50 results on '"H. M. Kwon"'
Search Results
2. Lg = 130 nm GAA MBCFETs with three-level stacked In0.53Ga0.47As nanosheets.
- Author
-
H.-B. Jo, I.-G. Lee, J.-M. Baek, S. T. Lee, S.-M. Choi, H.-J. Kim, H.-S. Jeong, W.-S. Park, J.-H. Yoo, H.-Y. Lee, D. Y. Yun, S.-W. Son, D.-H. Ko, Tae-Woo Kim, H.-M. Kwon, S.-K. Kim, Jun-Gyu Kim, J. Yun, T. Kim, J. H. Lee, J.-H. Lee, C.-S. Shin, K.-S. Seo, and Dae-Hyun Kim
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Prevalence of diabetic and impact on cardiovascular events and mortality in patients with chronic coronary syndromes, across multiple geographical regions and ethnicities
- Author
-
H Appeltants, C Boesch, I Cromarty, D Carretta, S Romanov, U Windstetter, F Mibach, Jens Refsgaard, S Lebedev, F Proietti, M Y Tamimi, M C Gamboa, M Novikova, E Prada, K H Sim, E Messas, E Zherlitsyna, A Kalampalikis, N Nevolina, N Trocan, J Cohen, G Szto, R Gilabert Gómez, M Omelchenko, A Pinzani, D Goodwin, J Umaran Sánchez, Kim Fox, S H Dong, K Kronberg, E Castillo Lueña, T Ignatieva, S Joubert, C Macchi, S Lee, S Eidelman, F Alizon, S Chandra, M Akbar, D M Colquhoun, G Yanes Bowden, J de Juan Baguda, M Sebastian, C Wernham, K Miedema, R La Greca, C Morton, B S Jheeta, A C Tran, T Q Do, O Rodrigues, J Yan, S H Kim, R Jurgaitienė, Jean-Claude Tardif, R Baleón, D Hay, V Hennebelle, F Fazekas, R Davies, P Gratia, L Sorodoc, S Y Wu, C Martínez Sánchez, L Lopes Antunes, T H T Pham, I Suliman, M J Gómez Martinez, A Pernat, S H Hur, M Alanazy, L Zhabina, M Stanley, J Rogers, Y J Kim, S Geffroy, L K Andersen, S Coman, V Pedrosa del Moral, Y Garaud, J Krupicka, O Dzhkha, C Paul, M Jeżewska, B Mahler Mioto, V Abduvalieva, P Morra, L Kucheryava, C La Rosa, B Chan, M Wrębiak-Trznadel, A Kozlowski, M Sharif, L López Barreiro, V Kolesnikov, M Lawrence, A Tucker, C Okawabata, B La Hay, E Sadauskienė, B K Nguyen, L Bui, A Said, M E Ruíz Esparza, R K Saran, M S C Ho, E Homs Espinach, J R Romo Santana, J Forte De Carvalho, I Pattison, H H Phan, L Baleeva, L Kisiel, A López Granados, C Raters, F Paganelli, R Haberl, A P T Wong, D Xu, R Jagathesan, L Grekhova, H Stursova, Q B Truong, P Raymond, Y Sosnova, N H Khong, J Zarauza Navarro, C Florescu, L Gorshkova, N Saaidin, E Gordillo Higuero, L Davin, I Budanova, C Lavicka, L Gruznykh, P Bogdański, A Dufka, I Arroja, H A R Tahir, G Wilson, G Kolios, S J Yoon, Simon Cattan, K Berdnik, A Serrano, B Sievers, A Rodríguez Almodóvar, L A Holden, F O'Reilly, D Verleyen, H Hafez, K Nehrig, S M Kang, S Berrisch-Rahmel, E Meyer-Michael, P Samama, L Soares, A K Nguyen, F Tuktarova, C Weytjens, E Sandoval Rodriguez, J Cheng, F M Villasenor, João Morais, B Sullivan, R Zimoląg, Albert V. Smith, S F Ding, J C Louchart, G Guardigli, R Furtak, P Azzolini, S Chushak, J L Delgado Prieto, S Kornienko, K K Sia, J H Shin, F Baylac Domengetroy, P Błaszczak, M Saade, N Černič-Šuligoj, K Coetzee, A Kadleckova, V Scollo, O Larina, R Pal, M M Singh, N Nosova, R Burns, B S Yoo, O Gukov, F Massari, V Antia, A Brattström, G Holt, M Scherbak, V Firastrau, Y J Li, E Mikhailova, L Machado Cesar, C García García, J Pjontek, C Everton Biglow, G Pes, C Brown, A Bumbu, S Felis, R Bosch, M Lazaro, Luigi Tavazzi, R Engel, I Romeo Castillejo, Y S Byun, F Matias, I Grushetskaya, C Mestre-Fernandes, T Kheliya, S Schlesingerova, G Theodorakis, I Tsamopoulos, R Pedretti, A Puente Barragán, M P Vo, B Lammens, T Carruthers, J S Bhatt, A Khodanov, N Pasechnaya, I Petrova, G Boutros, I A Khan, E Le Moal, D Garofalo, H R Malaterre, A Bahal, J F Martínez González, H N Dinh, N V Pham, C Barjhoux, I Gilmour, C Soriano Navarro, O D Chioncel, K Tóth, N Borodina, P Khanoyan, B Sevilla Toral, H H Kim, C M A Bui, C Dernedde, N Eliseeva, M Galinier, E Kosachek, M M Doohan, L Potapska, M Tennekoon, R Nourallah, L Perez De Isla, K H Chee, E Panova, D M Walker, G Glanowska, G Hua, A Silvestre, W Wang, Matthew A. Brown, B Luke, G Jarosiński, R Davis, S Cleron, C Liatas, I Orestis, M Dereń, J Sudnik, S X Zhou, J Fuertes Alonso, O Baranova, S Mingalaeva, T N Vo, K A Ngo, J A Rodríguez Fernández, R Ishmael, G Bode, K K Chan, G Al Radaideh, S Ramphall, H D Theron, V Montagud Saavedra, A Yusuf, G F Mazzanti Mignaqui, L Evtukhova, J Lorenc, D Beacock, O B Šlapikienė, F Alitto, J N Poujois, B Berzal Martín, M Felbermayer, V Mallamaci, T Spitsina, R Ramachandran, A Jánosi, V Dženkevičiūtė, S Gillam, V Joulie, G Esna Ashari, R Henry, E Durand, A Alam, V Fourchard, H Dreycopp, R Fressonnet, C Camossa, O Jerzykowska, M Castrucci, G Sinicropi, B K Goyal, V Vasylenko, R Grogono, M Partington, B Vaquette, R Blindt, Mª T Moreno Casquete, V Kukaleva, W Streb, P F Clavette, M Pérez Paredes, V Hadjiivanov, C Bundy, D E Manyari, A Wassef, J Kuchar, W Nisker, P S Bath, S Panpunnung, G H Choo, Datshana P Naidoo, Y Pavlova, R McManus, N Brand, E Davies, L Prunier, A Schenowitz, P Sternthal, T Sinotova, J Martínez Florez, R Sykulski, J Pinar Sopena, M Balbi, Y Pesant, D A Playford, C Villar Mariscal, F Redding Escalante, W Wongcharoen, O Grechishkina, A Girão, M Speth-Nitschke, K A Mahendran, A Bianco, A Vadavi, G Singh, L Petoin Peuch, L Sukhanova, A Y Y Fong, J L Vega Barbado, A Dzien, S Honorat, G Ansalone, G Kamensky, G McLaren, T B Kim, I Bratu, R Fillet, V Rogozhyna, L Nagy, M Malgina, M A Sheikh Abdul Kader, Z C Li, L Rotaru H Rus, D Adamczyk-Kot, J Estrella, S Serrano García, P Farto E Abreu, D Mescharekova, Su Thillai Vallal, P Seal, S Möller, A Cziráki, T T H Ta, S Davies, H Ge, M Arafah, M Ovize, A Olszewski, V Aboyans, C Roche, F Al Tamimi, L Popova, V Kazachkova, R Rennert, J Aubry, G Bourgeois, J Mackrell, F Al Kandari, N Reifart, J Bérubé, W H J Hutse, O Lysunets, I Butkuvienė, J Cotroneo, J Gdalia, J Dalle Mule, R Santos, B Singh, H Mohammed, A Birkenhagen, T Chiscaneanu, H Sullivan, Jacob A. Udell, N Bolotova, A Jankowska, M Skonieczny, B S K Ch'ng, O Aiyegbayo, S Ciaroni, N Lago, S R Coimbra, R Ellis, B K Koo, S Rostik, P Jacquier, A Conradie, N Biryukova, M Ayche, A Khripun, B Peperstraete, E Velasco Espejo-Saavedra, G Cunliffe, G Grollier, C Ceraulo, T L To, Q H Tran, M Anscombe, R Jordan, I Czuriga, P Haimes, R Ancín Viguiristi, H Q Zhang, C A Chételat, A Rafter, E Rinkūnienė, K Yang, W Gao, J Pearce, L C Fernández Léoz, L Gareeva, R Fernández Alvarez, G Verret, P Astrakhantseva, C M Chu, L Murphy, P A Do, J L Liu, A Clifford, K Woollard, N Dmitrieva, N Lousada, R Díaz Juárez, N Semenova, T Fesenko, F Henschel, R Amini, G Matuszewska, R Christodorescu, J Varaldi, S Varughese, V Lafarenko, A Ashford, J L Colomer Martín, S Assouline, H Noor Hasni, A Weatherup, T Forster, R Kaserbacher, I Caldwell, N Arabadzhi, Emmanuel Sorbets, A Rink, E C Rueda Calle, J M Stordeur, P West, V C Do, Béla Merkely, J Antunes, U Altmann, S Magheru, B Bachmann, W Parkar, M de los Reyes López, M Wazana, A Frattola, M Mospan, V Koval, E Giusti Rossi, J Vasconcelos, K B Do, A Ogorodnichuk, D Lighezan, G Mentz, J M Cherry, P Pouderou, M Moretti, C M Spinu, Emmanuelle Vidal-Petiot, N Kupstytė, P Jourdain, V Voronina, O Varezhnikova, S Williams, H AlFaleh, R Lew, P Hildebrant, J Drozd, G Muscio, T H Ashton, A Achilli, J Harinasuta, T Ghose, G Walawski, Y Arkhipova, M Alves Costa, B Day, A Suntinger, A Singh, P Sheringham, A Vázquez García, J Taggeselle, J T Dong, T H Goh, G Rojas, R Schultz, A Ballet, O Likhobabina, Z M Qian, S Sandoval Navarrete, D Manzi, S Langridge, W Haerer, C K Abdullah, L Hay, Á Herdade, A Gałuszka-Bilińska, F Biausque, V M Lai, D S Eccleston, L Nikolaeva, P Kalaras, J Martínez Redding, N P H Tran, B Wauer, Philippe Gabriel Steg, B Etcheverry, J Navarro Manchón, R Augarde, C Dixon, M Y Chen, J L Gleizes, S Pustovit, J L Farges, S Cox, G Manchet, K Shein, L Parker, C C Ang, O Sinyukova, V Veth, A Kurekhyan, N Cindea Nica, N Wittlich, J Al Yazeedi, A Pucheu, V Elliott, J Bories, K Alford, M F Ferrão E Vasconcelos, A Adamkiewicz-Piejko, R Cervenak, J F Beltrame, A Castro, L Safonova, G Koutsimpanis, C de Brito Vianna, R Wysocki, V Ginzburg, J Hernández Afonso, A Ihonor, O Golubeva, M Karachaliou, S Kleta, D d'Este, Gustavs Latkovskis, F Jäger, E Gamzatov, Y Kozhelenko, J Lippai, T T L Ong, S J Ge, A Hersi, K Kyd, S Mingam, V Yordanova, L Bardachenko, E Mozerova, S W Liu, J Zdrojewska, E Chung, M Leclair, M Nazir, S Zarechnova, A Rahman, M Sołtysiak, B Maguire, F Moreira Pinto, R Fathi, E Prieto Moriche, C Priftis, P Heno, N Sytilina, A Pladys, S Shimonenko, P Keller, J F Junior, G Amiel Oster Sauvinet, J P Kanner, L Tkachenko, J Dalal, A Liston, D Herrera Fernández, J L Bonnet, A Chirivella González, R P Shah, F A Reyes Cisneros, C Avgerinos, P Ravoala, V Albero Martínez, G Suarez, V Jouve, A Frankiewicz, A Lindsay, A De Meester, H Dau, M Pornin, J Álvarez Gil, J Murin, T Hodac, J J Gómez Barrado, Y J Wu, S Jean, P Hilti, A Dayani, R Steponėnienė, G A Somsen, H Zhang, J Moore, P Tarenidis, T H Nguyen, M Maliszewski, L Voloshyna, S Novo, A Phrommintikul, I Shanina, Roberto Ferrari, P Franklin, C Turner, W Boonyapisit, F Sepulcri, P Vandergoten, J Carvalho, J Halcox, V Rotenberger, J F Baril, M Turiel, P Shiels, P Painsipp, S Reis Monteiro, T Honsig, V Vivekaphirat, J Ardill, P Brodzicki, A Khalifa, H Audibert, T Wettstein, F Auhser, D Ezekiel, D Pella, E Simarro Martín-Ambrioso, H S Seo, J A Núñez Gamero, Gabriel Steg, M Orbán, S Bykovskaya, W Gadziński, N Rozkova, G H M Vawda, R A Motyer, B Limeres González, E Fernandez Valadez, Riyaz S. Patel, I Shaikh, E Ziak, A Estriga, P Dodemant, Dragos Vinereanu, W Miao, L Marullo, F MacNamara, S K Tan, N Giacomantonio, A Leherissier, H W Li, Arpana Agrawal, Y Moreau, F David, S K Ma, A N Jamaluddin, E Alegría Ezquerra, Scalzo, M C Ta, T T Nguyen, A Sudre, R Gupta, H Lagioia, M Haiba, P Kohan, M Szentivanyi, T Dmitrieva, N Vechtomova, C Vuille, R G Schena, P Navratil, O Tsygankov, L Saaby, P Lefebvre, S King Wong, S Maheas Morlet, N H Pham, P Bonnet, S Modi, L Gaspar, M Karlicek, S Pallie, H T Pham, S Abele, N Bizyaeva, L Facila Rubio, N Meneveau, G Poluyanova, J Calaça, S Orazi, M Emonts, A Yusufali, V Sprott, Z Vazhdaeva, M R Conte, E Bulakhova, K Giokoglu, E Page, E Kotova, G Maragoni, C Jerjes Sánchez, T Kiver, M Brunehaut Petaut, A Nagy, P Singer, Zs Sziegl, B Fontanet, S Strange, A Watson, J Föchterle, Janet A. Dunn, R Šlapikas, M Stikhurova, S Salimova, J Volmar, E Otero Chulian, S Hutchinson, R Koller, X Bonnaud, E Peris Domingo, F Marín Ortuño, E Galve Basilio, S Bongo, L Payot, C Miller, A Samothrakitis, L Silva Melchor, K Orzechowski, W Hofer, L V Nguyen, R Oliver, K T Jung, J Robb, D Sobczyk, J Muller, A Tomatti, M Gruchała, C Bradshaw, D Richmond, E Mineeva, E Smirnova, A Idrissi-Sbai, H Vial, R Balai, I Kiseleva, H Jones, M Gibbs, D Ohlmeyer, Y Al Wahshi, V d’Alessandro, S Pérez Ibiricu, V Zachos, A Chernozemova, D R Spink, J Schneider, A M Peset Cubero, M Irurita Latasa, M Migliore, G Perna, E Daniels, M H Tay, N Z Khiew, I Soin, F Bernasconi, T Garban, F Omardeen, O Rodina, L Kanagaratnam, I Blum-Decary, A Jaussi, D Romero Alvira, D Vermander, N Kanumilli, M A Romero Maldonado, M Fernández-Valls Gómez, H Tran, T P Nguyen, H Omar, R S Collette, B Kisjós, H Krause-Allmendinger, J Silva E Sá, H Topf, F Panetta, T C Do, G Roul, J Leso, A Lacroix, M Fic, C Hart, R Chan, L Lema, Y Polyanskaya, R Howlett, Lesley J. Burgess, X P Chen, Hywel C Williams, V T Le, N Gurianova, R Duchowska, V P Nair, D Mitropoulos, A Allcock, T T H Bui, M Golub, E Yakovenko, M Perry, F Belcastro, K Svolis, B H R Forge, F Fernández de la Cigoña, N Murga Eizagaechevarría, G Mariano Pêgo, V Mincheva, T N Nguyen, J Moyal, M Wei, H Vinhas, A Batalla Celorio, C Romero Menor, S Rahman, N Hassler jun, F Duclos, K Ladha, A Ordóñez España, B C