SUMMARY Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection has been found to be strikingly associated with autoimmune phenomena. The aim of the present study was to investigate the presence of various autoantibodies in patients with HCV infection. Anti-neutrophil cytoplamic antibody (ANCA), anti-dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (anti-E3), rheumatoid factor (RF), anti-dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase (anti-E2), anti-SS-A/Ro (60 kD), anti-SS-A/Ro (52 kD), anti-SS-B/La, anti-topoisomerase II (anti-topo II), anti-cardiolipin (aCL), anti-dsDNA, anti-ssDNA, anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA), anti-proteinase 3 (anti-Pr3) and anti-myeloperoxidase (anti-MPO) were determined in sera from 516 patients with HCV infection, 11 with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and 44 healthy controls. Assays employed were indirect immunofluoresence, the particle latex agglutination test, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunoblotting. ANCA, anti-E3 antibody and RF were positive in 278/516 (55·6%), 276/516 (53·3%) and 288/516 (56%) patients with HCV infection, respectively. Positivity for ANA was present in 15·8%, anti-ssDNA in 15·6%, anti-dsDNA in 8·5%, aCL in 5%, anti-SS-B/La in 4·1%, anti-SS-A/Ro (60 kD) in 3·9%, anti-E2 in 3·3% and anti-SSA/Ro (52 kD) in 1·2%, anti-MPO in 4·8%, anti-Topo II and anti-actinin in 0%. All sera with ANCA showed c-ANCA patterns and contained anti-PR3 specificity. HCV patients with ANCA showed a higher prevalence of skin involvement, anaemia, abnormal liver function and α-Fetoprotein (α-FP). HCV patients with anti-E3 antibodies showed a higher prevalence of liver cirrhosis, arthritis, abnormal liver function and elevated α-FP levels. The prevalence of autoantibodies was not affected by treatment with interferon-alpha (IFN-α). In conclusion, autoantibodies are commonly found in patients with HCV infection. There is a high prevalence of anti-E3, ANCA and RF in these patients. Proteinase 3 and E3 are the major target antigens in HCV infection. HCV may be regarded as a possible causative factor in ANCA-related vasculitis.
Taiwan's aboriginal peoples are thought to be related to ancestral Austronesian-speaking peoples. Currently, Taiwan has 14 officially acknowledged aboriginal tribes. The major crops currently farmed in aboriginal areas are rice (Oryza sativa) and foxtail millet (Setaria italica). Archeologists recently excavated the remains of several early cultures in Taiwan. The most plentiful plant remains were carbonated rice and foxtail millet grains. The earliest 14 C date of these excavation sites is ∼5,000 BP . These settlements may be those of the earliest ancestral Austronesian speakers in Taiwan. Rice domestication is a complex story. In this study, we identified the functional nucleotide polymorphisms of 16 domesticationrelated genes using 60 landraces collected from aboriginal Taiwanese villages about 100 years ago. We also screened the phenotypes of these landraces. By integrating phenoand genotypic data, together with data from archeologists and linguists, we may be able to better understand the history of rice cultivation in Taiwan and nearby areas.
BackgroundArchaeobotanical remains of millet were found at the Nan-kuan-li East site in Tainan Science Park, southern Taiwan. This site, dated around 5000–4300 BP, is characterized by remains of the Tapenkeng culture, the earliest Neolithic culture found so far in Taiwan. A large number of millet-like carbonized and charred seeds with varied sizes and shapes were unearthed from the site by the flotation method. Since no millet grain was ever found archaeologically in Taiwan previously, this discovery is of great importance and significance. This paper is in an attempt to further analyze these plant remains for a clearer understanding of the agricultural practice of the ancient inhabitants of the Nan-kuan-li East site.ResultWe used light and scanning electron microscopy to examine the morphological features of some modern domesticated and unearthed seeds to compare and identify the archaeobotanical remains by three criteria: caryopsis shape, embryo notch, and morphology of lemma and palea. We also developed a new methodology for distinguishing the excavated foxtail and broomcorn millet seeds.ConclusionTwo domesticated millet, including broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) and foxtail millet (Setaria italica), as well as one wild millet species, yellow foxtail (Setaria glauca), were identified in the unearthed seeds. Together with the millet remains, rice was also cultivated in the area. Archaeological evidence shows that millet and rice farming may have been important food sources for people living about 5000 years ago in southern Taiwan.
A cDNA clone GmPM4 which encodes mRNA species in mature or dry soybean seeds was characterized. DNA sequence analysis shows that the deduced polypeptides have a molecular mass of 68 kDa. GmPM4 proteins have a relatively high amino acid sequence homology with a major biotinylated protein isolated from pea seeds, SBP65, but both of these proteins differ markedly from that of presently known biotin enzymes. The accumulation of GmPM4 mRNA is detectable in the leaf primodium and the vascular tissues of the hypocotyl-radicle axis of mature seeds, and the GmPM4 proteins are present at high levels in dry and mature soybean seeds, but not in fresh immature seeds. It degrades rapidly at the early stage of seed germination. These proteins are boiling-soluble and biotinylated when they are present endogenously in soybean seeds; however, the same recombinant protein expressed in Escherichia coli is boiling-soluble, but it is not biotinylated.
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