Mouse Tabby (Ta) and X chromosome-linked human EDA share the features of hypoplastic hair, teeth, and eccrine sweat glands. We have cloned the Ta gene and find it to be homologous to the EDA gene. The gene is altered in two Ta alleles with a point mutation or a deletion. The gene is expressed in developing teeth and epidermis; no expression is seen in corresponding tissues from Ta mice. Ta and EDA genes both encode alternatively spliced forms; novel exons now extend the 3 end of the EDA gene. All transcripts recovered have the same 5 exon. The longest Ta cDNA encodes a 391-residue transmembrane protein, ectodysplasin-A, containing 19 Gly-Xaa-Yaa repeats. The isoforms of ectodysplasin-A may correlate with differential roles during embryonic development.
Adrenomedullin (AM) is a newly discovered hypotensive peptide which is believed to play an important role for blood pressure control in the adult. Although it has been well established that a major production site of AM is vascular endothelial cells, we now show that AM is most highly expressed in trophoblast giant cells, which are derived from the conceptus and are directly in contact with maternal tissues at the implantation site. Northern blot and in situ hybridization analyses show that the AM mRNA begins to be detected just after implantation and its level peaks at 9.5 days postconception (d.p.c.) in those cells. Expression then falls dramatically after 10.5 d.p.c., coincident with the completion of the mature chorioallantoic placenta. Immunohistochemical analyses show that the AM peptide is secreted from the trophoblast giant cells into the surrounding tissues, i.e., embryo, decidua, and maternal circulation. In contrast, the expression of an AM receptor was not detected by Northern blot analyses in either embryo or trophoblast giant cells at 7 d.p.c., when the AM gene is most highly expressed in the trophoblast giant cells. This suggests that the AM produced and secreted from the embryo's trophoblast giant cells acts on the maternal tissues rather than on the embryonic tissues. Based on these results, we propose that the high production of AM may be the mechanism by which the embryos survive at the early postimplantation period by pooling maternal blood in the implantation site in order to secure nutrition and oxygen before the establishment of efficient embryo-maternal circulation through the mature placenta.
This study identi®ed 17 matching serogroups of Vibrio cholerae belonging to serogroups other than O1 and O139 isolated from human cases and from the environment during a concurrent clinical and environmental study conducted in Calcutta, a cholera endemic area. Isolates within these matching serogroups were compared by various phenotypic and genotypic traits to determine if the environment was the source of the organisms associated with the disease. Clinical strains of V. cholerae were resistant to a greater number of drugs and exhibited multi-drug resistance compared with their environmental counterparts. Except for the presence of the genes for the El Tor haemolysin and the regulatory element ToxR in most of the strains of V. cholerae examined, non-O1, non-O139 V. cholerae strains lacked most of the other known virulence traits associated with toxigenic V. cholerae O1 or O139. Restriction fragment-length polymorphism of virulence-associated genes, ribotypes and DNA ®ngerprints of strains of matched serogroups showed considerable diversity, although some gene polymorphisms and ribotypes of a few strains of different serogroups were similar. It is concluded that despite sharing the same serogroup, environmental and clinical isolates were genetically heterogeneous and were of different lineages.
Use of antimicrobials for acne treatment is correlated with an increased occurrence of antimicrobial‐resistant Cutibacterium acnes. To clarify the role of antimicrobial use on the resistance and to investigate the characteristics of resistant strains, we conducted a multicenter study in dermatological clinics frequently visited by new patients with acne vulgaris. We collected specimens in 264 acne patients and tested 164 C. acnes strains isolated from 164 patients visiting 13 dermatological clinics. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing showed that the rates of resistance for tetracyclines, macrolides and clindamycin were significantly higher in C. acnes strains isolated from patients using antimicrobials for acne treatment than patients not using them. In particular, clindamycin‐resistant strains were frequently isolated from patients with older median age (≥24 years) and severe/moderate acne. After investigating the resistance mechanism of 15 high‐level clindamycin‐resistant strains, the transposable clindamycin resistance genes, erm(X) or erm(50), were detected in 14 strains. Using single‐locus sequence typing for C. acnes, the strains with erm(X) or multidrug resistance plasmid pTZC1 coding erm(50) and tetracycline resistance gene tet(W) were classified into clade F, which were specifically isolated from Japanese patients with acne, except for one strain. Our data showed that patients’ information, such as antimicrobial use, age and acne severity, are valuable in estimating whether a patient carries antimicrobial‐resistant C. acnes. Additionally, our results suggest that the clade F strains have a high risk of acquiring multidrug resistance.
Mammals achieve gene dosage control by (1) random X-chromosome inactivation in females, (2) parental origin-specific imprinting of selected autosomal genes, and (3) random autosomal inactivation. Genes belonging to the third category of epigenetic phenomenon are just now emerging, with only six identified so far. Here we report three additional genes, Nubp2, Igfals, and Jsap1, that show 50%-methylated CpG sites by Southern blot analyses and primarily monoallelic expression in single-cell allele-specific RT-PCR analysis of bone marrow stromal cells and hepatocytes. Furthermore, we show that, in contrast to X inactivation, alleles can switch between active and inactive states during the formation of daughter cells. These three genes are the first in their category to exist as a tight cluster, in the proximal region of mouse chromosome 17, providing a thus far unique example of a region of autosomal random monoallelic expression.
Background: Pityriasis rubra pilaris (PRP) is reported to respond poorly to cyclosporin A (CsA). Objective: We attempted to determine the efficacy of CsA in the treatment of classic adult-type PRP. Methods: Three patients with classic adult-type PRP were treated with 5 mg/kg/day CsA. Results: A sustained clinical response was achieved within 2–4 weeks of therapy. Relapses were noted when the CsA dose was decreased to 1.2 mg/kg/day. Conclusion: CsA should be considered in the treatment of classical adult-type PRP.
A decrease in the activity of ferrochelatase (FECH; EC 4.99.1.1), the terminal enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway, results in erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP; MIM 177000). We analyzed the FECHgene in eight Japanese EPP patients from seven non-consanguineous families and found two distinct genomic DNA abnormalities. In six patients from five families, there was a G-to-A point-mutation at the first position of the intron 9 donor site; it resulted in aberrant splicing and skipping of exon 9 in FECH mRNA. In one patient, we found an A-to-G point-mutation 4 bases from the 3" terminus of intron 4 that led to the in-frame insertion of 3 bases in mRNA. No allelic anomalies, except for 3 single nucleotide polymorphisms were detected in another patient. We analyzed intron polymorphism at IVS3-48, known to be associated with the phenotypic expression of EPP, in these eight patients and 152 healthy Japanese volunteers. All patients were C/C homozygous for IVS3-48. The allelic frequency of IVS3-48C polymorphism in the healthy Japanese volunteers was 67.8% (103/152).
A 66-year-old woman who lived on Tokunoshima Island, a small and remote southern island of the Japanese archipelago, had suffered from chromomycosis for more than 30 years and presented with a tumor-like growth on the posterior crural region of his right leg. Fonsecaea pedrosoi was identified as the pathogen from its growth pattern and micromorphological characteristics. The patient was successfully treated with 5-fluorocytosine, itoraconazole, and topical thermotherapy.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.