Chang, R Cortés Sánchez, G Lafrance, I Mihailova, Y Riou, I Pashentseva, S Tantillo, U Casas Juarezy, Ian B. Wilkinson, MJuneja, Q L Liu, M Baquero Alonso, P Kirmond, A Stevens, T Bouvy, P Casas Giménez, G Kassianos, P Kohler, T Rundell, J A Romero Hinojosa, T Sagastagoitia Gorostiza, M A Bennouna, A Hourany, F Thoin, G Steurer, V Batushkin, L Kolevatova, A Földi, G Sabe-Affaki, J T M Geraedts, I Illushechkin, T Korotich, W Manlay, B Merian, G Morrison, Y Wang, G Solache, P Magnus, A Lugin, S Tereshko, Jorge Escobedo, D Sharp, A Thelemann, J Gold, M Catarino Carvalho, P Lang, B Hermellin, B Doucet, A Martín Santana, E Foltzer, J Mora Robles, A I Bakbak, G Stanciulescu, L Baurenski, O Demina, G Lalljie, N Shmakova, R Vicente Amato, N Q Nguyen, S Kimmel, J-M Grégoire, F Tumarov, R Cue Carpio, S Nikishina, A Mukhtar, J Rueda Soriano, M Gnädinger, Michal Tendera, P Raska, S Cicek-Hartvig, E Potapova, A Melero Pita, P Ormiston, L Pastor Torres, R Shaw, M S Chenniappan, T Guo, L Zharikova, R Amoretti, J Janssen, G Kositsina, S Rajendran, N Atamanchuk, V Plastiras, T Kiernan, M H Pham, V M J Jelinek, J Dalrymple, S Van de Walle, M Goethals, I Stelmakh, S Cantabrana Miguel, L Hurlock-Clarke, C Ferreyra Solorio, J Alcaravela, H H Chuang, C Statescu, T Ługowski, B G Vanhauwaert, E London, G Z Pan, Z Özkan-Rashed, F Fellous, O Fillipova, K Ashmak, L Sargento, N Starostina, J A Ortiz de Murua López, H Thomas, T Gerasimova, L H Gowdak, S Perings, E Gaxiola, K Walcher, O Pogrebna, T Stasiuk, J Bell P McNaught, J Upton, G Scott, P Rossi Sevillano, A Gillet, T K L Nguyen, L E Manautou, L Kardashevskaya, A B Syed, F Brumelot, E Il'ina, V Alekseenko, G Wehr, G Gerges, B Fitzgerald, M Castellari, I Bratishko, M Dorobantu, I O'Connor, M V Ivan, A Esenokova, M Z Abdul Wahab, S Sylivris, S S S Quek, P Buffet, L Thomas, S Darnes Soler, N Pelicano, B Truong, N Vyshnevaya, M Habab, J Moreira, S Z Lv, D Shukla, P Eavis, E Kryvenkova, S Hansone, S Tabet, M Adda, R Trambitas, L A Fernández Lázaro, M Basara, R Mažutavičius, B Roy, X Dreyfus, T Karaseva, R Tilluckdharry, K Królicka, A Rogowsky, A Rodríguez Fernández, S Junejo, H Ancliff, W K Son, G Bodur, G Pournaras, N Sharapova, J Egido, S Kuanprasert, E Alexanderson, L Vanneste, L Singh, N Bokuchava, D K Jin, E H M Tan, A Bernard, F Baslaib, M A Fazil, M Deissner, F Narro García, R Bonhomme, A Dan, V S Hoang, R Snikytė, O Ratovskaya, T T N Pham, M I Mendonça, F Bates, N Karnaukhova, P Nazeyrollas, L A Elizondo Sifuentes, D Onger, S Yakovova, R Sadłowski, B Doronzo, J Carda, A Taylor, A Albuquerque, V López Mouriño, I Segura Laborda, D O'Donnell, R K Pandey, M Asplanato, M A Paz Bermejo, E Rodríguez, L C Iosipescu, K Fikker, Y Porras Ramos, M Escande, D Binet, J Mantoux, P Barahona Pérez, V Zakirova, A Rocha de Lorenzo, I Konstantinidis, H-H Breuer, B Hockings, A Muthu, Koon-Hou Mak, A Soward, D D Ionescu, P Talbot, F Patriarchi, A Meinel, S Abdel Malak, E Craiu, N Ranjith, B A Lim, R Rosado Soares, G Barauskienė, J Vercammen, N Shelomova, S Govender, S González Romero, K S Ng, D M'Bey, B Al-Khalidi, J Berlingieri, J B Fournier, J Tan, P Mochkina, S Pouwels, G Caridi, D P Phan, P Soskin, D Farcas, C Constance, D Rouse, A Tudose, J M Yu, T T C Nguyen, R Brownlie, J Giordano, A Gigantino, T Yip, A I Noury, R Baroudi, E Pinch, I Landragin, T Cahill, N H Mohd Amin, S Baptista, V Lavicka, P Rodenas, M Jeserich, K F Alhabib, U Teleky, M Ege, D Bierge Valero, D Kozlov, M Vallis, A Rahali, F Maes, E Guiu, P Hutayanon, C Escobar Cervantes, H D Luong, T Salah, J C Ford, C Travill, G Barron, L Rebelo, A S Abdullah, K-H Schermaul, Z Lorenc, F Perreault, O Shamsutdinova, A Fernandes, H Rickli, E Usoltseva, C Cazenave, N Baboshina, P Matthews, N Schön, W Matta, J H Zo, N Pontaga, E Novo García, G R Searles, J A Wang, M S Grocutt, A Kondratovica, P Povolna, J Arnedillo Pardo, J L Prevot, J A Rodríguez Hernández, H Killat, M Hinrichsen, S Santaolalla Rodríguez, F Calvo Iglesias, P Mpompoth, M Claus, K Kunhali, K Panisois, A Lourenço, D Iovescu, I Simkova, C González Juanatey, A Vicentini, C Baranes, J Hilario Jiménez Orozco, M Magherusan, I Orpen, M Horrigan, M Banu, R Weinrich, C Arsenescu Georgescu, R Dubinskaya, Y Kulikova, C Petrillo Pio, N Khishova, R Mika, P Dalampyras, M Maćków, M H Custódio, M A Cobos Gil, Y D Chen, B Bondarenko, V Puel, S Garg, Y Lemiere, J Bruguera Cortada, A Pereira, C Vaticón Herreros, V Ravlyk, G Pons, E Osadchuk, Dayasagar Rao, O Charikova, E Liu, M Baverstock, V Kulygina, J P Dubs, V Climent Payá, M Grobéty, I Krajnc, I Feldmann, A Idoate Gastearena, F Paillard, M Alanbaei, D Sinclair, F Pitella, M Casanovas Pié, R Sheahan, F J Nasser-Sharif, M Goralski, D Kinloch, N Chauhan, M Sandin Rollán, M Didier, N S Pham, W Heddle, N Oleinikova, E Verbrugge, C Amo Fernández, M Kraus, Y K Chan, A M Kushner, K Phillips, V Barriales Alvarez, V Martins, P Talavera Calle, Y Jobic, P Túri, C Greco, G Scalia, J Flores, P Saul, C K Wong, O O'Toole, S Nurgalieva, K Makarenkova, S Hayne, S Kutuzova, N MacCarthy, D Logan, J M Dubois, J Cygler, M Kindel, V Karnot, T Herbots, G Masszi, J de Jesús Rivera Arellano, C Botana Penas, T Vicente Vera, R Karnik, J Morales González, L Lasalle, A S Sahar, R Forrai, A Shekhar Pandey, T Wang, N Maximchuk, A Chung, D Zalewska, O Bashkirtcev, A O'Gara, E Dubinina, H E Harlos, P Meyssonnier, G Dalton, X Tabone, R Capalneanu, I Soosiwala, J Finlayson, H Soleille, T J Hong, I Myhailiv, K Babes, K Modzelewska, Robin Young, K Mayr, J Freire Corzo, J M Bourgeois, S Guerard, F Fernandes, A Loera Pinales, C Schmied, A Minsafina, J Ingham, J Escobedo de la Peña, Y Guo, C Krasucki, R Gendreau, J Bonal, I T Ly, M Jaquet Herter, W Kępa, B Prasad, J L Zamorano Gómez, S Banham, P Ziehn, Nicolas Danchin, C W Goh, M Gonzalvez Ortega, D Dymova, P Bishop, T Dutoya, J E Poulard, P Monnier, O Si, J L Briseño, G Attia, N Khartova, I Gorlova, L Raisova, B Faudon, V Freeman, M Kerbev, U Frank, G Kaliska, A K Ghapar, C Tricot, L Jankowska, V Dormagen, A Pasquet, I Kruglova, P Chemin, J L Díaz Díaz, J H Tao, R Bietzk, G Sceats, K Lai, P Berthezene, Digna R. Velez Edwards, A Buakhamsri, N Bazargani, U Spengler, M Toringhibel, M A Matos, I Skoczylas, V Arrarte Esteban, J Fuertes Beneitez, V Gil, L U P Tran, A Mehta, A Álvarez Sangabriel, P Di Pasquale, K Egstrup, P Choudhury, S Whetstone, T S Chee, M Elkohen, P Martina, J Martínez Rivero, C Arden, J Walczewska, I Benett, R Silvestri, V García Saavedra, J Słaboszewska, A Thomson, S Revienė, A Szpak, V Challenor, F Saporito, P Ruiz Pérez, Vives, H M Li, I Sadykova, D Lawton, T Kuzmina, R Elias, D Troup, P Dehayes, J Vavougios, V Pernice, P Tanielian, R Cabrera Solé, T Pitsch, R Nethononda, P Poinson, A Tavares E Taveira, J Yi-MingCha, J Y Hwang, T Haghfelt, C García Pindado, N Bilous, A Kotsalos, M Bariaud, A Drzewiecka, L Polkina, V Arfaras, P Vymetal, J Rawal, A Aumjaud, H P Wang, L Wu Amen, J Fernandes, F Howie, A Ouguoujil, M H Ngo, J A Bertarini, A Malysheva, G De Geeter, N Aimouch, R Parkin, H Taylor, M Kittipovanonth, A Gupte, S Ramanaidu, L Basto, A Zherebtsova, T Arsentieva, V Männl, Y L Cham, J J Gómez Doblas, D Ennouchi, Iveta Mintale, A Vance, R Jirmar, L Boikova, D T Le, P Srivastava, L Tonet, M Liautard, C Proto, Q H Do, Mª A Pérez Martínez, R Stankevičius, L Semedo, M Anghel, I Nikolaeva, J Janes, H Al-Backer, M C Escourrou Berdou, O Leshchuk, D Reshotko, V P Dang, I Édes, L Schlueter, B Sikorska-Buczkowska, K Hatalova, I Marozsán, S Gessner, J Gmehling, M Kuzmicheva, Z Huang, L Kosareva, D K Kumbla, A Baika, F El-Shaer, T Voronova, J M Chopo Alcubilla, A Veternik, S Mohr, D Garcia, J Y Rhew, C K Yeo, C De Niel, H K N Nguyen, E Orts Soler, J Dubrava, S Natarajan, M S H Khan, U Kossowska, J P Detienne, T T H Nguyen, I Centa, M G Millauer, Jose Lopez-Sendon, J T Counsell, E Galehr, T Schröder, L Frost, P P Singh, C Moya López, R Beyer, L Carpentier, J Carrillo Calvillo, Z M Du, R Steeds, E Horstkotte, P Kindler, P Johnson, M Sander, I Rodríguez Tejero, F Azar Manzur, S Brown, M Odín de los Ríos Ibarra, C K Choor, M A Sadiq, D B Gysan, V B Doan, A Gueusquin, M Andrews, L L Feng, B Martina-Hooi, S R Shetty, Y Dascotte, E T Ch'ng, P Dematteo, A Woodall, S Gabriilidis, Jean Ferrières, S K Oh, J Lindford, S Blignaut, L Macedo, R Carrillo Cardoso, Y C Lai, C Lang, S R Jayasinghe, B Bastian, V Sanfins, J de Jeús Zuñiga, F X Meriaux, G Sepp, S Molotyagina, S García Ortego, T Perger, Y Lukina, J H Wirtz, A Regulska, P Durand, P Loheac, J Sinnadurai, S Avlonitis, J García-Moll Marimón, J Bradley, K Pareathumby, L Latyntseva, D Stergiou, K Ling, S K Hong, N S Chonkar, C Goldie, C C Koo, A Salustri, Y Peneva, I Rodríguez Briones, P Ferreira, L Franskyavichene, G Bragança, C Rodrigues, S H Lee, L Dang, B J Lubelsky, L Weinrich, E Hoffer, J Tricoire, M Marachli, O Smirnova, C Falces Salvador, A Mobeirek, M Fagan, A Serazhim, M M W Yeung, F Petitjean, I Cullen, J Benacka, Yañez Wonenburger, D Gentille Lorente, J Ferreira Dos Santos, F Bosa Ojeda, N Marchionni, L Brottier, P Keelan, D Kerö, L Moretti, R Seabra Gomes, I Jasinkevica, P Purnode, D Relange, H N Luqman, A Petit, I Hamilton-Craig, E Kochurov, P Berry, P Aguar Carrascosa, M Noble, S Yvorra, N Razzaq, J M Walch, L Lenartowska, R Sethi, W Kim, C Killeen, S Kurochkina, N Capuano, P Sampson, K H Mak, T Bouchaya, J Hellermann, M Geneves, F Ramos Ariznabarreta, J L Mougeolle, J Ferreira, T Roy, J de Andrés Novales, J F Monteiro Ferreira, M S Mayer, N Lopez Cabanillas, P Touzet, K H Ng, F Pelier, T K Huynh, J Schindler, T Krechunova, A Gaglione, Z Fras, P Haralambus, R Pradhan, L P Low, G Odent, M Sidor, R Sopia, D Janody, T K Ong, K Adamaszek, G Vives Boniato, T Maxwell, H Charles, D Gough, O Dibon, A A Abdul Rahim, H B Liew, S Tikhonova, I Bläse, J Chambel De Aguiar, E Santas Olmeda, M Rosseel, R Angela, D Savard, C Cernetti, O Huttin, J Calder, O Kilaberiya, A Elkrail, I I Tulevski, A Ilyukhina, E Chalkiadakis, R Antonicelli, H C Gwon, G Bautista López, G Brown, J Kojelienė, R Zeitouni, J Mimoso, N Better, N H Vu, H Abdel Wahab, B Poprawa, F Weber, A Ghicu, K Rybak, G Fouquet, C Pindado Rodríguez, A Salakhova, L Isaeva, M H Fallacher, J Placke, G McCansh, V D Tran, O Gusev, D Enayat, P Khera, E Brice, G Levesque, A Alvarez Auñon, M A Arnau, M A López Aranda, E Andreicheva, I Kruck, R Grigoriu, I Sainz Hidalgo, M Węglarz, A Ajani, I Khudina, T Makhieva, V D Dang, R Testa, E Cisowska-Drozd, F Giacomazzi, R Cierpka, Nicola Greenlaw, P Wong, L Simões, L Tsaryabina, O Gureeva, R Raffelsberger, H Luquez, A Rainbird, D Evéquoz, M A Balice-Pasquinelli, R Massay, K L Joseph, I H Chae, R Herrmann, I Salecker, A Montero Gaspar, P F Fonseca, A Martin, W Czarnecki, R Motomancea, E Dechoux, M Shamsuzzaman, M Leandri, D Marzal Martín, C Navas Navas, C Beaurain, T Gkinis, K Shetty, P A Jeannerat, D S Wong, A Gonzaga, W Kulig, J F Millet, E Jankauskienė, E Anastasiou, A I Ruhani, N Aksyutina, O Kolesova, K Yared, M Panajatovic, Y L Zhou, S Thurston, T Alekseeva, S Preston, N Mai, M Kuzyakina, D Rechtman, T Boonyasirinant, J Nobre Dos santos, A Ahuad Guerrero, M Al-Shamiri, M Feldner-Busztin, S Godart, S Liandrat, A Narayan, L Burlakova, M J García Martínez, C Militaru, J Chávez Paez, H B Matheson, D Meddah, P Brindle, N Petrova, A Nicolino, D Spensieri, A Giuca, E Molina Laborda, J Moreno Arribas, V Martinho, T Mularek-Kubzdela, S K Chua, G A Dan, N T H Tu, V T Nguyen, M Alcocer Gamba, J Costa, H Milligan, R Badr-Eslam, E Variava, A Merkhi, C Mays, R De Castro Aritmendiz, A K Mohamed Yusof, A Hamer, R McNeilly, S Dedkova, D Rousson, K Chamou, A Mahr, D C Dan, R Till, T L Yang, M Vida Gutiérrez, D Piyayotai, É Bajcsi, D Zaronskienė, I