In laboratories and manufacturing settings, a rapid and inexpensive method for the preparation of a target protein is crucial for promoting resesrach in protein science and engineering. Inclusion-body-based protein production is a promising method because high yields are achieved in the upstream process, although the refolding of solubilized, unfolded proteins in downstream processes often leads to significantly lower yields. The most challenging problem is that the effective condition for refolding is protein dependent and is therefore difficult to select in a rational manner. Accordingly, considerable time and expense using trial-and-error approaches are often needed to increase the final protein yield. Furthermore, for certain target proteins, finding suitable conditions to achieve an adequate yield cannot be obtained by existing methods. Therefore, to convert such a troublesome refolding process into a routine one, a wide array of methods based on novel technologies and materials have been developed. These methods select refolding conditions where productive refolding dominates over unproductive aggregation in competitive refolding reactions. This review focuses on synthetic refolding additives and describes the concepts underlying the development of reported chemical additives or chemical-additive-based methods that contribute to the emergence of a universal refolding method.
The anterior sacral horns and external anal sphincter muscle were examined histologically with special reference to Onuf's nucleus in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Shy-Drager syndrome. Onuf's nucleus and the external anal sphincter muscles were well preserved in ALS, but in Shy-Drager syndrome both structures showed marked degenerative changes. These findings suggest that Onuf's nucleus does not belong to the autonomic neurons, but to the motoneurons in anterior sacral horn, and it innervates the external sphincter muscles of the anus and urethra.
A 58-year-old man presented with an intramedullary spinal cord abscess (ISCA) manifesting as posterior neck pain, gait disturbance, and urinary retention, and transverse myelopathy 1 week later. Magnetic resonance imaging showed the ISCA at the C7 to T1 levels. He was treated under a diagnosis of cryptogenic ISCA with high-dose ampicillin and third- or fourth-generation cephalosporins, which resulted in complete recovery after 2 months. Review of the literature between January 1998 and August 2007 identified 26 cases of ISCA, including our patient. We also identified two additional nonsurgically treated ISCA patients reported between 1977 and 2007. The most common presentation was motor deficits in all patients, followed by fever, pain, and bladder dysfunction. The mortality rate was 1 of 26 patients, and neurological sequelae were observed in 15 of the 25 surviving patients. There was no significant difference in the frequency of neurological sequelae between surgically and nonsurgically treated patients. Mean length of the abscess in the surgically treated group was significantly larger than that in the medically treated group (5.8 vs. 2.2 vertebral bodies). All three nonsurgically treated patients with neurological sequelae had anaerobic infections and received antibiotic therapy later and for shorter periods than those with complete neurological recovery. Antibiotic treatment is comparable to surgery plus antibiotic treatment. Early broad-spectrum high-dose ampicillin and third-generation cephalosporin, covering Gram-positive, Gram-negative, and anaerobic organisms, should be the first choice of management for patients with ISCA.
Objective: To characterize various dysgraphic symptoms in parietal agraphia.
Method: We examined the writing impairments of four dysgraphia patients from parietal lobe lesions using a special writing test with 100 character kanji (Japanese morphograms) and their kana (Japanese phonetic writing) transcriptions, and related the test performance to a lesion site.
Results: Patients 1 and 2 had postcentral gyrus lesions and showed character distortion and tactile agnosia, with patient 1 also having limb apraxia. Patients 3 and 4 had superior parietal lobule lesions and features characteristic of apraxic agraphia (grapheme deformity and a writing stroke sequence disorder) and character imagery deficits (impaired character recall). Agraphia with impaired character recall and abnormal grapheme formation were more pronounced in patient 4, in whom the lesion extended to the inferior parietal, superior occipital and precuneus gyri.
Conclusion: The present findings and a review of the literature suggest that: (i) a postcentral gyrus lesion can yield graphemic distortion (somesthetic dysgraphia), (ii) abnormal grapheme formation and impaired character recall are associated with lesions surrounding the intraparietal sulcus, the symptom being more severe with the involvement of the inferior parietal, superior occipital and precuneus gyri, (iii) disordered writing stroke sequences are caused by a damaged anterior intraparietal area.
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