To explore gene expression during sugarcane culm maturation, we performed a partial sequence analysis of random clones from maturing culm total and subtracted cDNA libraries. Database comparisons revealed that of the 337 cDNA sequences analysed, 167 showed sequence homology to gene products in the protein databases, while 111 matched uncharacterised plant expressed sequence tags (ESTs) only. The remaining cDNAs showed no database match and could represent novel genes. The majority of ESTs corresponded to a variety of genes associated with general cellular metabolism. ESTs homologous to various stress response genes were also well represented. Analysis of ESTs from the subtracted library identified genes that may be preferentially expressed during culm maturation. This research has provided a framework for functional gene analysis in sugarcane sucrose-accumulating tissues.
To investigate ventricular tachycardias produced in healthy canine myocardium by stimulation of sympathetic ganglia or cardiac nerves, we simultaneously recorded a surface ECG and 63 ventricular electrograms in anesthetized open-chest dogs. Isochronal and isopotential maps were generated off-line by computer. Ventricular tachycardia with uniform beat-to-beat morphology was induced in 13 or 22 dogs by electrical stimulation of the left stellate ganglion (five experiments), the left middle cervical ganglion (four experiments), the left caudal pole cardiopulmonary nerve (two experiments), or the ventrolateral cardiac nerve (eight experiments). It was not inducible by stimulation of the right-sided major cardiopulmonary nerves or ganglia. In most instances the earliest measured electrical excitation occurred on the posterior aspect of the ventricles. Isochronal maps demonstrated a radial spread of the impulse away from the area of earliest excitation. Changes in the region of earliest excitation and (or) activation pattern were accompanied by changes in QRS morphology. The potential gradients measured between areas displaying positive and negative T waves on the anterior and left lateral aspects of the ventricles were significantly increased by ventrolateral cardiac nerve stimulation. However, the ventricular regions where these potential gradients existed differed from the regions of earliest excitation during ventricular tachycardia. These results demonstrate that the thoracic autonomic nervous system can induce repetitive ventricular excitation originating from consistent loci.
To investigate the actions of lidocaine and diltiazem on the ischemic alterations associated with the onset of acute ischemic arrhythmias, the left anterior descending coronary artery was occluded for 6-min periods separated by 30 min of reperfusion, under control conditions and after injection of lidocaine (2.4-3.8 micrograms/mL of plasma) or diltiazem (390-510 ng/mL) in open-chest anesthetized pigs. Sixty-one unipolar electrograms were continuously recorded in the ischemic zone. Isochronal maps and isopotential maps were determined by computer analysis. The magnitude of beat-to-beat alternation of unipolar waveforms was described by the difference between the time integrals subtended by electrograms of consecutive beats. Activation times were prolonged by ischemia and the ST segment became elevated. Delay and ST elevation developed at a faster rate in the presence of lidocaine than under control conditions, but were reduced by diltiazem. ST-T alternation was not significantly different between control and lidocaine occlusions, but the incidence of negative T waves and that of ventricular tachycardia degenerating to fibrillation were higher in lidocaine occlusions than in control occlusions. In contrast, unipolar waveform alternation and negative T waves were virtually abolished by diltiazem, even at fast pacing rates (180-210 beats/min) at which diltiazem did not reduce ST elevation. Ventricular arrhythmias also were abolished by diltiazem. Thus, lidocaine and diltiazem produce opposite effects on the ischemic alterations most closely associated with the initiating mechanism of tachycardia. This could be related to differences between these drugs with regard to their actions on transmembrane currents during repolarization.
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