Silver shells of 20 nm thickness have been deposited on silica particles of 200 nm diameter with narrow size distribution. Silver nanoshells dispersed in water exhibit a strong surface plasmon resonance band at 443 nm. This band was found to be very sensitive to rabbit immunoglobulin G antibodies, which were anchored on the nanoshells. These in turn could be utilized to detect the presence of small (approximately 5) to large numbers (approximately 10(9)) of Escherichia coli in water. The protocol presented here proves to be a specific, rapid, reliable, and inexpensive method to detect E. coli.
Turner syndrome is a chromosomal abnormality characterized by the absence of whole or part of the X chromosome in females. This X aneuploidy condition is associated with a diverse set of clinical phenotypes such as gonadal dysfunction, short stature, osteoporosis and Type II diabetes mellitus, among others. These phenotypes differ in their severity and penetrance among the affected individuals. Haploinsufficiency for a few X linked genes has been associated with some of these disease phenotypes. RNA sequencing can provide valuable insights to understand molecular mechanism of disease process. In the current study, we have analysed the transcriptome profiles of human untransformed 45,X and 46,XX fibroblast cells and identified differential expression of genes in these two karyotypes. Functional analysis revealed that these differentially expressing genes are associated with bone differentiation, glucose metabolism and gonadal development pathways. We also report differential expression of lincRNAs in X monosomic cells. Our observations provide a basis for evaluation of cellular and molecular mechanism(s) in the establishment of Turner syndrome phenotypes.
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