Alexopoulos, Y Huo, H S Zeng, P Rowe, S Fleming, D B Vu, Á Dongó, C Hand, J C S Leong, M Claeys, S Hood, J Bozkova, G Vieyra, G Unger, A Liqui-Lung, D Cremer Luengo, M Castillo Orive, S Muth, M Joseph, P L Torres Díaz, C Zakopoulos, D Cross, F Trujillo Berraquero, F Sattar, H A Boyrazian, T B Le, M Mantcheva, M Constantinescu, P Gosse, U Keil, G F Vaz, M Bdeir, T S Pham, M J García González, J K Ryu, D W Jeon, Zs Malkócs, J Á Perea Egido, R Izquierdo González, V Probst, E Wellenkamp, C Boureux, M Czarnecka, C Vaughan, H Falconer, H Brunner, G Peña Pérez, E Nelböck-Huber, E Blanc, F Thomas-Richard, A L R Ng, M Provvidenza, R Gascueña Rubia, J Freitas, A Dabboura, B Mörz-Proszowski, A Utech, C Alves, C M David, J A Lastra Galán, L Oliveira, T A Nguyen, I Ghaly, A Hofmeister, I Gorodilova, P Szałkowski, M S Hiremath, G Golovina, C Daly, M Tardy, S Kostomarova, J-P Salembier, P Zagožen, D Wang, M Vogel, J Borbola, I Chlewicka, K-H Schmitz, C Pappas, J Victory, M Garandeau, P Wiggers, C Piñero Ramírez, L Tkhorzhevskaya, E Suglobova, V Samakhovets, P Surmont, H A Ramírez Reyes, M Winter, F Prunier, B Cavert, B Salaun, J M Roca Catalán, A Beinhauer, Ian Ford, K Elsby, V Knyazeva, C Tamburino, V Khoury, A Felice Castro Issa, B Marchenko, K König, A Kennedy, J M Alegret Colomer, T Gillet, Clarify Investigators, B Maheu, A Troncoso Gil, N Haldane, B Koujan, T Mouhat, A Waldman, J Robert, J Campbell, A Kokis, M Micheals, P Gori, P Ramoutar, M Al Zaibag, V Ryzhkova, M Kazakovtseva, C Bernardeau, B Ferreiro Rodríguez, Y Voloshko, S Szabo, I Jarvis, Y N Ke, J Donetti, A Serrano-Garcia, R Ketelers, S Grigoryan, V Kulik, P Zündorf, L Kleemann, J McPherson, M Luaces Méndez, F Mouquet, L G Xiong, T H Tran, P Costello, A Potter, M Cinteza, F Colivicchi, E Nowicka, O Greiner, G Reddy, M Martins Oliveira, F Fernandes De Sousa, P Nocon, R Sewell, I Nikodemska, R Tadeu Munhoz, T Gilbert, I Laizane, M Maroun, B Demianiuk, A Bolidai, R Kacorzyk, R Fernández Mouzo, K Karastanev, J Blanco Castiñeiras, P Messali, R Schwarz, M Vardhani, O Gouli, C Thelemann, A Forclaz, G Khaznadar, G Eisele, P Sosner, M L Bourachot, N Pontikakis, S Heinemann-Meerz, E Zatsarina, E Smrckova, P Calmettes, D H Kang, M L Santos Iglesias, S M Marinescu, A Heap, Melnikova, N F Strathmore, S Tolpygina, M Yang, M Naisseh, E George, J Banach, E Delcoulx, E Teijeira Fernández, J Poles, P Saunders, S Haddad, T Q Luu, A Dhesi, O Prikolota, M Baar, P Lafontaine, C O'Dong, I Petropoulos, B-M Altevogt, D Warden, T De Backer, G Miñana Escrivá, T L Mai, U Schlesinger-Irsch, M M Gomaa, E Moksyuta, M Drexler, P Monteiro, P Grooterhorst, J Moolman, P McAlavey, J O'Shea, L P Quinn, F Crespo, K Srinivasa Reddy, T Shokina, Ellen M. Schmidt, M H Jeong, K Denef, A Pleskof, I Takács, Y Tikhonov, O Ushakov, L Stevens, J Ezcurdia Sasieta, L Nkombua, O Henne Otero, J Y Fraboulet, D S Kim, G Hoh, A Tamm, M Sardon, G Chatzioakim, M A Ulecia Martínez, S Reymond, M Myint, G Proença, R Massabie, E Foster, H Dougall, Anjan Kumar Roy, C Franco Aranda, M Getman, E Filippova, C Aguiar, X D Pu, N Voronina, L L Chen, M Szulc, L Bayakhchan, M J Pinto Vaz, C Niederberger, N Vites, I Sen, Paul R. Kalra, J A Castillo Moreno, W K Ng, C Brunschwig, D Morgan, A Concepción Clemente, N Yakimova, J M Guy, A H Jaafar, J Badarienė, N Taylor, L Compson, R Amor, A Maximovitch, J L Bardají Mayor, E Marín Araez, N H Chau, N Srtumilenko, K Kelly, A Papathanasioy, S Erofeev, B Mamez, A Ribeiro, M Micko, N Alvarenga Recalde, K Atueva, Z Sebõk, P Kycina, A K Gupta, A Laucevičius, R Ahuja, A Prokop, P Stadler, S De Ridder, L Zhang, F B Ramadan, L Kapustina, V Fedoskin, A Bateman, C A Nacht, R Musetescu, M Aparici Feal, A Büttl, S Ross, M Rau, P Federico Zaragoza, G Brisson, M Zagreanu, T T H Pham, F Dominé, N Davydova, N Petrochenko, N Paul, P H Truong, S Frickel, W Bryl, G Brouillette, A Stumpp, M Barrera Bustillos, C Ziccarelli, O Zalyzniak, M eatherhead, N Watkins, G Riccioni, l Kudryavtsev, R Carvalho, J P S Sawhney, V González Toda, P Matos Dias, M Giorgadze, I Rodriguez Marrero, W Gritsch, K Lee, G W Kellam, I Parker, V Ecina, Mª I Soto Ruiz, C Delhomme, T Ivaschenko, Y W Cheah, I Grudtsina, R Chehayeb, T Dookie, O Krasnoslobodskaya, P Jarmużek, F Van den Branden, A M F Vandeplas, A Rocha De Almeida, M Espiga De Macedo, E Łotocka, K Nagy, R Paliulionienė, J L Leyva Pons, N Fedorova, Y Yanina, O Stasuk, Z Vlasuk, P Lim, P Egloff, T Berezhna, A Faria, J Cerda Rojas, E Moser, H G Jin, S J Oh, G Arquero García, K H Karner, I Leontaridis, A Banikova, J Fridrich, H Lesseliers, I Pokrovskaya, P Astridge, H Abdul Manap, R Daniel, C A Almeida Fernández, A Nowowiejska-Wiewióra, B Carvalho De Moura, M Malden, H Rosenstein, S Dixon, G Balogh, M Adam-Blanpain, A Sandalian, H Gervas Pavón, G A Antoniadis, N Naberezhnova, A Amlaiky, P Terrosu, K K H Lau, B Chartier, X Su, O Kovyrshyna, G Beale, P Primot, M H Chen, S S Ramesh, R Chyrek, E Gómez Álvarez, J Rodríguez Collado, G Sibilio, R Jeremiasz, R Colin, C Lalla, G M Fullerton, M P Samal, H Thümmel, R P Patel, J Takhar, H M Kwon, T A Cieza Lara, F Magliari, J Morrell, M Rayo Gutiérrez, T L Orenstein-Lyall, H Choi, S Kulinich, A Aftab, A Wallace, B B Abdul Kareem, S Kwok, A Królak, A Grover, Laurent Fauchier, Mª J Pinilla Lozano, G Sengupta, D Paris, M Al Dhanki, J Milewski, F Petersen Aranguren, H Brufau Redondo, H Mayr, A Arias Mendoza, M Ducoudre, A Correia, J S Awtar Singh, P Aylward, E Brscic, J Du Plooy, J L Arenas León, G Silva Alves, L Sreenivasa Murthy, P Dendale, F La Varra, S Minkin, T Eggeling, A Jamiel, G Lebischak, E Andreev, T V A Tuong, V Chaithiraphan, O Duprez, S Higgins, F Chometon, Y Cottin, A Bonny, C Guyetand, J Matos, F Henpin Yue Cesena, L Polyaeva, M Drijfhout, J Toplak, G E Vertes, N F Wang, J Doucet, A K Trivedi, P Turek, G Chouinard, A Al Lawati, W Filip, F Kovar, T J Cha, A Belanger, H L Cong, J F Robert, D López Gómez, J L Sanz Rodríguez, H Simper, P Shetty, A Chukwu, E Bukanina, C Amoros Galito, H MacCowan, T T T Tran, A Singal, K C Vu, O Ismail, A Ardiaca Capell, P Bousquet, F Goss, Z Galeeva, Maxime Guenoun, B Rijavec, Z Lazerevic, A McCracken, A C Motoc, Y Sharapova, S Wright, A J Paule Sánchez, L Mainar Latorre, I Sirazov, X L Yang, S E Paget, G Berkenboom, J Markenvard, I Surovtseva, S K George, Matthias Simon, M L Fuantos Delgado, C Christoforidis, M Lagares Carballo, P Alvarez García, J Könemann, L Crawford, I Gonos, D Saulnier, E Szabó, L Ardouin, J Bhayat, F J Abardía Oliva, X Bernard, O Sirbu, P Boutsikos, N Khmelevskikh, E Tavlueva, P LeBouthillier, I Bourazanis, A Sequeira, M López Martínez, C P Paulus, R K M Bhaskaran, F Pellerin, B Brown, B Saleh, A Lacchè, R Sola Casado, E Kaźmierczak, M Weingrod, and G Vijayaraghavan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems ,Epidemiology ,LONG-TERM ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Chronic coronary syndromes ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Revascularization ,Ventricular Function, Left ,GLUCOSE ,MELLITUS ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Ethnicity ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,ARTERY-DISEASE ,Myocardial infarction ,Stroke ,RISK ,OUTCOMES ,Ejection fraction ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,CLARIFY Investigators ,Hazard ratio ,Diabetes ,Stroke Volume ,Geographical disparities ,Syndrome ,medicine.disease ,MIDDLE-EAST ,EUROPEAN-SOCIETY ,Treatment Outcome ,MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION ,Heart failure ,CLARIFY registry ,Cardiovascular System & Cardiology ,HEART-FAILURE ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Abstract
BackgroundIn contrast with the setting of acute myocardial infarction, there are limited data regarding the impact of diabetes mellitus on clinical outcomes in contemporary cohorts of patients with chronic coronary syndromes. We aimed to investigate the prevalence and prognostic impact of diabetes according to geographical regions and ethnicity.Methods and resultsCLARIFY is an observational registry of patients with chronic coronary syndromes, enrolled across 45 countries in Europe, Asia, America, Middle East, Australia, and Africa in 2009–2010, and followed up yearly for 5 years. Chronic coronary syndromes were defined by ≥1 of the following criteria: prior myocardial infarction, evidence of coronary stenosis >50%, proven symptomatic myocardial ischaemia, or prior revascularization procedure.Among 32 694 patients, 9502 (29%) had diabetes, with a regional prevalence ranging from below 20% in Northern Europe to ∼60% in the Gulf countries. In a multivariable-adjusted Cox proportional hazards model, diabetes was associated with increased risks for the primary outcome (cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke) with an adjusted hazard ratio of 1.28 (95% confidence interval 1.18, 1.39) and for all secondary outcomes (all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, and coronary revascularization). Differences on outcomes according to geography and ethnicity were modest.ConclusionIn patients with chronic coronary syndromes, diabetes is independently associated with mortality and cardiovascular events, including heart failure, which is not accounted by demographics, prior medical history, left ventricular ejection fraction, or use of secondary prevention medication. This is observed across multiple geographic regions and ethnicities, despite marked disparities in the prevalence of diabetes.ClinicalTrials identifierISRCTN43070564
- Published
- 2021
4. Development of PCR Assays for the Identification of Species and Pathotypes of Elsinoë Causing Scab on Citrus
- Author
-
K. S. Kim, Lavern W. Timmer, Natalia A. Peres, S.-Y. Yi, J. W. Hyun, H.-M. Kwon, and H.-C. Lim
- Subjects
biology ,Pcr assay ,Plant Science ,Orange (colour) ,biology.organism_classification ,RAPD ,law.invention ,Elsinoë ,law ,Specific primers ,Botany ,Elsinoë fawcettii ,Internal transcribed spacer ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Two scab pathogens of citrus, Elsinoë fawcettii and E. australis, cause citrus scab and sweet orange scab, respectively, and pathotypes of each species have been described. The two species cannot be readily distinguished by morphological or cultural characteristics and can be distinguished only by host range and the sequence of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region. In this study, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) assays clearly distinguished E. fawcettii and E. australis, and the sweet orange and natsudaidai pathotypes within E. australis also could be differentiated. We developed specific primer sets, Efaw-1 for E. fawcettii; Eaut-1, Eaut-2, Eaut-3, and Eaut-4 for E. australis; and EaNat-1 and EaNat-2 for the natsudaidai pathotype within E. australis using RAPD products unique to each species or pathotype. Other primer sets, Efaw-2 and Eaut-5, which were specific for E. fawcettii and E. australis, respectively, were designed from previously determined ITS sequences. The Efaw-1 and Efaw-2 primer sets successfully identified E. fawcettii isolates from Korea, Australia, and the United States (Florida) and the Eaut-1 to Eaut-5 primer sets identified both the sweet orange pathotype isolates of E. australis from Argentina and the natsudaidai pathotype isolates from Korea. The EaNat-1 and EaNat-2 primer sets were specific for isolates of the natsudaidai pathotype. The Efaw-1 and Efaw-2 primer sets successfully detected E. fawcettii from lesions on diseased leaves and fruit from Korea and primer pairs Eaut-1, Eaut-2, Eaut-3, Eaut-4, and Eaut-5 detected E. australis from lesions on sweet orange fruit from Brazil.
