Video-microscopy in combination with digital image processing was used to analyze dynamic processes associated to the life cycle of Giardia lamblia trophozoites. These parasites swim and attach to the epithelial cells, producing the disease known as Giardiasis. Giardia is a multiflagellar cell, presenting 4 pairs of flagella. With the use of analogue and digital tools, we observed that in cells attached to glass slides only 2 of the 4 pairs present active beating (wave propagation). The frequency observed was 17-18 Hz to the anterior and 8-11 Hz to the ventral flagella. These data resulted from several hours of recording using both analogue video and high-speed digital camera. The caudal pair did not show active beating patterns and the same holds true for the posterior one. In this latter pair, oscillations were observed, but they were always associated to the transit of the wave produced by the ventral pair. The analysis performed with free moving cells showed that during its forward dislocation, Giardia lamblia presented either a lateral rocking or a complete rotational (tumbling) movement around its longitudinal axis. A dislocation of the caudal region of the cell both in the lateral and dorso-ventral direction was observed. This movement was completely independent from the flagellar beating and it is likely to be produced by a microtubular complex located in the caudal portion of the cell. The adhesion process of Giardia lamblia was also followed by video-microscopy and the data showed that the ventral disk had an active participation in this process.
SummaryA cDNA library was prepared from peripheral blood lymphocytes of an autoimmune patient with primary Sj6grens' syndrome. The cDNA library was screened with the patients own autoimmune serum being monospecitic for the nuclear autoantigen La/SS-B. Thereby an alternative type of La mRNA was identified that differed from the known La mRNA due to an exchange of the exon 1. Sequencing of the genomic region between the exons 1 and 2 showed that the alternative 5'-end is a part of the intron. In addition, the presence of an alternative promoter site, which exists within the intron downstream of the exon 1, became evident. In consequence, the alternative La mRNA is the result of a promoter switching combined with an alternative splicing mechanism. In the intron, further transcription factor binding sites, including a NF-xB element, were identified leading to the suggestion that the expression of the gene encoding for the nuclear autoantigen La/SS-B alters in dependence on disease conditions.
The subcellular distribution of the small Epstein-Barr virus-encoded RNAs EBER-1 and EBER-2 has been investigated by using a high-resolution in situ hybridization technique. The distribution prns in Raji cells of fluorescent oligodeoxynucleotides complementary to each RNA were detected by confocal laser nning microscopy. Both RNAs were found in the cytoplasm as well as in the nuclei of interphase cells. In contrast, use of the same technique indicated an exclusively nuclear location for cellular U2 RNA. In the cytoplasm distribution of the EBERs was similar to that of the double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase, to which these RNAs can bind, and was coincident with the rough endoplasmic reticulum. In cells undergoing mitosis the EBERs became localized around the chromosomes, whereas the protein kinase remained uniformly distributed in the cytoplasm. A cytoplasmic location for EBER-1 and EBER-2 in interphase ceils is consistent with the evidence for a role for these small RNAs in translational control.
This study describes a novel contrast agent with the capability of intracellular accumulation without an uptake mediator providing a T1-positive MRI signal at 1.5 T and may be suitable for cell tracking in animal models with intraparenchymal hemorrhages such as stroke or malignant tumors.
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