The limited effectiveness of the intervention suggests that condom promotion should continue, but that additional investment in clinic-based health promotion is unlikely to result in consequent health gain.
Cajal bodies (CBs) are subnuclear structures involved in RNA metabolism. Here we show that, following infection of HeLa cells by adenovirus type 5 (Ad5), CBs fragment and form ordered structures, which we have termed "rosettes". Formation of CB rosettes was prevented by inhibition of viral DNA synthesis and preceded expression of the L4-33K protein. CB rosettes localised to the periphery of E2A-72K-containing replication centers and to the edges of ASF/SF2 and hnRNP A1 ring structures that demarcate sites of viral transcription and splicing. At later times of infection, CB rosettes were undetectable. Furthermore, knock-down of p80-coilin (the major structural protein of CBs) by RNA interference reduced the yield of infectious Ad5 and expression of the late proteins IIIa (from L1), hexon (from L3) and fiber (from L5), whereas the E2A-72K protein was unaffected. We conclude that CBs have an important role in the expression of adenovirus major late gene products.
Factor III (thromboplastin) activity is inhibited by apoB-100, but the mechanism of inhibition is unknown. By examining the effect of purified apoB-100 on factor III activity, we showed that apoB-100 can inhibit factor III via a different mechanism from that caused by the issue-factor pathway-inhibitor, which is mainly carried on the surface of lipoproteins. Although the presence of calcium ions and factors X and VII may enhance the rate of inhibition, they are not a prerequisite for the inhibition of factor III by apoB-100. In addition, by investigating the changes in the UV spectra of apoB-100 on interaction with factor III and factors X and VII and by assigning the shifts in absorption spectra to particular amino acids, we showed that these interactions involve negative and positive residues within these proteins. By following the rates of interactions between apoB-100 and either factors III, X, VII, a two-step mechanism for the inhibition process involving factors X and VII was postulated. In this mechanism, the primary interaction of apoB-100 with factor III is followed by a rate-limiting step that can be accelerated by the presence of either factor X or VII and leads to the inhibition of factor III. Furthermore, a computer-based analysis of the sequences of factor III revealed a possible binding site for apoB-100.
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