- Published
- 2019
5. Tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein haplodeficiency attenuates seizure severity and NF-κB-mediated neuroinflammation in kainic acid-induced seizures
- Author
-
Hyun Joo Shin, Wan Sung Choi, Gu-Seob Roh, Hwajin Kim, Rok Won Heo, H M Kwon, and Hoon-Gu Kim
- Subjects
Male ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Kainic acid ,Active Transport, Cell Nucleus ,Haploinsufficiency ,Status epilepticus ,Biology ,Blood–brain barrier ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Seizures ,Enhancer binding ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Neuroinflammation ,Aquaporin 4 ,Cell Nucleus ,Mice, Inbred ICR ,Original Paper ,Kainic Acid ,NF-kappa B ,NF-κB ,Cell Biology ,NFKB1 ,CA3 Region, Hippocampal ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Cyclooxygenase 2 ,medicine.symptom ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Kainic acid (KA)-induced seizures followed by neuronal death are associated with neuroinflammation and blood–brain barrier (BBB) leakage. Tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein (TonEBP) is known as a transcriptional factor activating osmoprotective genes, and in brain, it is expressed in neuronal nuclei. Thus dysregulation of TonEBP may be involved in the pathology of KA-induced seizures. Here we used TonEBP heterozygote (+/−) mice to study the roles of TonEBP. Electroencephalographic study showed that TonEBP (+/−) mice reduced seizure frequency and severity compared with wild type during KA-induced status epilepticus. Immunohistochemistry and western blotting analysis showed that KA-induced neuroinflammation and BBB leakage were dramatically reduced in TonEBP (+/−) mice. Similarly, TonEBP-specific siRNA reduced glutamate-induced death in HT22 hippocampal neuronal cells. TonEBP haplodeficiency prevented KA-induced nuclear translocation of NF-κB p65 and attenuated inflammation. Our findings identify TonEBP as a critical regulator of neuroinflammation and BBB leakage in KA-induced seizures, which suggests TonEBP as a good therapeutic target.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Distribution characteristics of fission gas along the axial direction for an irradiated fuel rod of a pressurized water reactor (PWR)
- Author
-
Yeong-Keong Ha, D. S. Kim, H. M. Kwon, Sungbin Park, and Kyuseok Song
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Fission ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Pressurized water reactor ,Krypton ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Oxide ,Analytical chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Pollution ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Xenon ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,law ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Post Irradiation Examination ,Spectroscopy ,Burnup ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
In this work, the fission gas distribution of an irradiated oxide fuel was investigated by measuring the fission gas release (FGR) and retained gas from and in an oxide fuel along the axial height of the fuel rod. In addition to the fission gas measurements, other destructive and non-destructive post irradiation examination tests such as gamma scanning, eddy current testing, density and oxide layer thickness measurements, and ceramography/metallography were conducted to review their impact on the FGR and gas retention. A lead rod was extracted from a lead test assembly, which was irradiated to 56.9 GWd/tU during three irradiation cycles for a total exposure of 1,406 effective full power days. Considering the water-side oxide layer thickness and local burnup of the fuel rod, the rod was sectioned into four positions along the axial height and four samples were prepared from these positions. A sample fragment of around 0.1–0.2 g was individually melted to measure its retained krypton and xenon concentration. According to the measurement results, the retained krypton and xenon concentration ranges were 0.114–0.139 cc/gU and 1.073–1.338 cc/gU, respectively, and their retention percentage after normalization of the sample local burnup showed a decreasing trend as the axial height of the fuel rod raised. The water-side oxide layer thickness scope of the tested fuels measured by an observation of the optical microscope images was 13–42 μm, and the thickness was increased along the axial height of the rod. The amount of released krypton and xenon into the rod-free volume was measured as 5.7 and 54.6 cc, respectively, by a rod puncturing/collection procedure, which corresponds to a 1.94 % fractional fission gas release referring to fission gas generation by a code calculation.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Single-Pill Combination of Telmisartan/Amlodipine in Patients With Severe Hypertension: Results From the TEAMSTA Severe HTN Study
- Author
-
F. Barucq, B. Minescu, S. Slabic, A. Ivleva, Y. Svyshchenko, Catalina Arsenescu Georgescu, R. Marple, N. Gotcheva, A. Patron, F. Robin, P. Touzet, T. Lívia, K. Crump, H. A. Punzi, M. Pouget, I. Vykhovanyuk, D. Lecaignard, J. Y. Yang, O. Korzh, J. M. Hill, A. Vishnevsky, B. D. Forestier, V. Shatilo, L. Kononenko, E. Hannoush, A. MacAgno, B. Gil-Extremera, G. P. Tatu-Chitoiu, J. L. Diaz, B. Perrin, E. Jordan, P. J. Lane, R. Combet, C. Fivel, D. Taminau, I. Karen, R. Struble, P. Causse, M. Ripoll, L. Yena, M. Bismuth, C. Giraldi, D. Raev, A. Faynyk, I. Horný, M. Bourgoin, L. Jagminas, I. Manitiu, I. Gordeev, O. Jerábek, V. Mincheva, J. P. Jacquet, N. Breton, M. Cristea, P. Chalaux, L. Levinson, Joel M. Neutel, T. Tyurina, C. A. Percheron, Ludwin Ley, B. Lemarie, J. Oliván, S. Milanov, V. András, A. Khennouf, D. Gaita, A. Martynov, S. Hojerová, L. Jappy, B. Geoffray, D. G. Cheung, R. D. Eyzaguirre, J. C. Deme, M. Depoisier, Richard Vinisko, N. Gabriella, G. Martocq, C. J. Mello, V. Kolíková, R. E. Tidman, J. Gonsorcík, B. Goloborodko, Y. Sirenko, N. R. Patel, N. Zlatareva, P. Cayron, M. H. Kim, A. Filippov, P. Záreczky, M. Hranai, J. Nagel, Björn Dahlöf, G. Venturini, B. Dimon, M. Y. Lee, M. H. Vuong, Z. Károly, C. G. Park, N. Bittar, S. M. Kang, S. H. Baek, B. Michalak, G. Pencheva, A. M. Salajan, M. Flosi, J. C. Kuchar, Henry R. Black, I. Benedek, B. Zehnder, I. László, R. J. Graf, G. Aroutiounov, D. Sacareau, O. Geronimi, S. Dragulescu, P. Michellier, P. Ibolya, V. Zadionchenko, Z. Krumlov Lorenc, S. Petranov, A. Chaleon, T. Donova, Holly Defeo, M. Peterka, D. E. Webster, D. R. Ricci, D. B. Jack, R. L. Eddy, J. J. Roger, M. B. Samson, R. Judit, A. Chalvignac, J. L. Tovar, J. L. Pool, E. B. Portnoy, V. Kostenko, D. Lefort, S. Stoimenov, S. Judit, M. Repin, G. Rouviere, Y. Khronusova, B. Kanna, F. Henriot, B. Goloshchekin, Giusepe Mancia, O. Karpenko, N. Winer, H. M. Kwon, L. Ruffini, J. Munoz, F. Lacoin, A. Matei, I. Kraiz, F. Pont, E. Nabedian, P. Ferenc, J. Wayne, A. Queguiner, E. Zídková, and D. Zimmermann
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Urology ,Peripheral edema ,Discontinuation ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Tolerability ,Cuff ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Amlodipine ,medicine.symptom ,Telmisartan ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Adverse effect ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This 8-week, randomized, double-blind, controlled study compared efficacy and tolerability of telmisartan/amlodipine (T/A) single-pill combination (SPC) vs the respective monotherapies in 858 patients with severe hypertension (systolic/diastolic blood pressure [SBP/DBP] ≥180/95 mm Hg). At 8 weeks, T/A provided significantly greater reductions from baseline in seated trough cuff SBP/DBP (-47.5 mm Hg/-18.7 mm Hg) vs T (P
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Pathotypes and Genetic Relationship of Worldwide Collections of Elsinoë spp. Causing Scab Diseases of Citrus
- Author
-
S. H. Yi, K. S. Kim, S. K. Kang, H. C. Lim, Lavern W. Timmer, S. J. MacKenzie, H. M. Kwon, and Jae-Wook Hyun
- Subjects
Citrus ,Veterinary medicine ,Argentina ,Genetic relationship ,Plant Science ,Orange (colour) ,Genetic analysis ,Intergenic region ,Ascomycota ,Botany ,DNA, Fungal ,Plant Diseases ,Korea ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Rough lemon ,Australia ,biology.organism_classification ,United States ,Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Technique ,Elsinoë ,Elsinoë fawcettii ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Brazil ,New Zealand - Abstract
Two scab diseases are recognized currently on citrus: citrus scab, caused by Elsinoë fawcettii, and sweet orange scab, caused by E. australis. Because the two species cannot be reliably distinguished by morphological or cultural characteristics, host range and molecular methods must be used to identify isolates. Four pathotypes of E. fawcettii and two of E. australis have been described to date based on host range. The host specificity and genetic relationships among 76 isolates from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Korea, New Zealand, and the United States were investigated. Based on pathogenicity tests on eight differential hosts, 61 isolates were identified as E. fawcettii and 15 as E. australis. Of 61 isolates of E. fawcettii, 24 isolates were identified as the Florida broad host range (FBHR) pathotype, 7 as the Florida narrow host range (FNHR) pathotype, 10 as the Tryon's pathotype, and 3 as the “Lemon” pathotype. Two new pathotypes, the “Jingeul” and the satsuma, rough lemon, grape-fruit, clementine (SRGC), are described, and four isolates did not fit into any of the known pathotypes of E. fawcettii. Of the 15 isolates of E. australis from Argentina and Brazil, 9 belonged to the sweet orange pathotype and 6 from Korea to the natsudaidai pathotype. E. fawcettii and E. australis were clearly distinguishable among groups by random amplified polymorphic DNA-polymerase chain reaction (RAPD-PCR) assays and the E. fawcettii group was divided into three subgroups, A-1, A-2, and A-3. The A-1 group was composed of the FBHR, FNHR, and SRGC pathotypes; some Lemon pathotypes; and the uncertain isolates. The A-2 subgroup included all of the Tryon's pathotype isolates and one of the three Lemon pathotype isolates and the A-3 group contained the Jingeul pathotype isolates. E. australis was differentiated into two groups: B-1, the natsudaidai pathotype isolates, and B-2, the sweet orange pathotype isolates. Isolates of E. fawcettii and E. australis were clearly distinguishable by sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and the translation elongation factor 1 α (TEF) gene. There were also fixed nucleotide differences in the ITS and TEF genes that distinguished subgroups separated by RAPD-PCR within species. We confirmed two species of Elsinoë, two pathotypes of E. australis, and at least six pathotypes of E. fawcettii and described their distribution in the countries included in this study.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors and immunosuppressants perturb the myo-inositol but not the betaine cotransporter in isotonic and hypertonic MDCK cells
- Author
-
Stephen C. Dahl, Mohamed G. Atta, H. M. Kwon, and Joseph S. Handler
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,medicine.drug_class ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Biological Transport, Active ,Biology ,Kidney ,Tacrolimus ,Article ,Tyrosine-kinase inhibitor ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Betaine ,cotransport ,medicine ,Animals ,Inositol ,RNA, Messenger ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,hypertonicity ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,cell volume ,Epidermal Growth Factor ,Symporters ,urogenital system ,osmolytes ,Membrane Proteins ,Biological activity ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Tyrphostins ,Genistein ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology ,protein phosphorylation ,Gene Expression Regulation ,chemistry ,Hypertonic Stress ,Nephrology ,Cyclosporine ,Isotonic Solutions ,Signal transduction ,Carrier Proteins ,Cotransporter ,transcription ,Tyrosine kinase ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors and immunosuppressants perturb the myo-inositol but not the betaine cotransporter in isotonic and hypertonic MDCK cells. Background The sodium/ myo -inositol cotransporter (SMIT) and the betaine cotransporter (BGT1) are essential for the accumulation of myo -inositol and betaine, and hence cell survival in a hypertonic environment. The underlying molecular mechanism involves an increase in transcription of the SMIT and BGT1 genes through binding of a trans -acting factor to enhancer elements in the 5′ flanking region of both genes, resulting in increased mRNA abundance and increased activity of the cotransporters. Current evidence regarding transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation indicates that both cotransporters are regulated in parallel. Methods To investigate the signal transduction of hypertonic stress, we examined the effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitors and immunosuppressants on the hypertonicity-induced activity of the two cotransporters in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. Results None of the agents studied affected BGT1 activity in isotonic or hypertonic conditions. Treatment of MDCK cells with genistein, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, increased SMIT activity in hypertonic but not isotonic conditions. The stimulation of SMIT by genistein was accompanied by a parallel increase in mRNA abundance. In contrast, treating cells with tyrphostin A23, another tyrosine kinase inhibitor, or cyclosporine A, an immunosuppressant, inhibited SMIT activity in hypertonic cells. FK506, another immunosuppressant, increased SMIT activity, but only in isotonic conditions. Conclusions These results provide the first evidence of divergent regulatory pathways modulating SMIT and BGT activity.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Irish cardiac society
- Author
-
C. Seifer, B. McNeill, M. O’Donnell, K. Daly, J. Kellett, H. M. McGee, A. J. Montogomery, D. O’Callaghan, J. H. Horgan, N. G. Mahon, M. Codd, J. Brennan, B. Egan, H. A. McCann, D. D. Sugrue, I. B. A. Menown, R. S. H. W. Patterson, S. R. McMechan, S. Hameed, A. A. J. Adgey, S. H. Baird, S. J. McBride, T. G. Trouton, C. Wilson, J. P. McRedmond, D. J. Fitzgerald, J. J. Crowley, J-F. Tanguay, R. M. Santos, R. S. Stack, P. Keelan, C. J. McKenna, R. AuBuchon, A. R. Camrud, D. R. Holmes, R. S. Schwartz, R. Wolff, W. D. Edwards, C. Hanratty, D. McAuley, I. Young, G. Murtagh, B. O’Keeffe, G. Richardson, M. Scott, E. W. Chew, N. A. Bailie, A. M. J. Graham, H. O’Kane, H. M. Kwon, L. Ellis, R. Virmani, L. Noelke, A. E. Wood, H. Javadpour, D. Veerasingham, D. O’Kane, J. D. Allen, T. Hennessy, P. Johnson, D. Hildick-Smith, E. Winter, L. Shapiro, A. Lerman, L. T. McGrath, P. Passmore, B. Silke, A. G. Nugent, C. McGurk, S. Maguire, G. D. Johnston, S. L. Lovell, G. McDowell, D. McEneany, M. S. Riley, D. P. Nicholls, D. Gilligan, D. Sargent, D. Dan, G. Elam, B. Rhee, D. Keane, L. Zhou, B. McGovern, H. Garan, J. Ruskin, J. C. O’Shea, H-C. Tan, J. P. Zidar, D. B. O’Keeffe, S. Graffin, D. Fitzsimmons, S. Brown, D. Duff, B. Denham, F. Woods, M. Neligan, P. Oslizlok, C. K. Connolly, M. H. D. Danton, M. Danton, D. J. Gladstone, B. Craig, H. C. Mulholland, F. Casey, S. Chaudhuri, J. Hinchion, R. H. S. W. Patterson, G. MacKenzie, M. T. Harbinson, L. M. Burgess, V. Moohan, D. J. McEneaney, O. C. Finnegan, L. Doherty, J. G. Riddell, R. Meleady, L. Daly, I. Graham, M. Quinn, B. Foley, J. Lee, N. Mulvihill, P. Crean, M. Walsh, C. O’Morain, C. Hynes, S. M. King, S. David, H. Newton, M. Maguire, F. Rafferty, P. A. Sullivan, D. Murphy, S. Gallagher, J. Allen, J. McC Anderson, J. Hoag, D. Eckberg, J. Galvin, P. Diamond, T. Neilan, E. Keelan, null H. A., C. McCarthy, V. P. Moohan, G. M. Ayers, M. Roberts, L. Burgess, C. Anderson, M. Khan, I. P. Clements, W. L. Miller, F. Turtle, H. Long, W. McNair, N. P. S. Campbell, T. P. Mathew, M. Smye, G. S. Nesbitt, I. S. Young, D. Mulcahy, I. M. Graham, D. Moore, D. Sugrue, M. B. Codd, P. Zimmerman, J. Winget, M. Capeless, T. A. McKelvey, M. I. A. Sarsam, and D. McEneaney
- Subjects
Irish ,business.industry ,language ,Medicine ,Library science ,General Medicine ,business ,language.human_language - Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Kinetics and osmoregulation of Na(+)-and Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter in rat renal medulla
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon, W. G. Guder, Li Wen Lai, G. W. Moeckel, and Y.-H. H. Lien
- Subjects
Male ,GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,Renal cortex ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Betaine transporter ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Betaine ,Chlorides ,Renal medulla ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Ion transporter ,Kidney Medulla ,Osmolar Concentration ,Sodium ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,Molecular biology ,Rats ,Kinetics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Osmolyte ,Osmoregulation ,Tonicity ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
Betaine is one of the major organic osmolytes that accumulate in the renal medulla in response to high extracellular tonicity. Recent studies in MDCK cells have shown that betaine is taken up by an Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent transporter located on the basolateral membrane. We demonstrate here the presence of Na(+)-Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter(s) in tubule suspensions prepared from the rat outer and inner medulla. The betaine transport activity was two to three times higher in the inner medulla compared with the outer medulla. The removal of Na+ and Cl- reduced betaine uptake in the outer medullary tubules by 86% and 82%, respectively. The betaine uptake was decreased by 39% in hypotonic buffer (189 mosmol/ kgH2O) and increased by 82% in hypertonic buffer (545 mosmol/kgH2O), compared with isotonic buffer (308 mosmol/ kgH2O). Kinetic studies of Na(+)-dependent betaine uptake in the outer medullary tubules revealed both a low- and a high-affinity component as follows: low-affinity and high volume component with Michaelis constant (K(m)1) of 8.6 mM and maximal uptake rate (Vmax1) of 112 pmol.microgram protein-1.h-1; and a low-volume and high-affinity component with K(m)2 of 0.141 mM and Vmax2 of 10 pmol. microgram protein-1.h-1. To investigate whether the Na(+)-Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter is regulated by tonicity in vivo, we quantitated its mRNA in rat renal cortex and outer and inner medulla using both canine and rat Na(+)-Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter cDNA probes. A single band of 3.0 kb was seen in the Northern blots prepared from both outer and inner medulla, but not in the cortex. Water deprivation for 3 days increased the abundance of this mRNA in the outer and inner medulla by 140% and 170%, respectively, but did not affect its expression in the cortex. In conclusion, Na(+)-Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter(s) is present in rat outer and inner medullary tubules, and betaine transporter mRNA abundance is regulated by the hydration state in vivo.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Transcriptional regulation of the betaine/γ-aminobutyric acid transporter by hypertonicity
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,DNA, Complementary ,Organic anion transporter 1 ,Hypertonic Solutions ,MAP Kinase Kinase 1 ,Organic Anion Transporters ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Betaine ,Transcriptional regulation ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases ,Regulation of gene expression ,Kidney Medulla ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Membrane transport protein ,Membrane Proteins ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,RNA ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Gene Expression Regulation ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Carrier Proteins - Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The canine betaine gamma-amino-n-butyric acid transporter gene: diverse mRNA isoforms are regulated by hypertonicity and are expressed in a tissue-specific manner
- Author
-
M Takenaka, A S Preston, H M Kwon, Serena M. Bagnasco, Shinichi Uchida, Joseph S. Handler, and A Yamauchi
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Transcription, Genetic ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Organic Anion Transporters ,Biology ,Betaine transporter ,Cell Line ,Exon ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Betaine ,Animals ,Gene family ,RNA, Messenger ,Northern blot ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Gene ,Messenger RNA ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,Osmolar Concentration ,Membrane Proteins ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Promoter ,DNA ,Exons ,Molecular biology ,Introns ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Carrier Proteins ,Research Article - Abstract
The Na(+)- and Cl(-)-coupled betaine transporter, designated BGT1, a member of the neurotransmitter transporter gene family, is responsible for accumulation of betaine in hypertonic Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells and presumably in the hypertonic renal medulla. The canine gene for the betaine gamma-amino-n-butyric acid transporter has been cloned and analyzed. The gene extends over 28 kb and consists of 18 exons. The 5' end of the gene has three alternative first exons (1A, 1B, and 1C+D). Analysis of BGT1 mRNA revealed that there is considerable divergence in the 5' untranslated sequence resulting from three different 5' end motifs (A, B, and C) followed by an alternative motif (D) as well as two internal acceptor sites for splicing. Eight kinds of BGT1 mRNA were classified into three types (A, B, and C) according to the 5' end sequence. Northern blot analysis using probes specific for the A, B, or C motif revealed that hypertonicity induces all three types in MDCK cells. Reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction showed that each type was expressed in a tissue-specific manner. Primer extension and/or RNase protection assays as well as transfection assays into MDCK cells demonstrated that exons 1A, 1B, and 1C+D have independent transcription initiation sites under control of independent promoters. Diverse mRNA isoforms are regulated by hypertonicity and are expressed in a tissue-specific manner.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Atypical diffusion-restricted lesion in 5-Fluorouracil encephalopathy
- Author
-
W-W, Lee, J-S, Kim, K R, Son, and H-M, Kwon
- Subjects
Male ,Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic ,Brain Diseases ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain ,Humans ,Case Report ,Fluorouracil ,Middle Aged ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Central nervous system toxicity of 5-FU could show various manifestations, such as decreased alertness, disorientation, and agitation. It is generally accepted that lesions of 5-FU encephalopathy are mainly in the deep cerebral white matter and corpus callosum on MR imaging. Here we describe a case of 5-FU encephalopathy in gastric cancer with an atypical reversible diffusion-restricted lesion on MR imaging, showing bilateral basal ganglia, thalami, and parasagittal frontal cortex involvement on diffusion and T2-weighted imaging.
