106 research outputs found
Engineering an endocrine Neo-Pancreas by repopulation of a decellularized rat pancreas with islets of Langerhans
Decellularization of pancreata and repopulation of these non-immunogenic
matrices with islets and endothelial cells could provide transplantable,
endocrine Neo- Pancreata. In this study, rat pancreata were perfusion
decellularized and repopulated with intact islets, comparing three perfusion
routes (Artery, Portal Vein, Pancreatic Duct). Decellularization effectively
removed all cellular components but conserved the pancreas specific
extracellular matrix. Digital subtraction angiography of the matrices showed a
conserved integrity of the decellularized vascular system but a contrast
emersion into the parenchyma via the decellularized pancreatic duct. Islets
infused via the pancreatic duct leaked from the ductular system into the peri-
ductular decellularized space despite their magnitude. TUNEL staining and
Glucose stimulated insulin secretion revealed that islets were viable and
functional after the process. We present the first available protocol for
perfusion decellularization of rat pancreata via three different perfusion
routes. Furthermore, we provide first proof-of-concept for the repopulation of
the decellularized rat pancreata with functional islets of Langerhans. The
presented technique can serve as a bioengineering platform to generate
implantable and functional endocrine Neo-Pancreata
A functional analysis of the pyrimidine catabolic pathway in Arabidopsis
Reductive catabolism of pyrimidine nucleotides occurs via a three-step pathway in which uracil is degraded to β-alanine, CO2 and NH3 through sequential activities of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (EC 1.3.1.2, PYD1), dihydropyrimidinase (EC 3.5.2.2, PYD2) and β-ureidopropionase (EC 3.5.1.6, PYD3).A proposed function of this pathway, in addition to the maintenance of pyrimidine homeostasis, is the recycling of pyrimidine nitrogen to general nitrogen metabolism. PYD expression and catabolism of [2-14C]-uracil are markedly elevated in response to nitrogen limitation in plants, which can utilize uracil as a nitrogen source.PYD1, PYD2 and PYD3 knockout mutants were used for functional analysis of this pathway in Arabidopsis. pyd mutants exhibited no obvious phenotype under optimal growing conditions. pyd2 and pyd3 mutants were unable to catabolize [2-14C]-uracil or to grow on uracil as the sole nitrogen source. By contrast, catabolism of uracil was reduced by only 40% in pyd1 mutants, and pyd1 seedlings grew nearly as well as wild-type seedlings with a uracil nitrogen source. These results confirm PYD1 function and suggest the possible existence of another, as yet unknown, activity for uracil degradation to dihydrouracil in this plant.The localization of PYD-green fluorescent protein fusions in the plastid (PYD1), secretory system (PYD2) and cytosol (PYD3) suggests potentially complex metabolic regulation
Richter- und Anwaltschaft in Dialog: Aktuelle Rechtsprechung des Kammergerichts zum Bank- und Kapitalmarktrecht
"Die Akademie aber hat es rein nur mit der Wissenschaft an sich zu thun" : Wilhelm von Humboldt und die Akademie der Wissenschaften
The Traditions of Grammar Writing in Karl Philipp Moritz’s (1756–1793) Grammars of English (1784) and Italian (1791)
SummaryUntil the late 18th century, authors of vernacular grammars often adopted the categories of Latin grammar to describe these languages. However, by adapting the Latin system to English, German or Italian, grammarians could succeed only in part, because these languages work in different ways. In the present paper, the author discusses the solutions that Karl Philipp Moritz (1756–1793) proposes in hisEnglischeandItaliänische Sprachlehre für die Deutschen, textbooks for German learners. The author analyses to what extent Moritz’s grammar descriptions were influenced by the Latin model as well as by the traditions of English and Italian grammar writing that he encountered in his sources. It will be demonstrated that he translated extensively from the works of other authors: For his English textbook (Moritz 1784), he mainly used James Greenwood’s (1683?–1737)The Royal English Grammar(1737), and for Italian (Moritz 1791), he profited especially from Benedetto Rogacci’s (1646–1719)Pratica, e compendiosa istruzione circa l’uso emendato, ed elegante della Lingua Italiana(1711).</jats:p
- …
