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  • DFMO  (1)
  • Patch dynamics  (1)
  • Planar lipid bilayer  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Oecologia 125 (2000), S. 119-126 
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Disturbance ; Patch dynamics ; Stream ecology ; Bed stability ; Mobile species
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The patchy distribution of benthic invertebrates in streams and rivers is an important and widely researched phenomenon. Previous studies on reasons for this patchiness have neglected the potential role of local disturbance history, probably because most lotic invertebrates are mobile and any effect of disturbance history was thought to be short-lived. Here we demonstrate for a New Zealand gravel-bed stream that local disturbance history can have long-term effects on the distribution of highly mobile stream invertebrates. Buried scour chains (100 at each of three 20-m sites within a 350-m reach) indicated that a spate with a return period of 5 months caused a mosaic of bed patches with different stabilities. More than 2 months after the spate, we took random, quantitative samples at each site from five patches that had experienced 4 cm or more of scour during the spate, from five patches with 4 cm or more of fill, and from five stable patches. Density of the dominant invertebrate taxon, the highly mobile mayfly Deleatidium spp., and densities of another three of the seven most common taxa differed significantly between patch stability categories. Larvae of Deleatidium, the black fly Austrosimulium spp. and the dipteran Eriopterini were most abundant in fill patches, whereas Isopoda were most abundant in scour patches. Total invertebrate densities and densities of six common taxa also differed between sites, although these were only 95–120 m apart. These results show that local disturbance history can have long-term effects on lotic invertebrates and be an important cause of invertebrate patchiness. The observed effects might have been even stronger had we sampled sooner after the spate or after a large flood. Disturbance history may influence invertebrates both directly (through dislodgement or mortality) and indirectly, through effects on the spatial distribution of their resources. Our results suggest that the role of disturbance in structuring animal communities dominated by mobile species may be more important than previously thought.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 147 (1995), S. 121-136 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: Chloride channel ; Cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum ; Planar lipid bilayer ; Ion selectivity ; Voltage ; Block ; pH
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract We have characterized a voltage-sensitive chloride channel from cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) following reconstitution of porcine heart SR into planar lipid bilayers. In 250 mm KCl, the channel had a main conductance level of 130 pS and exhibited two substrates of 61 and 154 pS. The channel was very selective for Cl− over K+ or Na+ ( $$P_{{\text{K}}^{\text{ + }} } /P_{{\text{Cl}}^{\text{ - }} } = 0.012$$ and $$P_{{\text{Na}}^{\text{ + }} } /P_{{\text{Cl}}^{\text{ - }} } \sim 0.040$$ ). It was permeable to several anions and displayed the following sequence of anion permeability: SCN− 〉 I− 〉 NO 3 − ∼ Br− 〉 Cl− 〉 f− 〉 HCOO−. Single-channel conductance saturated with increasing Cl− concentrations (K m= 900 mm and γmax = 488 pS). Channel activity was voltage dependent, with an open probability ranging from ∼1.0 around 0 mV to ∼0.5 at +80 mV. From −20 to +80 mV, channel gating was time-independent. However, at voltages below −40 mV the channel entered a long-lasting closed state. Mean open times varied with voltage, from ∼340 msec at −20 mV to ∼6 msec at +80 mV, whereas closed times were unaffected. The channel was not Ca2+-dependent. Channel activity was blocked by disulfonic stilbenes, arylaminobenzoates, zinc, and cadmium. Single-channel conductance was sensitive to trans pH, ranging from ∼190 pS at pH 5.5 to ∼60 pS at pH 9.0. These characteristics are different from those previously described for Cl− channels from skeletal or cardiac muscle SR.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-0646
    Keywords: DFMO ; human stomach cancer ; cell kinetics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Treatment of human gastric cancer clones in vitro with low doses of DFMO (5 mM) produced elongation of the cell population doubling times and lowering of the saturation densities. By contrast, DFMO treatment of normal human skin fibroblasts altered only the saturation density. The lack of an effect of 5 mM DFMO on the doubling time of normal fibroblasts may be directly related to baseline intracellular putrescine levels, which were about 2.5 times higher than in the cancer cells. The same dose of DFMO caused a rapid decrease in intracellular polyamine levels in the tumor clones. The effects on the doubling time and saturation density were almost totally abolished by the addition of 50 μM putrescine to the growth medium during the first 24 h of treatment with DFMO. Exposure to 5 mM DFMO for 24 h caused the human gastric cancer cells to become blocked in G1 phase only, and this led to a reduction in the fraction of cells in S phase. The G1 block was reversible and this cohort of cells eventually passed through S phase and then through G2 and M. A higher 100 mM dose of DFMO and longer exposure times for both doses produced cell cycle changes and death of more than 90% of the cell population. These data suggest that cell kinetics changes observed under these experimental conditions may reflect polyamine-related alterations in the biochemical events of cell cycle progression kinetics; but may also be the result of DFMO-induced loss of cell viability.
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