- Published
- 2012
15. Regulation of renal cell organic osmolyte transport by tonicity
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon and Joseph S. Handler
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Taurine ,Monosaccharide Transport Proteins ,Transcription, Genetic ,Physiology ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cell ,Biology ,Kidney ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Betaine ,Consensus Sequence ,medicine ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Cloning, Molecular ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Glucose Transporter Type 1 ,Symporters ,urogenital system ,Osmolar Concentration ,Membrane Proteins ,Biological Transport ,Cell Biology ,Membrane transport ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Osmolyte ,Multigene Family ,Tonicity ,Carrier Proteins ,Inositol - Abstract
Madin-Darby canine kidney cells accumulate several nonperturbing organic osmolytes when cultured in a hypertonic medium. Myo-inositol, betaine, and taurine are accumulated secondary to an increase in uptake, the first coupled to sodium entry, the latter two coupled to sodium and chloride entry. The transport rates increase as the result of an increase in maximum velocity for each cotransporter, with peak activity 24 h after the increase in tonicity. The cDNA for each cotransporter has been cloned. Their sequences indicate that the myo-inositol cotransporter belongs to the gene family that includes the sodium-coupled glucose transporter (SGLT1); the betaine and taurine cotransporters belong to the gene family of sodium- and chloride-coupled transporters that are responsible for neuronal uptake of many neurotransmitters. Assays of mRNA abundance and nuclear run-on assays reveal that shifts in tonicity have a major effect on transcription of the genes for the sodium-myo-inositol (SMIT) and sodium-chloride-betaine (BGT1) cotransporters. The ensuing increase in mRNA abundance for the two cotransporters and presumed increase in synthesis of the cotransporter proteins can explain the increase in transport activity in response to changes in tonicity.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Medium tonicity regulates expression of the Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells by increasing transcription of the transporter gene
- Author
-
J S Handler, A S Preston, Shinichi Uchida, A Yamauchi, and H M Kwon
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Kidney Medulla ,Transcription, Genetic ,urogenital system ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Transporter ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Betaine transporter ,Cell biology ,Betaine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Cell culture ,Osmolyte ,Osmoregulation ,Animals ,Tonicity ,RNA, Messenger ,Carrier Proteins ,Cotransporter ,Research Article - Abstract
Betaine is one of the major compatible osmolytes accumulated by kidney derived Madin-Darby canine kidney cells cultured in hypertonic medium. Betaine is accumulated by Na+- and Cldependent uptake from the medium. To gain insight into the mechanism by which hypertonicity evokes an increase in the V.,, of the betaine transporter in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, we measured the relative abundance of mRNA for the transporter in cells shifted to a hypertonic medium and found parallel increases inmRNA abundance and cotransporter activity. The increase inmRNA levels preceded the increase in transporter activity slightly. Transcription of the gene for the transporter rose rapidly and to the same relative extent as mRNA abundance in cells shifted to hypertonic medium, indicating that transcription of the gene for the cotransporter plays a major role in regulating the accumulation ofbetaine in response to hypertonicity. (J. Clin. Invest. 1993. 91:1604-1607.) Key
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Expression of rat fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 as three splicing variants during kidney development
- Author
-
Eung-Gook Kim, Barbara J. Ballermann, C. R. Burrow, and H. M. Kwon
- Subjects
Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Molecular Sequence Data ,DNA, Recombinant ,Kidney development ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biology ,Kidney ,Fibroblast growth factor ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 1 ,Northern blot ,Cloning, Molecular ,Receptor ,Base Sequence ,Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 ,Genetic Variation ,Receptor Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Blotting, Northern ,Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor ,Molecular biology ,Rats ,Fibroblast Growth Factors ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Molecular Probes ,RNA splicing - Abstract
Fibroblast growth factors (FGF) are known to participate in the processes of embryogenesis and angiogenesis. This study was undertaken to examine the transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation of the FGF receptor 1 (FGFR-1) subclass in the embryonic rat kidney. Two full-length FGF receptor cDNAs were cloned using low-stringency screening of a neonatal rat kidney library with a chicken FGFR-1 cDNA probe. Sequencing revealed these cloned cDNAs to be rat homologues of the FGFR-1 subtype, with the two clones representing splicing variants beta and gamma of the FGFR-1. Evidence for renal expression of a third splicing variant (alpha) was obtained by use of the polymerase chain reaction. Splicing variants alpha and beta of FGFR-1 are predicted to produce cell-surface FGF receptors with three and two immunoglobulin-like domains, respectively, whereas the gamma-isoform may represent an intracellular form of the receptor. Although all three splicing variants were expressed in the developing kidney at days 14, 17, and 20 of gestation, at neonatal days 1 and 7 and in mature rats the beta-isoform was present in vastly larger abundance than alpha- and gamma-isoforms at all stages studied. Northern blot analysis revealed enhanced expression of FGFR-1 in the neonatal compared with the mature kidney. It is concluded that FGFR-1 is expressed in the kidney predominantly as the beta-isoform splicing variant and that expression of this receptor is enhanced during kidney development.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Hypertonicity stimulates transcription of gene for Na(+)-myo-inositol cotransporter in MDCK cells
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon, J S Handler, A. Yamauchi, S Uchida, and A S Preston
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcription, Genetic ,Physiology ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Biology ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Ribonucleases ,Transcription (biology) ,Internal medicine ,Renal medulla ,medicine ,Animals ,Inositol ,RNA, Messenger ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Messenger RNA ,Symporters ,Osmotic concentration ,urogenital system ,Membrane Proteins ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,Membrane transport ,Blotting, Northern ,Culture Media ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Osmoregulation ,Carrier Proteins ,Cotransporter - Abstract
Myo-inositol is a major compatible osmolyte accumulated in the hypertonic renal medulla and in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells cultured in hypertonic media. Myo-inositol is taken up by MDCK cells on a Na(+)-coupled transporter whose activity increases sixfold 24 h after cells are switched to hypertonic medium. To investigate the mechanism of regulation of the cotransporter by hypertonicity, we used the cDNA encoding the canine Na(+)-myo-inositol cotransporter that we recently cloned to measure the abundance of the mRNA for the cotransporter and its rate of transcription after changes in osmolality. When MDCK cells were switched from isotonic to hypertonic medium, cotransporter mRNA abundance rose 10-fold in 16 h. Transcription of the cotransporter gene also rose and 16 h after the switch reached a peak approximately 15-fold that in isotonic cells. When cells were switched back to isotonic medium, mRNA abundance and transcription of the gene returned to isotonic levels in 8 h and transport rate reached isotonic levels in 48 h. Thus transcription appears to be the primary step in regulation of myo-inositol transport by hypertonicity.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. An analysis of Conduction Mechanism and Reliability Characteristics of MIM Capacitor with Single ZrO2 Layer
- Author
-
C. Y. Kang, H. M. Kwon, B. H. Lee, H. D. Lee, I. S. Han, Y. J. Jung, H. S. Shin, S. U. Park, R. Jammy, and J. D. Bok
- Subjects
Mechanism (engineering) ,Capacitor ,Reliability (semiconductor) ,Materials science ,business.industry ,law ,Optoelectronics ,Thermal conduction ,business ,Layer (electronics) ,law.invention - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Cloning of the cDNa for a Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter, a hypertonicity stress protein
- Author
-
A S Preston, A. Yamauchi, J S Handler, H. M. Kwon, A Garcia-Perez, M B Burg, and S Uchida
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,urogenital system ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Osmolyte ,Hypertonic Stress ,Complementary DNA ,Inositol ,Cotransporter ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Intracellular - Abstract
Kidney medullary cells in situ, as well as kidney-derived Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells accumulate nonperturbing, small organic solutes (osmolytes), including myo-inositol, when bathed in hypertonic media. Accumulation of osmolytes balances the osmolality of extracellular fluid without raising intracellular salts that would perturb cellular functions. In hypertonic media, increased myo-inositol accumulation is the result of increased activity of a Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter. We have isolated a cDNA encoding a Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter from MDCK cells using expression in Xenopus oocytes. The cDNA sequence predicts a protein of 718 amino acids with a significant amino acid sequence similarity to the Na+/D-glucose cotransporters of absorbing epithelia. Transporter mRNA is present in kidney and brain and is markedly induced in MDCK cells by medium hypertonicity, demonstrating that adaptation to hypertonic stress involves up-regulation of transporter mRNA accumulation.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Cloning of a Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent betaine transporter that is regulated by hypertonicity
- Author
-
A. Yamauchi, J S Handler, H. M. Kwon, A Garcia-Perez, S Uchida, A S Preston, M B Burg, and R. B. Robey
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,cDNA library ,Transporter ,Cell Biology ,Biochemistry ,Betaine transporter ,Molecular biology ,gamma-Aminobutyric acid ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Betaine ,chemistry ,Osmolyte ,biology.protein ,medicine ,GABA transporter ,Molecular Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Many hypertonic bacteria, plants, marine animals, and the mammalian renal medulla are protected from the deleterious effects of high intracellular concentrations of electrolytes by accumulating high concentrations of the nonperturbing osmolyte betaine. When kidney-derived Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells are cultured in hypertonic medium, they accumulate betaine to 1,000 times its medium concentration. This results from induction by hypertonicity of high rates of betaine transport into cells. We have isolated a cDNA (BGT-1) encoding a renal betaine transporter by screening an MDCK cell cDNA library for expression of a betaine transporter in Xenopus oocytes. The cDNA encodes a single protein of 614 amino acids, with an estimated molecular weight of 69 kDa. The deduced amino acid sequence exhibits highly significant sequence and topographic similarity to brain gamma-amino-n-butyric acid (GABA) and noradrenaline transporters, suggesting that the renal BGT-1 is a member of the brain GABA/noradrenaline transporter gene family. Expression in oocytes indicates that the BGT-1 protein has both betaine and GABA transport activities that are Cl(-)- as well as Na(+)-dependent and functionally similar to betaine and GABA transport in MDCK cells. Northern hybridization indicates that transporter mRNA is localized to the kidney medulla and is induced in MDCK cells by hypertonicity.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Induction of glycinebetaine uptake into Xenopus oocytes by injection of poly(A)+ RNA from renal cells exposed to high extracellular NaCl
- Author
-
Maurice B. Burg, A. Garcia-Perez, R B Robey, Joseph S. Handler, and H M Kwon
- Subjects
Hypertonic Stress ,Gene expression ,Osmoregulation ,Extracellular ,Tonicity ,Cell Biology ,Membrane transport ,Biology ,In ovo ,Cotransporter ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology - Abstract
Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells accumulate glycinebetaine via Na(+)-dependent transport in response to hypertonic stress. When extracellular tonicity is increased by the addition of NaCl, Vmax for glycinebetaine transport increases without an associated change in Km, consistent with an increase in the number of functioning transporters. To test whether increased transport activity results from increased gene expression, we injected poly(A)+ RNA (mRNA) from MDCK cells into Xenopus oocytes and assayed for glycinebetaine uptake in ovo. RNA-induced Na(+)-dependent uptake is observed in oocytes injected with mRNA from cells exposed to high extracellular NaCl, but not in oocytes injected with either water or mRNA from cells maintained in isotonic medium. Unfractionated mRNA induces glycinebetaine uptake in ovo at a rate which is approximately 3-fold higher than in water-injected controls. Size-fractionated mRNA (median size 2.8 kilobases) induces uptake at a rate which is approximately 7-fold higher than controls. Such RNA-induced transport activity in ovo is consistent with heterologous expression of Na(+)/glucinebetaine cotransporters encoded by renal mRNA. Increased transporter mRNA in cells exposed to hypertonicity probably underlies the pattern of expression observed in ovo. This can account for the observed rise in MDCK cell glycinebetaine transport during hypertonic stress.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Expression of Madin-Darby canine kidney cell Na(+)-and Cl(-)-dependent taurine transporter in Xenopus laevis oocytes
- Author
-
A S Preston, S Uchida, H. M. Kwon, and J S Handler
- Subjects
Differential centrifugation ,Taurine ,Messenger RNA ,RNA ,Hypotaurine ,Transporter ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Oocyte ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,medicine ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Expression of a Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell taurine transporter was examined in Xenopus oocytes that had been injected with poly(A)+ RNA extracted from MDCK cells. Compared with water-injected oocytes, injection of total poly(A)+ RNA resulted in an increase in Na(+)-dependent taurine uptake which was directly related to the amount of RNA injected. The magnitude of expression in poly(A)+ RNA-injected oocytes was 5-10-fold higher than that of water-injected oocytes. Since the Vmax of taurine uptake in MDCK cells is increased by culture in hypertonic medium, we compared oocyte taurine uptake after injection with poly(A)+ RNA from MDCK cells cultured in hypertonic medium with uptake in oocytes injected with poly(A)+ RNA from hypertonic cells elicited twice the taurine uptake elicited by poly(A)+ RNA from isotonic cells. The transporter expressed in oocytes was like that in MDCK cells: it was completely dependent on external sodium and was also anion dependent (Cl- greater than or equal to Br- greater than SCN- much greater than gluconate-). Other beta-amino acids, beta-alanine and hypotaurine, inhibited taurine uptake, but L-alanine and 2-(methylamino) isobutyric acid did not. The apparent Km of the transporter was 7.0 microM. After size fractionation on a sucrose density gradient, poly(A)+ RNA encoding for the MDCK taurine transporter was found in the fraction whose average size was 4.4 kilobases.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Renal Na-myo-inositol cotransporter mRNA expression in Xenopus oocytes: regulation by hypertonicity
- Author
-
A Garcia-Perez, J. S. Handler, S Uchida, H. M. Kwon, M B Burg, R. B. Robey, and A. Yamauchi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Phloretin ,Phlorizin ,Xenopus ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Biology ,Kidney ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Messenger RNA ,urogenital system ,RNA ,Molecular biology ,Culture Media ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Hypertonic Stress ,Oocytes ,Tonicity ,Cotransporter ,Inositol - Abstract
Canine renal cells in culture (MDCK cells) accumulate organic osmolytes, including myo-inositol (MI), in response to hypertonic stress. When medium tonicity is increased, intracellular concentration of MI rises because hypertonicity elicits increased uptake of MI via Na-MI cotransporter(s). To study the mechanism for this increase in cotransporter activity, poly(A)+ RNA isolated from MDCK cells maintained in hypertonic or isotonic medium was injected into Xenopus oocytes, and Na-dependent MI uptake was measured 3–5 days later. Poly(A)+ RNA from hypertonic cells induced clear expression of the cotransporter. In contrast, oocytes injected with poly(A)+ RNA isolated from MDCK cells maintained in isotonic medium exhibited cotransporter activity like oocytes injected with water. Upon size fractionation of RNA, peak activity appeared in a fraction that contained poly(A)+ RNA with median size of approximately 4 kilobases. Na-dependent MI uptake by poly(A)+ RNA-injected oocytes was inhibited by both phlorizin and phloretin. We suggest that hypertonicity-induced upregulation of the Na-MI cotransporter involves an increase in mRNA and synthesis of cotransporter protein(s).
