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Showing papers by "Collège de France published in 1992"



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the basic equations of atmospheric dynamics in meteorology, namely the primitive equations of the atmosphere, with or without vertical viscosity, are studied, with the purpose of understanding the mechanism of long-term weather prediction and climate changes.
Abstract: The primitive equations are the fundamental equations of atmospheric dynamics. With the purpose of understanding the mechanism of long-term weather prediction and climate changes, the authors study as a first step towards this long-range project what is widely considered as the basic equations of atmospheric dynamics in meteorology, namely the primitive equations of the atmosphere. The mathematical formulation and attractors of the primitive equations, with or without vertical viscosity, are studied. First of all, by integrating the diagnostic equations they present a mathematical setting, and obtain the existence and time analyticity of solutions to the equations. They then establish some physically relevant estimates for the Hausdorff and fractal dimensions of the attractors of the problems.

486 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The more important result of this work was to show that the cephalic mesoderm does not form dermis, which is taken over by neural crest cells, which form both the skeleton and dermis of the face in the course of evolution of the vertebrate head.
Abstract: The developmental fate of the cephalic paraxial and prechordal mesoderm at the late neurula stage (3-somite) in the avian embryo has been investigated by using the isotopic, isochronic substitution technique between quail and chick embryos. The territories involved in the operation were especially tiny and the size of the transplants was of about 150 by 50 to 60 microns. At that stage, the neural crest cells have not yet started migrating and the fate of mesodermal cells exclusively was under scrutiny. The prechordal mesoderm was found to give rise to the following ocular muscles: musculus rectus ventralis and medialis and musculus oblicus ventralis. The paraxial mesoderm was separated in two longitudinal bands: one median, lying upon the cephalic vesicles (median paraxial mesoderm--MPM); one lateral, lying upon the foregut (lateral paraxial mesoderm--LPM). The former yields the three other ocular muscles, contributes to mesencephalic meninges and has essentially skeletogenic potencies. It contributes to the corpus sphenoid bone, the orbitosphenoid bone and the otic capsules; the rest of the facial skeleton is of neural crest origin. At 3-somite stage, MPM is represented by a few cells only. The LPM is more abundant at that stage and has essentially myogenic potencies with also some contribution to connective tissue. However, most of the connective cells associated with the facial and hypobranchial muscles are of neural crest origin. The more important result of this work was to show that the cephalic mesoderm does not form dermis. This function is taken over by neural crest cells, which form both the skeleton and dermis of the face. If one draws a parallel between the so-called "somitomeres" of the head and the trunk somites, it appears that skeletogenic potencies are reduced in the former, which in contrast have kept their myogenic capacities, whilst the formation of skeleton and dermis has been essentially taken over by the neural crest in the course of evolution of the vertebrate head.

399 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
17 Apr 1992-Cell
TL;DR: The Hox-3.1 coding sequence was replaced with the E. coli lacZ gene by means of homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells and thus produced null mutant mice and several skeletal segments were transformed into the likeness of more anterior ones, as observed in Drosophila with loss-of-function homeotic mutations.

351 citations


Journal ArticleDOI

338 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the predictions of two broad classes of models: an Eyring approach and a hydrodynamic approach, focusing on the viscous losses inside the liquid wedge of angle θ.

301 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Results indicate that, in addition to alpha and beta' (class III)-tubulin, other beta-tubulin isotypes are also glutamylated, and this antibody has been used to analyze the cell and tissue distributions of glutamelated tubulin.

270 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present results suggest that: (1) the dopamine-induced inhibition of prefrontal cortex neurons could involve cortical GABAergic interneurones; (2) the non-dopaminergic mesocortical system exerts also an inhibitory influence on prefrontal cortical cells and appears to be GABAergic.

