental pollutants is to compare measured concentrations of the target pollutant in the environment with a standard. A complementary approach is also to measure health-based indicators, e.g., changes in the prevalence of adverse health outcomes attributed to the pollutant. This manuscript presents the concepts of using asthma emergency room (ER) visits and hospital admission as potential health-based indicators for ozone., Methods: The frequency of ER visits and hospital admissions for asthma in New Jersey in 1995 was compared with daily ozone concentrations, to establish the consistency of the relationship and the presence of potential confounders, and to establish whether routinely documented adverse outcomes in asthmatics could serve as health-based indicators., Results: A mathematical model relating ER visits and hospital admissions of asthmatics to ozone concentration was developed for 1995, which was to be used as a baseline year within a health-based indicator program. A coherent relationship was found between same-day ambient air ozone concentrations and ER visits and 2-day time-lagged ambient ozone and hospital admissions during 1995; pollen was identified as a confounder and the association between ER visits and ozone concentration was similar to that determined for 1986 to 1990., Conclusions: Sufficient databases exist for ER visits by asthmatics in Northern and Central New Jersey, and throughout the state for hospital admissions, for these health outcomes to be used as health-based indicators, complementing air-monitoring data in assessing whether improvements in public health are occurring because of reduction in emissions of precursors of ozone.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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519. Modern spectrum analysis in multidimensional NMR spectroscopy: comparison of linear-prediction extrapolation and maximum-entropy reconstruction.
- Author
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Stern AS, Li KB, and Hoch JC
- Subjects
- Prolactin chemistry, Thermodynamics, Fourier Analysis, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular methods
- Abstract
NMR spectroscopy is an inherently insensitive technique, and many challenging applications such as biomolecular studies operate at the very limits of sensitivity and resolution. Advances in superconducting magnet, cryogenic probe, and pulse sequence technologies have resulted in dramatic improvements in both sensitivity and resolution in the past decade. Conversely, the signal-processing method used most widely in NMR spectroscopy, extrapolation of the time domain signal by linear prediction (LP) followed by discrete Fourier transformation (DFT), was developed in the early 1980s and has not been subjected to detailed scrutiny for its impact on sensitivity and resolution. Here we report the first systematic investigation of the accuracy and precision of spectra obtained by LP extrapolation followed by DFT. We compare the results to spectra obtained by maximum-entropy (MaxEnt) reconstruction, which was developed contemporaneously to LP extrapolation but is not widely employed in NMR spectroscopy. Although it reduces truncation artifacts and increases the amplitudes of strong peaks, we find that LP extrapolation generates false-positive peaks and introduces frequency errors. These defects of LP extrapolation become less pronounced for longer data records and higher signal-to-noise ratio. MaxEnt generally yields more detectable peaks for a given number of data samples, more accurate peak frequencies, and fewer false-positive peaks than LP extrapolation. MaxEnt also permits the use of nonlinear sampling, which can give dramatic improvements in resolution. These results show that the use of MaxEnt together with nonlinear sampling, rather than LP extrapolation, could reduce the amount of instrument time required for adequate sensitivity and resolution by a factor of 2 or more.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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