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Acute myocardial infarction due to sinus of Valsalva aneurysm in a patient with Behçet's disease
- Author
-
S J, Jin, H-S, Mun, S-J, Chung, M-C, Park, H M, Kwon, and Y-S, Hong
- Subjects
Behcet Syndrome ,Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Sinus of Valsalva ,Aortic Aneurysm - Abstract
Cardiovascular manifestations have been reported in 7-38% of patients with Behçet's disease (BD), and mortality occurs in up to 20% of those with marked vascular involvement. Sporadic cases of endocarditis, myocarditis, pericarditis, acute myocardial infarction, aortic aneurysm, ventricular thrombosis, congestive cardiomyopathy, and valvular dysfunction have been reported. Here we report a case of acute myocardial infarction that resulted from the compression of coronary arteries by a sinus of Valsalva aneurysm in a patient with BD.
- Published
- 2008
26. How tonicity regulates genes: story of TonEBP transcriptional activator
- Author
-
U. S. Jeon, H. M. Kwon, Mee Rie Sheen, and J.‐A. Kim
- Subjects
Regulation of gene expression ,NFATC Transcription Factors ,Physiology ,Activator (genetics) ,Kidney metabolism ,Biology ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,Kidney ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Kidney Concentrating Ability ,Transactivation ,Biochemistry ,Gene Expression Regulation ,NFAT5 ,Osmolyte ,Osmotic Pressure ,Tonicity ,Animals ,Humans ,Homeostasis ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
TonEBP stimulates genes whose products drive cellular accumulation of organic osmolytes and HSP70, which protect cells from the deleterious effects of hypertonicity and urea, respectively. Mice deficient in the TonEBP gene display severe atrophy of the renal medulla because cells failed to adapt to the hyperosmolality. Emerging data suggest that TonEBP plays a key role in the urinary concentrating mechanism by stimulating the UT-A urea transporters and possibly AQP2 water channel. Thus, TonEBP is an essential regulator in the urinary concentrating mechanism. Studies on structural basis of TonEBP function have revealed the structure of the DNA binding domain, and defined the transactivation domains. Molecular mechanisms underlying the nucleocytoplasmic trafficking, transactivation, and phosphorylation in response to changes in tonicity need to be understood in molecular detail. Such knowledge is needed for the identification of the sensor that detects changes in ambient tonicity and signals to TonEBP.
- Published
- 2006
27. The tonicity-sensitive element that mediates increased transcription of the betaine transporter gene in response to hypertonic stress
- Author
-
J S Handler, M Takenaka, H. M. Kwon, and A S Preston
- Subjects
Messenger RNA ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Betaine transporter ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Betaine ,chemistry ,Transcription (biology) ,Hypertonic Stress ,Transcriptional regulation ,Tonicity ,Enhancer ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
BGT1, the Na(+)-and Cl- coupled betaine transporter, is responsible for the accumulation of high concentrations of the non-perturbing osmolyte betaine in hypertonic Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells and presumably in the hypertonic renal medulla. In MDCK cells, the increase in activity of the betaine transporter is preceded by an increase in transcription of BGT1 and in the abundance of BGT1 mRNA. To investigate the molecular mechanism of transcriptional regulation by tonicity, we have characterized the 5'-flanking region of the gene. Transient transfection assays in MDCK cells cultured in isotonic or hypertonic medium using luciferase reporter constructs containing various fragments of the 5'-flanking region revealed that the region spanning base pairs -69 to -50 5' to the transcription initiation site (-69/-50) has hypertonicity-responsive enhancer activity. A double-stranded -69/-50 concatemer cloned 5' to an SV40 basal promoter and luciferase reporter gene in hypertonic cells exhibited more than 11-fold the activity in isotonic cells. Expression assays and electrophoretic mobility shift assays of mutants of -69/-50 identified a smaller region that is required for hypertonicity to induce increased expression and a slowly migrating band on mobility shift assays.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Sequence of precursor polyprotein gene (segment A) of infectious bursal disease viruses isolated in Korea
- Author
-
H M, Kwon, D K, Kim, T W, Hahn, J H, Han, and D J, Jackwood
- Subjects
Korea ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Virulence ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Gene Products, pol ,Genetic Variation ,Birnaviridae Infections ,Infectious bursal disease virus ,Disease Outbreaks ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Animals ,Chickens ,Phylogeny ,Poultry Diseases ,DNA Primers - Abstract
The coding regions of segment A of two recent Korean very virulent (vv) infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) isolates (KK1 and KSH) and one atypical IBDV isolate (K310) were amplified by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, sequenced, and compared with published sequences for IBDV. The overall amino acid sequence similarity of the KK1 and KSH strains compared with foreign vvIBDV strains was between 97.43% and 98.02%. The KK1 and KSH strains, like vvIBDV strains, share unique amino acid residues at positions 222(A), 256(I), 294(I), and 299(S). The sequence of K310 strain was markedly different from other IBDV strains. The K310 strain had 12, 2, and 1 unique amino acid substitutions in the VP2 hypervariable region, VP4, and VP3 gene, respectively, and 3 of 12 substitutions in a VP2 hypervariable region were found in two hydrophilic regions known to be involved in antigenic determination. Also, the K310 strain had 222(S) and 254(S), which were found in variant IBDV strains. The SWSASGS heptapeptide is conserved in all Korean IBDV isolates. By phylogenetic analysis, KK1 and KSH were categorized in one group with foreign vvIBDV isolates, but K310 isolate was categorized in a separate group that was differentiated from the other IBDV strains compared. The K310 strain seemed to be evolved from a separate lineage of IBDV strain.
- Published
- 2000
29. Functional characterization of the Betaine/gamma-aminobutyric acid transporter BGT-1 expressed in Xenopus oocytes
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon, C A Wagner, Stegen C, J S Handler, Lang F, Bröer S, Busch Ae, Ioulia Matskevitch, Noll B, Waldegger S, and Risler T
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Sarcosine ,Patch-Clamp Techniques ,Voltage clamp ,Xenopus ,Biochemistry ,Models, Biological ,Substrate Specificity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Betaine ,Dogs ,Chlorides ,Current clamp ,GABA transporter ,Animals ,Proline ,Molecular Biology ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,biology ,Sodium ,Electric Conductivity ,Biological Transport ,Cell Biology ,Cations, Monovalent ,Recombinant Proteins ,chemistry ,Osmolyte ,Glycine ,biology.protein ,Oocytes ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
Betaine is an osmolyte accumulated in cells during osmotic cell shrinkage. The canine transporter mediating cellular accumulation of the osmolyte betaine and the neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (BGT-1) was expressed inXenopus oocytes and analyzed by two-electrode voltage clamp and tracer flux studies. Exposure of oocytes expressing BGT-1 to betaine or γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) depolarized the cell membrane in the current clamp mode and induced an inward current under voltage clamp conditions. At 1 mm substrate the induced currents decreased in the following order: betaine = GABA > diaminobutyric acid = β-alanine > proline = quinidine > dimethylglycine > glycine > sarcosine. Both the V max and K m of GABA- and betaine-induced currents were voltage-dependent, and GABA- and betaine-induced currents and radioactive tracer uptake were strictly Na+-dependent but only partially dependent on the presence of Cl−. The apparent affinity of GABA decreased with decreasing Na+ concentrations. TheK m of Na+ also depended on the GABA and Cl− concentration. A decrease of the Cl−concentration reduced the apparent affinity for Na+ and GABA, and a decrease of the Na+ concentration reduced the apparent affinity for Cl− and GABA. A comparison of22Na+-, 36Cl−-, and14C-labeled GABA and 14C-labeled betaine fluxes and GABA- and betaine-induced currents yielded a coupling ratio of Na+/Cl−/organic substrate of 3:1:1 or 3:2:1. Based on the data, a transport model of ordered binding is proposed in which GABA binds first, Na+ second, and Cl−third. In conclusion, BGT-1 displays significant functional differences from the other members of the GABA transporter family.
- Published
- 1999
30. Adventitial vasa vasorum in balloon-injured coronary arteries: visualization and quantitation by a microscopic three-dimensional computed tomography technique
- Author
-
H M, Kwon, G, Sangiorgi, E L, Ritman, A, Lerman, C, McKenna, R, Virmani, W D, Edwards, D R, Holmes, and R S, Schwartz
- Subjects
Swine ,Vasa Vasorum ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Animals ,Humans ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Coronary Vessels - Abstract
The objective of this study was to examine the quantitative response of the adventitial vasa vasorum to balloon-induced coronary injury.Recent attention has focused on the role of vasa vasorum in atherosclerotic and restenotic coronary artery disease. However, the three-dimensional anatomy of these complex vessels is largely unknown, especially after angioplasty injury. The purpose of this study was to visualize and quantitate three-dimensional spatial patterns of vasa vasorum in normal and balloon injured porcine coronary arteries. We also studied the spatial growth of vasa vasorum in regions of neointimal formation. A novel imaging technique, microscopic computed tomography, was used for these studies.Four pigs were killed 28 d after coronary balloon injury, and four pigs with uninjured coronary arteries served as normal controls. The coronary arteries were injected with a low-viscosity, radiopaque liquid polymer compound. Normal and injured coronary segments were scanned using a microscopic computed tomography technique. Three-dimensional reconstructed maximum intensity projection and voxel gradient shading images were displayed at different angles and voxel threshold values, using image analysis software. For quantitation, seven to 10 cross-sectional images (40 normal and 32 balloon injured cross-sections) were captured from each specimen at a voxel size of 21 microm.Normal vasa vasorum originated from the coronary artery lumen, principally at large branch points. Two different types of vasa were found and classified as first-order or second-order according to location and direction. In balloon-injured coronary arteries, adventitial vasa vasorum density was increased (3.16+/-0.17/mm2 vs. 1.90+/-0.06/mm2, p = 0.0001; respectively), suggesting neovascularization by 28 d after vessel injury. Also, in these injured arteries, the vasa spatial distribution was disrupted compared with normal vessels, with proportionally more second-order vasa vasorum. The diameters of first-order and second-order vasa were smaller in normal compared with balloon-treated coronary arteries (p = 0.012 first-order; p0.001, second-order; respectively). The density of newly formed vasa vasorum was proportional to vessel stenosis (r = 0.81, p = 0.0001). Although the total number of vasa was increased after injury, the total vascular area comprised of vasa was significantly reduced in injured vessels compared with normals (3.83+/-0.20% to 5.42+/-0.56%, p = 0.0185).Adventitial neovascularization occurs after balloon injury. The number of new vessels is proportional to vessel stenosis. These findings may hold substantial implications for the therapy of vascular disease and restenosis.
- Published
- 1998
31. Effect of extracellular pH on the myo-inositol transporter SMIT expressed in Xenopus oocytes
- Author
-
J. S. Handler, Carsten A. Wagner, Florian Lang, Siegfried Waldegger, Teut Risler, Andreas E. Busch, J. Matskevitch, and H. M. Kwon
- Subjects
Patch-Clamp Techniques ,Physiology ,Xenopus ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Gene Expression ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Physiology (medical) ,Extracellular ,Animals ,Inositol ,Receptor ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Osmotic concentration ,biology ,Symporters ,Sodium ,Electric Conductivity ,Membrane Proteins ,Transporter ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,Kinetics ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Osmolyte ,Biophysics ,Oocytes ,Female ,Cotransporter ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
The myo-inositol transporter SMIT is expressed particularly at high extracellular osmolarity and serves to accumulate the osmolyte myo-inositol. Transport of myo-inositol is coupled to the cotransport of Na+ and is electrogenic. In Xenopus oocytes injected with mRNA encoding SMIT but not in water-injected oocytes, myo-inositol creates an inward current that is dependent on the ambient Na+ concentration. The present study has been performed to elucidate the pH dependence of myo-inositol-induced currents. Therefore, Xenopus oocytes were injected with mRNA encoding SMIT and two-electrode voltage-clamp studies were performed. The myo-inositol-induced currents in oocytes expressing SMIT were found to have a sigmoidal dependence on the ambient pH between pH 5.5 and 8.5 with an apparent Ki of 0.21+/-001 microM H+ and a Hill coefficient of 1.80+/-0.16. Kinetic analysis of the myo-inositol-induced currents at pH 8.0 and -90 mV holding potential revealed a Hill coefficient of 0.93+/-0.07 and an apparent Km for myo-inositol of 0.031+/-0.003 mM as well as a Hill coefficient of 1. 64+/-0.24 and an apparent Km of 38.8+/-4.1 mM for Na+. A decrease of the Na+ concentra-tion from 150 mM to 50 mM significantly altered the maximal observed current and increased the apparent Km for myo-inositol. Acidification to pH 6.5 significantly increased the apparent Km for myo-inositol and for Na+ to 0.057+/-0.005 mM and 73. 9+/-4.8 mM, respectively. The Hill coefficients for myo-inositol and Na+ were not affected and remained close to 1 for myo-inositol and 2 for Na+. In summary, acidification impedes SMIT-mediated myo-inositol transport at least partially by decreasing the affinity of the carrier for Na+. The impaired Na+ binding subsequently decreases binding and transport of myo-inositol.