239 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Low‐frequency stimulation of the hippocampo‐prefrontal cortex pathway activates cortical neurons mostly through AMPA receptors, suggesting that the hippocampal input to the prefrontal cortex utilizes glutamate and/or aspartate as a transmitter.
Abstract: Previous experiments in the rat have demonstrated that field CA1 and the subiculum project to the prefrontal cortex and that this direct unilateral pathway is excitatory. In the present study, anatomical and electrophysiological approaches were used to determine the transmitter mediating the excitatory responses in prefrontal cortex neurons to low-frequency stimulation of the hippocampus. The method of selective retrograde d-[3H]aspartate labelling was used to identify putative glutamatergic and/or aspartatergic hippocampal afferent fibres to the prefrontal cortex. Unilateral microinjection of d-[3H]aspartate into the prelimbic area of the prefrontal cortex resulted in the retrograde labelling of a fraction of hippocampal neurons. Some labelled cell bodies were distributed in field CA1 and the subiculum but larger numbers of neurons were detected in the ventral and intermediary subiculum. In a second series of experiments, the excitatory transmission from the hippocampus to the prefrontal cortex was pharmacologically analysed to provide further evidence for the involvement of glutamate and/or aspartate in the pathway. All prefrontal cortex neurons responding to the stimulation of the hippocampus were activated by selective agonists of the glutamate receptor subtypes alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionic acid (AMPA) and N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA), and these effects were selectively antagonized by 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) and 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (APV) respectively. Most of the excitatory responses of prefrontal cortex neurons to single and paired-pulse stimulation of the hippocampus were antagonized by CNQX. APV only affected the excitatory response in a few cells. These results suggest that the hippocampal input to the prefrontal cortex utilizes glutamate and/or aspartate as a transmitter. Even though prefrontal cortex neurons responding to the stimulation of the hippocampus appear to have both AMPA and NMDA receptors, low-frequency stimulation of the hippocampo-prefrontal cortex pathway activates cortical neurons mostly through AMPA receptors.

187 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The isolation and characterization of a cDNA encoding the C-terminal portion of a putative glial Na-channel (Na-G) alpha subunit indicates that the Na-G represents a separate molecular class within the mammalian Na- channel multigene family.
Abstract: Previous electrophysiological and pharmacological studies on central and peripheral glia revealed the presence of voltage-gated Na channels with properties that are similar but not identical to those of neuronal Na channels. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a cDNA encoding the C-terminal portion of a putative glial Na-channel (Na-G) alpha subunit. The amino acid sequence deduced from this cDNA indicates that the Na-G represents a separate molecular class within the mammalian Na-channel multigene family. By Northern blot, RNase protection, and in situ hybridization assays, we demonstrate that, in addition to brain astroglia, the Na-G mRNA is expressed in cultures of Schwann cells derived from dorsal root ganglia or from sciatic nerve. In vivo, the Na-G mRNA is detected not only in brain, dorsal root ganglia, and sciatic nerve, but also in tissues outside the nervous system including cardiac and skeletal muscle and lung. Its level varies according to the tissue and is developmentally regulated. The sequence and expression data concur in designating Na-G as an distinct type of Na channel, presumably with low sensitivity to tetrodotoxin.

171 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The AMPA (10(-3) M)-evoked release of [3H]dopamine was markedly potentiated by the combined application of N-methyl-D-aspartate and glycine in the presence of strychnine, indicating that the concomitant activation of AMPA receptors removes the voltage-dependent magnesium block of N