- Published
- 1998
32. Osmolarity in renal medulla of transgenic mice regulates transcription via 5'-flanking region of canine BGT1 gene
- Author
-
J. S. Handler, H. M. Kwon, Atsushi Yamauchi, Enyu Imai, Masaru Okabe, Tetsuya Kaneko, Masaru Horio, Y. Yoshimura, and Masaru Takenaka
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Transcription, Genetic ,Physiology ,5' flanking region ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,Betaine transporter ,Mice ,Dogs ,Transcription (biology) ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Renal medulla ,Animals ,Tissue Distribution ,RNA, Messenger ,Transgenes ,Enhancer ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Kidney Medulla ,Osmotic concentration ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,Molecular biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Tonicity ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
Betaine is a major compatible osmolyte accumulated in the mammalian kidney medulla and in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells in response to hypertonicity. The accumulation is the result of an increase in maximal velocity of the Na(+)- and Cl-coupled betaine transporter designated BGT1. We have previously cloned the canine BGT1 gene and identified a tonicity-responsive enhancer element (TonE) in its 5'-flanking region. Here we report studies of transgenic mice that have in their genome 2.4 kb of the 5'-flanking region of the canine BGT1 gene in front of a chloramphenicol acetyl-transferase (CAT) reporter. Expression of CAT mRNA was detected only in the renal medulla and was increased by experimental manipulations that increase the tonicity of the renal medulla and decreased by manipulations that decrease medullary tonicity. We conclude that the 2.4-kb 5'-flanking region of the BGT1 gene mediates an increase in transcription in response to hyperosmolarity in the renal medulla.
- Published
- 1997
33. Activators of protein kinase A and of protein kinase C inhibit MDCK cell myo-inositol and betaine uptake
- Author
-
Joseph S. Handler, A S Preston, A Yamauchi, and H M Kwon
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,8-Bromo Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate ,Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase ,Kidney ,MAP2K7 ,1-Methyl-3-isobutylxanthine ,Animals ,ASK1 ,c-Raf ,Protein kinase A ,Cells, Cultured ,Protein Kinase C ,Ion Transport ,biology ,MAP kinase kinase kinase ,urogenital system ,Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 ,General Medicine ,Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases ,Cell biology ,Betaine ,Biochemistry ,Nephrology ,biology.protein ,Cyclin-dependent kinase 9 ,Inositol - Abstract
Amino acid sequences of the myo-inositol and betaine cotransporters that are induced in MDCK cells by hypertonicity include consensus sequences for phosphorylation by protein kinase A and by protein kinase C. To test for the effect of activation of protein kinases A and C on the activity of those cotransporters, MDCK cells were exposed to activators of each kinase and the activity of both cotransporters was assayed. Incubation with 8-bromoadenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (8Br-cAMP) or 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX), activators of protein kinase A, and incubation with an active phorbol ester or with an active diacylglycerol, activators of protein kinase C, inhibited the activity of both cotransporters by about 30%. The relative effect of the activation of protein kinase A and of protein kinase C was similar in hypertonic and isotonic cells. The effects of activators of protein kinase A and of protein kinase C were not additive. The two cotransporters behaved differently when protein kinase C activity was down-regulated by prolonged incubation with a higher concentration of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. There was a doubling of activity of the myo-inositol cotransporter and no change in the activity of the betaine cotransporter in hypertonic and isotonic cells. Although the mechanisms of the effects of activation of the two kinases remain to be established, it is clear that the kinases can mediate post-translational regulation of the uptake of compatible osmolytes.
- Published
- 1995
34. Molecular differentiation of transmissible gastroenteritis virus and porcine respiratory coronavirus strains. Correlation with antigenicity and pathogenicity
- Author
-
D J, Jackwood, H M, Kwon, and L J, Saif
- Subjects
Swine Diseases ,Virulence ,Gastroenteritis, Transmissible, of Swine ,Swine ,Transmissible gastroenteritis virus ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Coronavirus ,Animals ,RNA, Viral ,Coronavirus Infections ,Antigens, Viral ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length - Abstract
Transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) causes an economically important enteric disease of swine. Differences in the pathogenicity, antigenicity and tissue tropism have been observed among porcine coronaviruses. Although porcine respiratory coronavirus (PRCV) is antigenically similar but not identical to TGEV isolates, these respiratory coronaviruses differ markedly in pathogenicity and tissue tropism compared to TGEV isolates. Using a reverse transcriptase/polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RT/PCR-RFLP) assay, TGEV and PRCV isolates were assigned to several distinct groups. By RFLP analysis of the 5' region of the S gene, TGEV strains were differentiated into 4 groups using the restriction enzyme Sau3AI. A fifth Sau3AI group contained the PRCV isolates. These 5 groups correlated with antigenic groups previously defined using monoclonal antibodies in our laboratory. Several restriction enzymes could be used to differentiate the TGEV strains into Miller and Purdue types. Analysis of a PCR amplified product in the 3 and 3-1 genes indicated the RT/PCR-RFLP assay results for TGEV Miller strains could be correlated with lower virulence created by passage in cell culture.
- Published
- 1995
35. Kinetics and specificity of the renal Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter expressed in Xenopus oocytes
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon, K. Hager, Ernest M. Wright, Donald D. F. Loo, A. Hazama, and J. S. Handler
- Subjects
Physiology ,Phlorizin ,Voltage clamp ,Xenopus ,Kinetics ,Biophysics ,Analytical chemistry ,Gene Expression ,Kidney ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Animals ,Inositol ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Membrane potential ,Ion Transport ,biology ,Symporters ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Membrane Proteins ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Electrophysiology ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Oocytes ,Carbohydrate Metabolism ,RNA ,Rabbits ,Cotransporter ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
The two-microelectrode voltage clamp technique was used to examine the kinetics and substrate specificity of the cloned renal Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter (SMIT) expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The steady-state myo-inositol-induced current was measured as a function of the applied membrane potential (V m ), the external myo-inositol concentration and the external Na+ concentration, yielding the kinetic parameters: K 0.5 MI , K 0.5 Na , and the Hill coefficient n. At 100 mM NaCl, K 0.5 MI was about 50 μm and was independent of V m . At 0.5 mm myo-inositol, K 0.5 Na ranged from 76 mm at V m =−50 mV to 40 mm at V m =−150 mV. n was voltage independent with a value of 1.9±0.2, suggesting that two Na+ ions are transported per molecule of myo-inositol. Phlorizin was an inhibitor with a voltage-dependent apparent K I of 64 μm at V m =−50 mV and 130 μm at V m = −150 mV. To examine sugar specificity, sugar-induced steady-state currents (at V m =−150 mV) were recorded for a series of sugars, each at an external concentration of 50 mm. The substrate selectivity series was myo-inositol, scyllo-inositol > l-fucose > l-xylose > l-glucose, d-glucose, α-methyl-d-glucopyranoside > d-galactose, d-fucose, 3-O-methyl-d-glucose, 2-deoxy-d-glucose > d-xylose. For comparison, oocytes were injected with cRNA for the rabbit intestinal Na+/glucose cotransporter (SGLT1) and sugar-induced steady-state currents (at V m =−150 mV) were measured. For oocytes expressing SGLT1, the sugar selectivity was: d-glucose, α-methyl-d-glucopyranoside, d-galactose, d-fucose, 3-O-methyl-d-glucose > d-xylose, l-xylose, 2-deoxy-d-glucose > myo-inositol, l-glucose, l-fucose. The ability of SMIT to transport glucose and SGLT1 to transport myo-inositol was independently confirmed by monitoring the Na+-dependent uptake of 3H-d-glucose and 3H-myo-inositol, respectively. In common with SGLT1, SMIT gave a relaxation current in the presence of 100 mm Na+ that was abolished by phlorizin (0.5 mm). This transient current decayed with a voltage-sensitive time constant between 10 and 14 msec. The presteady-state current is apparently due to the reorientation of the cotransporter protein in the membrane in response to a change in V m . The kinetics of SMIT is accounted for by an ordered six-state nonrapid equilibrium model.
- Published
- 1995
36. Molecular Differentiation of Transmissible Gastroenteritis Virus and Porcine Respiratory Coronavirus Strains
- Author
-
H. M. Kwon, Linda J. Saif, and Daral J. Jackwood
- Subjects
Restriction enzyme ,Antigenicity ,Tissue tropism ,Virulence ,Biology ,Restriction fragment length polymorphism ,Porcine Respiratory Coronavirus ,Gene ,Virology ,Reverse transcriptase - Abstract
Transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) causes an economically important enteric disease of swine. Differences in the pathogenicity, antigenicity and tissue tropism have been observed among porcine coronaviruses. Although porcine respiratory coronavirus (PRCV) is antigenically similar but not identical to TGEV isolates, these respiratory coronaviruses differ markedly in pathogenicity and tissue tropism compared to TGEV isolates. Using a reverse transcriptase/polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RT/PCR-RFLP) assay, TGEV and PRCV isolates were assigned to several distinct groups. By RFLP analysis of the 5’ region of the S gene, TGEV strains were differentiated into 4 groups using the restriction enzyme Sau3AI. A fifth Sau3Al group contained the PRCV isolates. These 5 groups correlated with antigenic groups previously defined using monoclonal antibodies in our laboratory. Several restriction enzymes could be used to differentiate the TGEV strains into Miller and Purdue types. Analysis of a PCR amplified product in the 3 and 3-1 genes indicated the RT/PCR-RFLP assay results for TGEV Miller strains could be correlated with lower virulence created by passage in cell culture.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The tonicity-sensitive element that mediates increased transcription of the betaine transporter gene in response to hypertonic stress
- Author
-
M, Takenaka, A S, Preston, H M, Kwon, and J S, Handler
- Subjects
GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Base Sequence ,Molecular Sequence Data ,DNA ,Simian virus 40 ,Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid ,Betaine ,Dogs ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Carrier Proteins ,Luciferases ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Cells, Cultured - Abstract
BGT1, the Na(+)-and Cl- coupled betaine transporter, is responsible for the accumulation of high concentrations of the non-perturbing osmolyte betaine in hypertonic Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells and presumably in the hypertonic renal medulla. In MDCK cells, the increase in activity of the betaine transporter is preceded by an increase in transcription of BGT1 and in the abundance of BGT1 mRNA. To investigate the molecular mechanism of transcriptional regulation by tonicity, we have characterized the 5'-flanking region of the gene. Transient transfection assays in MDCK cells cultured in isotonic or hypertonic medium using luciferase reporter constructs containing various fragments of the 5'-flanking region revealed that the region spanning base pairs -69 to -50 5' to the transcription initiation site (-69/-50) has hypertonicity-responsive enhancer activity. A double-stranded -69/-50 concatemer cloned 5' to an SV40 basal promoter and luciferase reporter gene in hypertonic cells exhibited more than 11-fold the activity in isotonic cells. Expression assays and electrophoretic mobility shift assays of mutants of -69/-50 identified a smaller region that is required for hypertonicity to induce increased expression and a slowly migrating band on mobility shift assays.
- Published
- 1994
38. Differentiation of infectious bronchitis virus serotypes using polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis
- Author
-
H M, Kwon, M W, Jackwood, and J, Gelb
- Subjects
Membrane Glycoproteins ,Base Sequence ,Genes, Viral ,Viral Envelope Proteins ,Infectious bronchitis virus ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus ,Serotyping ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length - Abstract
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis were used to differentiate between serotypes of several infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) strains. A sequence of 1720 base pairs (bp) that contains the S1 glycoprotein gene of IBV was amplified by PCR, purified, and digested with restriction enzymes. Eleven reference IBV strains were grouped according to the RFLP patterns. The IBV Holte, Arkansas DPI, SE 17, Md 27, and Iowa 97 strains could be differentiated from the other IBV strains using the restriction enzyme HaeIII. The Beaudette, Massachusetts 41, Connecticut, and Florida 88 strains had the same HaeIII RFLP pattern but could be differentiated using XcmI and BstYI restriction enzymes. The Gray and JMK strains could not be differentiated by their RFLP patterns following digestion with 23 different restriction enzymes. Twenty-six samples (field isolates and reference strains) of IBV, previously serotypes by the virus-neutralization (VN) test in embryonating eggs, were analyzed in a blind fashion. The results using the PCR and RFLP analysis agreed with the serotype for traditional and variant IBV viruses as determined by the VN test.
- Published
- 1993
39. Polymerase chain reaction and a biotin-labeled DNA probe for detection of infectious bronchitis virus in chickens
- Author
-
H M, Kwon, M W, Jackwood, T P, Brown, and D A, Hilt
- Subjects
Trachea ,Microscopy, Electron ,Coronaviridae Infections ,Eggs ,Infectious bronchitis virus ,Animals ,Biotin ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,RNA, Viral ,DNA Probes ,Chickens ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Poultry Diseases - Abstract
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and a biotin-labeled DNA probe were used to amplify and detect the genome of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) from tracheal swabs taken from chickens that were experimentally inoculated with the IBV Beaudette, Arkansas, and Gray strains. The viral genome was successfully detected by PCR and confirmed by dot-hybridization assay using a biotin-labeled DNA probe on days 1, 3, 9, and 14 after exposure. Direct electron microscopy (EM) analysis was used to compare the ability of the two tests to detect IBV from the same tracheal swab samples. The EM analysis did not detect IBV in four of eight necropsy groups that were positive using PCR and the biotin-labeled DNA probe. Although histopathological lesions were observed in the tracheas, no clinical signs or specific antibody response were observed in the birds. The virus was also detected in the allantoic fluid of embryonating chicken eggs that had been inoculated with field samples suspected to be IBV. The field samples were passed four to six times in embryonating eggs, and 10 of 17 samples were positive using PCR and the biotin-labeled probe.
- Published
- 1993
40. Osmoregulation of Na(+)-inositol cotransporter activity and mRNA levels in brain glial cells
- Author
-
A. Paredes, Kevin Strange, H. M. Kwon, and Michael L. McManus
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Inositol ,RNA, Messenger ,Cells, Cultured ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Osmotic concentration ,Symporters ,Sodium ,Brain ,Membrane Proteins ,Transporter ,Cell Biology ,Membrane transport ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,Transport protein ,Culture Media ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Hypertonic Stress ,Osmoregulation ,Isotonic Solutions ,Carrier Proteins ,Neuroglia ,Astrocyte - Abstract
During plasma hypertonicity brain volume is regulated acutely by electrolyte uptake and chronically by accumulation of organic solutes such as inositol. Cultured rat C6 glioma cells, an astrocyte-like cell line, show a similar pattern of volume control. Volume regulatory accumulation of inositol requires external inositol, indicating that membrane transport plays a central role in this process. The inositol uptake pathway is Na+ dependent and exhibits Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Chronic hypertonic acclimation results in a twofold increase in the maximum velocity of the transporter without changing the Km. Hypertonic stress also results in a 17-fold increase in transporter mRNA. Elevation of mRNA levels precedes activation of the transporter by 4-6 h, suggesting that increased inositol uptake is mediated by synthesis and membrane insertion of new transport proteins. Reacclimation of hypertonic cells to isotonicity causes a rapid reduction of transporter mRNA levels to control levels within 4 h. In contrast, downregulation of transport activity does not begin until between 10 and 24 h after reexposure to isotonicity.
- Published
- 1992
41. Infectious bronchitis virus detection in allantoic fluid using the polymerase chain reaction and a DNA probe
- Author
-
M W, Jackwood, H M, Kwon, and D A, Hilt
- Subjects
Electrophoresis, Agar Gel ,Base Sequence ,Allantois ,Infectious bronchitis virus ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Animals ,RNA, Viral ,Chick Embryo ,Templates, Genetic ,DNA Probes ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Sensitivity and Specificity - Abstract
A rapid extraction procedure was developed to purify infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) RNA from the allantoic fluid of inoculated embryonating eggs. Reverse transcription of viral RNA and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were used to amplify the viral genome from eight different strains of IBV comprising five different serotypes. A biotinylated DNA probe, prepared to a sequence within the PCR amplification product of the Beaudette strain of IBV, was used in a dot-hybridization assay; it detected the amplification products of all of the IBV strains examined. Reverse transcription and PCR amplification were judged to be specific for IBV. This was because amplification products were not detected by agarose gel electrophoresis or by dot-hybridization when template used in the PCR was extracted from allantoic fluid and the chorioallantoic membrane of uninoculated embryonating eggs or from allantoic fluid of embryonating eggs inoculated with other chicken upper respiratory viruses.
- Published
- 1992
42. Taurine behaves as an osmolyte in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Protection by polarized, regulated transport of taurine
- Author
-
S Uchida, Agnes S. Preston, Joseph S. Handler, H M Kwon, and T Nakanishi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Taurine ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Biology ,Kidney ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Inositol ,Taurine transport ,Cells, Cultured ,Osmotic concentration ,Kidney metabolism ,Biological Transport ,General Medicine ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Osmolyte ,Biophysics ,Tonicity ,Research Article - Abstract
Using a clonal growth assay, we demonstrated that taurine, a nonperturbing osmolyte accumulated in kidney medulla, brain, and some other tissues of hypertonic experimental animals can function as a nonperturbing osmolyte in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. The taurine content of hypertonic MDCK cells is twice that of isotonic MDCK cells (isotonic 160 nmol/mg protein; hypertonic 320 nmol/mg protein). Therefore we studied taurine transport in MDCK cells grown on porous supports and then studied the effect of hypertonicity which is known to elicit increased uptake of some other nonperturbing osmolytes by MDCK cells. Basal uptake exceeded apical uptake, with Km and Vmax of 56 microM and 933 pmol/min.mg protein on the basal surface and 10 microM and 50 pmol/min.mg protein on the apical surface. On both surfaces, virtually all taurine uptake was Na+ and Cl- dependent. 24 h after cells were shifted to hypertonic medium (500 mosmol/kg), taurine uptake doubled on the basolateral surface without change on the apical surface. The response to hypertonicity was the result of an increase in Vmax without change in Km. There was no change in taurine efflux when cells were shifted from isotonic to hypertonic medium. When cells adapted to hypertonic medium were shifted to isotonic medium, a large transient basolateral efflux of taurine occurred within 10 min. We conclude that taurine can function as a nonperturbing osmolyte in MDCK cells and that tonicity-regulated taurine transport is a basolateral function in MDCK cells.
- Published
- 1991
43. Myo-inositol and betaine transporters regulated by tonicity are basolateral in MDCK cells
- Author
-
J. S. Handler, S Uchida, A. Yamauchi, H. M. Kwon, and A. S. Preston
- Subjects
Osmotic concentration ,Physiology ,Hypertonic Solutions ,Biological Transport ,Membrane transport ,Kidney ,Cell Line ,Culture Media ,Betaine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Osmolyte ,Biophysics ,Osmoregulation ,Tonicity ,Animals ,Inositol ,Efflux ,Isotonic Solutions ,Cotransporter - Abstract
Myo-inositol and glycinebetaine are compatible osmolytes accumulated in the renal medulla and in MDCK cells cultured in hypertonic media. Both osmolytes are taken up by MDCK cells on Na-coupled transporters. The maximal velocity (Vmax) of both cotransporters is increased by culture in hypertonic medium. When hypertonic MDCK cells are shifted to isotonic medium there is a large transient efflux of osmolytes. To determine the polarity of the cotransporters and the transient efflux, we grew MDCK cells on a porous support to assay transport separately at their apical and basolateral surfaces. In hypertonic cells, basolateral uptake of both osmolytes was 1) more than 10-fold apical uptake, 2) greater than 96% Na dependent, 3) 25- (myo-inositol) and 16-fold (glycinebetaine) uptake in isotonic cells, reaching a maximum 24 h after the switch to hypertonic medium. When medium osmolarity was decreased from hypertonic to isotonic, myo-inositol uptake reversed to the isotonic level within 1 day; glycinebetaine uptake decreased more slowly. When medium osmolarity was decreased from hypertonic to isotonic, there was a large transient increase in basolateral efflux of both osmolytes.
- Published
- 1991
44. Induction of glycinebetaine uptake into Xenopus oocytes by injection of poly(A)+ RNA from renal cells exposed to high extracellular NaCl
- Author
-
R B, Robey, H M, Kwon, J S, Handler, A, Garcia-Perez, and M B, Burg
- Subjects
Electrophoresis, Agar Gel ,Microinjections ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Xenopus ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Sodium Chloride ,Kidney ,Cell Line ,Dogs ,Bacterial Proteins ,Periplasmic Binding Proteins ,Oocytes ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Carrier Proteins ,Poly A - Abstract
Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells accumulate glycinebetaine via Na(+)-dependent transport in response to hypertonic stress. When extracellular tonicity is increased by the addition of NaCl, Vmax for glycinebetaine transport increases without an associated change in Km, consistent with an increase in the number of functioning transporters. To test whether increased transport activity results from increased gene expression, we injected poly(A)+ RNA (mRNA) from MDCK cells into Xenopus oocytes and assayed for glycinebetaine uptake in ovo. RNA-induced Na(+)-dependent uptake is observed in oocytes injected with mRNA from cells exposed to high extracellular NaCl, but not in oocytes injected with either water or mRNA from cells maintained in isotonic medium. Unfractionated mRNA induces glycinebetaine uptake in ovo at a rate which is approximately 3-fold higher than in water-injected controls. Size-fractionated mRNA (median size 2.8 kilobases) induces uptake at a rate which is approximately 7-fold higher than controls. Such RNA-induced transport activity in ovo is consistent with heterologous expression of Na(+)/glucinebetaine cotransporters encoded by renal mRNA. Increased transporter mRNA in cells exposed to hypertonicity probably underlies the pattern of expression observed in ovo. This can account for the observed rise in MDCK cell glycinebetaine transport during hypertonic stress.
- Published
- 1991
45. Expression of Madin-Darby canine kidney cell Na(+)-and Cl(-)-dependent taurine transporter in Xenopus laevis oocytes
- Author
-
S, Uchida, H M, Kwon, A S, Preston, and J S, Handler
- Subjects
Taurine ,Sodium ,Biological Transport ,Kidney ,Cell Line ,Substrate Specificity ,Kinetics ,Xenopus laevis ,Chlorides ,Oocytes ,Animals ,RNA ,Carrier Proteins ,Poly A - Abstract
Expression of a Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell taurine transporter was examined in Xenopus oocytes that had been injected with poly(A)+ RNA extracted from MDCK cells. Compared with water-injected oocytes, injection of total poly(A)+ RNA resulted in an increase in Na(+)-dependent taurine uptake which was directly related to the amount of RNA injected. The magnitude of expression in poly(A)+ RNA-injected oocytes was 5-10-fold higher than that of water-injected oocytes. Since the Vmax of taurine uptake in MDCK cells is increased by culture in hypertonic medium, we compared oocyte taurine uptake after injection with poly(A)+ RNA from MDCK cells cultured in hypertonic medium with uptake in oocytes injected with poly(A)+ RNA from hypertonic cells elicited twice the taurine uptake elicited by poly(A)+ RNA from isotonic cells. The transporter expressed in oocytes was like that in MDCK cells: it was completely dependent on external sodium and was also anion dependent (Cl- greater than or equal to Br- greater than SCN- much greater than gluconate-). Other beta-amino acids, beta-alanine and hypotaurine, inhibited taurine uptake, but L-alanine and 2-(methylamino) isobutyric acid did not. The apparent Km of the transporter was 7.0 microM. After size fractionation on a sucrose density gradient, poly(A)+ RNA encoding for the MDCK taurine transporter was found in the fraction whose average size was 4.4 kilobases.
- Published
- 1991
46. Multiple comparison of primary structure of the osmoregulatory Na+/myo-inositol cotransporter from bovine, human, and canine species
- Author
-
Gerard T. Berry, Teodor Parella, John J. Mallee, and H. M. Kwon
- Subjects
Male ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Symporters ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Protein primary structure ,Membrane Proteins ,Biology ,Human genetics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dogs ,Genes ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Cattle ,Inositol ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Canine Species ,Cloning, Molecular ,Carrier Proteins ,Cotransporter ,Heat-Shock Proteins - Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. S1 glycoprotein gene analysis of infectious bronchitis viruses isolated in Korea.
- Author
-
S. K. Lee, H. W. Sung, and H. M. Kwon
- Subjects
GLYCOPROTEINS ,BRONCHITIS ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases - Abstract
Summary. Fifteen isolates of Infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) were obtained from the kidney, trachea, and cecal tonsil of IB suspected chickens between 2001 and 2002 years in Korea. The S1 glycoprotein gene of IBV isolates were amplified by reverse transcriptase ? polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and analyzed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. Fifteen Korean IBV isolates were classified into 4 groups by their RFLP patterns using restriction enzymes, HaeIII, BstYI, and XcmI. The RFLP patterns for 3, 1, and 1 of 15 isolates corresponded to the patterns of IBV Arkansas, Connecticut, and Massachusetts strains, respectively. Ten of 15 isolates generated unique KM91 RFLP pattern that was observed in the IBV KM 91 strain previously isolated in Korea. To confirm genetic diversity in the S1 genes of IBV isolates, viral RNAs of representative 9 of 15 IBV isolates were amplified, cloned, sequenced and compared with published sequences for non-Korean IBV strains. Korean IBV isolates showed amino acid sequence similarity between 61.8% (K446-01 and K161-02) and 96.1% (K281-01 and K210-02) with each other and they showed amino acid sequence similarity between 42.9% (K161-02 and GA980470) and 96.5% (K203-02 and KB8523) compared to non-Korean IBV strains. By phylogenetic tree analysis, Korean IBV field isolates were branched into five clusters in which 3 clusters were differentiated from non-Korean IBV strains. Especially, Korean IBV isolates K069-01, K507-01, K774-01 and K142-02 formed a separate cluster. It seems that IBVs continue to evolve and IBVs showing various genetic differences may cocirculate in Korea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Molecular cloning of the cDNA for an MDCK cell Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent taurine transporter that is regulated by hypertonicity
- Author
-
F Marumo, A S Preston, H M Kwon, Joseph S. Handler, A Yamauchi, and Shinichi Uchida
- Subjects
Neurotransmitter transporter ,Taurine ,Renal cortex ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Xenopus laevis ,Dogs ,Renal medulla ,medicine ,Animals ,Tissue Distribution ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Cloning, Molecular ,Taurine transport ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,Correction ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Transporter ,DNA ,Water-Electrolyte Balance ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Oligodeoxyribonucleotides ,Osmolyte ,Carrier Proteins ,Sequence Alignment ,Research Article - Abstract
Cells in the hypertonic renal medulla maintain their intracellular ion concentration at isotonic levels, despite much higher concentrations of extracellular electrolytes, by accumulating high concentrations of nonperturbing small organic solutes termed osmolytes. Taurine has been identified as a nonperturbing osmolyte in the renal medulla and Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. In hypertonic medium, the increased accumulation of taurine in MDCK cells is the result of increased activity of a Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent taurine transporter. We have isolated a cDNA encoding a Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent taurine transporter, whose sequence corresponds to a protein of 655 amino acids with significant amino acid sequence similarity to previously cloned Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent transporters, including the MDCK cell betaine/gamma-aminobutyric acid transporter and several brain neurotransmitter transporters. Northern hybridization indicates that mRNA for the taurine transporter is present in renal cortex and medulla, ileal mucosa, brain, liver, and heart. The abundance of mRNA for the taurine transporter is increased in MDCK cells cultured in hypertonic medium, suggesting that regulation of transport activity by medium hypertonicity occurs at the level of mRNA accumulation.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Size selected mRNA induces expression of P-aminohippurate transport in Xenopus oocytes
- Author
-
J M Goldinger, H M Kwon, S K Hong, and O Kwon
- Subjects
Kidney Cortex ,Microinjections ,Renal cortex ,Xenopus ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Xenopus laevis ,Gene expression ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Incubation ,Cells, Cultured ,Genetics ,Kidney ,Aminohippuric Acids ,Biological Transport ,Membrane transport ,biology.organism_classification ,Oocyte ,Molecular biology ,Probenecid ,Kinetics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Genes ,Oocytes ,Female ,p-Aminohippuric Acid ,Rabbits ,Carrier Proteins ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Xenopus oocytes were injected with size-fractionated mRNA isolated from the renal cortex of rabbit kidney and after 4 days incubation, PAH uptake in oocytes injected with mRNA (0.7-1.3 kb) was 8 to 45 fold that of the water injected controls. The oocyte to medium ratio of accumulated PAH was 1.95. The Km and Vmax for transport were 333 microM and 66.6 nmoles.oocyte-1.min-1, respectively. This Km is similar to that reported for PAH transport in intact kidneys and slices. The uptake of PAH was unaffected by the absence of Na+ or the presence of probenecid. Expression of the transport represents the first step in an effort to clone and identify the gene for PAH transport.
- Published
- 1989
50. High Pelvic Incidence Is Associated with Disease Progression in Nontraumatic Osteonecrosis of the Femoral Head.
- Author
-
Kwon HM, Yang IH, Park KK, Cho BW, Kam JH, Kong Y, Yang JH, and Lee WS
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Disease Progression, Female, Femur Head diagnostic imaging, Femur Head Necrosis diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pelvis diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Femur Head pathology, Femur Head Necrosis pathology, Pelvis pathology
- Abstract
Background: Although several factors exacerbate osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH), little is known about whether pelvic sagittal parameters are associated with a greater risk of ONFH progression., Questions/purposes: The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between pelvic sagittal parameters and disease progression (collapse of the femoral head) in patients with nontraumatic ONFH., Methods: From March 2010 through December 2016, we saw 401 patients with unilateral ONFH diagnosed at an outpatient clinic using plain radiography and MRI that were retrospectively reviewed. Of those, 276 patients met our inclusion criteria: Association Research Circulation Osseous (ARCO) Stage I or II nontraumatic unilateral ONFH without femoral head collapse, older than 18 years, and no prior surgical treatment. In all, 74% (203 of 276) of hips had complete follow-up (clinical and radiographic) at a minimum of 2 years. The pelvic sagittal parameters (pelvic incidence, pelvic tilt, and sacral slope) of all patients were measured with standing radiographs by two observers. Progression of disease and potential collapse of the femoral head of all patients (ARCO Stage ≥ III) was examined using radiography every 2 to 3 months after the first outpatient clinic visit. If patients with intractable pain associated with collapse of the femoral head did not respond to nonoperative treatment, THA was performed during the follow-up period. The patients were divided into two groups for comparison: those whose femoral head collapsed within 12 months (rapid progression group) and those whose femoral head did not collapse (nonrapid progression group). The rapid progression group consisted of 49 men and 55 women with a mean age of 55 years; the nonrapid progression group consisted of 60 men and 39 women with a mean age of 56 years. Factors such as age, sex, BMI, size of necrotic lesions, location of necrosis, necrosis risk factor associated with the rapid progression of disease were analyzed using an exploratory univariate analysis followed by a multivariate analysis., Results: Pelvic incidence (53° ± 9° versus 49° ± 7°; p < 0.01) and sacral slope (38° ± 9° versus 33° ± 7°; p < 0.01) were greater in the rapid progression group than in the non-rapid progression group. After accounting for potentially confounding variables like age, sex, BMI, size of necrotic lesions, location of necrosis, and necrosis risk factors, the only variable we found that was independently associated with more rapid disease progression was high (> 55°) pelvic incidence (odds ratio, 0.95 [95% CI 0.91 to 0.99]; p = 0.03)., Conclusions: After controlling for potential confounders such as age, sex, BMI, size of necrotic lesions, location of necrosis, and necrosis risk factors, we found that a high pelvic incidence was associated with a greater likelihood of femoral head collapse in patients with nontraumatic ONFH. Assessing pelvic sagittal parameters in patients with early nontraumatic ONFH may help anticipate which patients are at risk for femoral head collapse, but future prospective studies are needed to confirm these findings., Level of Evidence: Level III, therapeutic study.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.