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: When applied locally to the caudate nucleus of the halothane-anaesthetized cat, riluzole markedly reduced (-57%) the spontaneous release of glutamate, since the efflux of the other amino acids, including aspartate was not affected.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the notion of a closed star product and define the character of a star product as the cohomology class (in the cyclic bicomplex) of a well defined cocycle.
Abstract: We define the notion of a closed star product. A (generalized) star product (deformation of the associative product of functions on a symplectic manifold W) is closed iff integration over W is a trace on the deformed algebra. We show that for these products the cyclic cohomology replaces the Hochschild cohomology in usual star products. We then define the character of a closed star product as the cohomology class (in the cyclic bicomplex) of a well-defined cocycle, and show that, in the case of pseudodifferential operators (standard ordering on the cotangent bundle to a compact Riemannian manifold), the character is defined and given by the Todd class, while in general it fails to satisfy the integrality condition.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1992-Peptides
TL;DR: Results suggest that septide, [Apa9-10]SP, and [Pro9, 10]SP exert their high contracting activity in the guinea pig ileum by acting on a new subtype of tachykinin receptors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sib pair analysis suggests that the renin gene does not have a frequent role in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension; further more powerful linkage studies or other approaches will be needed to detect contributions at the renIn locus to the heritability of essential pulmonary hypertension.
Abstract: Although essential arterial hypertension is believed to have a strong genetic predisposition, the gene(s) responsible are unknown. The mechanisms underlying the regulation of blood pressure and experimental studies place the renin gene among the main candidate genes that need to be tested in humans. We tested the hypothesis of a linkage between the renin gene and essential hypertension using the affected sib pair method. Siblings (133 subjects, 52.1±10.9 years) from 57 families were selected for sustained hypertension (160.7 ± 22.9/99.5 ± 12.8 mmHg with 80% of patients under antihypertensive treatment), of early onset (40.7 ± 12.0 years), in the absence of obesity, diabetes mellitus, and secondary hypertension. Eight renin haplotypes were generated from three diallelic renin restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) (TaqI, Hinfi, HindIII) located throughout the renin gene. The allelic concordance between the sib pairs was analyzed by identity by state relationships for 98 sib pairs (41 for 41 couples, 39 for 13 trios, 18 for 3 quartets). Allelic frequencies in the 57 hypertensive probands were similar to those observed among 102 hypertensive subjects studied previously. Six of eight possible haplotypes were observed, the informativity of the marker corresponded to 70% of heterozygosity. Allelic concordance for all sib pairs according to sibship size was not significantly different from that expected under the hypothesis of no linkage (t = 0.52, P = 0.15) reflecting only a small excess of renin alleles shared by the hypertensive sibs (1.44 ± 0.6 vs 1.36 ± 0.6). Likewise the linkage hypothesis was unsupported by weighted estimates to correct for possible bias due to large sibship size. Thus, the sib pair analysis suggests that the renin gene does not have a frequent role in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension; further more powerful linkage studies or other approaches will be needed to detect contributions at the renin locus to the heritability of essential hypertension.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new atomic cavity consisting of a single horizontal concave mirror placed in the earth's gravitational field is studied, where gravity, by bending the atomic trajectories, plays the role of a second mirror closing the cavity.
Abstract: This paper is devoted to the study of a new atomic cavity consisting of a single horizontal concave mirror placed in the earth gravitational field. Gravity, by bending the atomic trajectories, plays the role of a second mirror closing the cavity. We first discuss the stability criterion for this cavity, assuming that the mirror has a parabolic shape. We then derive the quantum mechanical modes of such a configuration, with particular emphasis on the paraxial (i.e., close to vertical) motion. Finally, we discuss the possibility of populating those modes from an initial cold atomic cloud dropped above the mirror.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support the existence in the early avian embryo of a phagocytic cell system of blood cell lineage, derived chiefly from the yolk sac, based on hemopoietic cells arising from theYolk sac.
Abstract: It is well established that hemopoietic cells arising from the yolk sac invade the avian embryo. To study the fate and role of these cells during the first 2.5-4.5 days of incubation, we constructed yolk sac chimeras (a chick embryo grafted on a quail yolk sac and vice versa) and immunostained them with antibodies specific to cells of quail hemangioblastic lineage (MB1 and QH1). This approach revealed that endothelial cells of the embryonic vessels are of intraembryonic origin. In contrast, numerous hemopoietic cells of yolk sac origin were seen in embryos ranging from 2.5 to 4.5 days of incubation. These cells were already present within the vessels and in the mesenchyme at the earliest developmental stages analyzed. Two hemopoietic cell types of yolk sac origin were distinguishable, undifferentiated cells and macrophage-like cells. The number of the latter cells increased progressively as development proceeded, and they showed marked acid phosphatase activity and phagocytic capacity, as revealed by the presence of numerous phagocytic inclusions in their cytoplasm. The macrophage-like cells were mostly distributed in the mesenchyme and also appeared within some organ primordia such as the neural tube, the liver anlage and the nephric rudiment. Comparison of the results in the two types of chimeras and the findings obtained with acid phosphatase/MB1 double labelling showed that some hemopoietic macrophage-like cells of intraembryonic origin were also present at the stages considered. These results support the existence in the early avian embryo of a phagocytic cell system of blood cell lineage, derived chiefly from the yolk sac. Cells belonging to this system perform phagocytosis in cell death and may also be involved in other morphogenetic processes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is postulate that products resulting from mitochondrial translation could be involved in the organization of the cytoskeleton or of certain membrane components whose rearrangements should be the prerequisite or the correlates to early stages of neuronal differentiation.
Abstract: Using clonal cell lines isolated from murine neuroblastoma C1300, we investigated the mitochondrial changes related to neuronal differentiation and, more generally, the role played by the mitochondrion in this phenomenon. By different approaches (measurement of the mitochondrial mass, immunoquantification of specific mitochondrial proteins, or incorporation of Rhodamine 123), the differentiation of the inducible clone, N1E-115, was found associated with an important increase of the cellular content in mitochondria. This increase could be observed with differentiating N1E-115 cells maintained in suspension, i.e. under conditions where neurite outgrowth is prevented but other early stages of (biochemical) differentiation continue to occur. That these mitochondrial changes are likely to be correlated with these stages of neuronal differentiation, rather than with simple progression to the postmitotic stage, stems from comparative experiments with clone N1A-103, a neuroblastoma cell line variant that becomes postmitotic after induction but fails to differentiate and shows no modification in its cellular content in mitochondria. In accordance with these observations, chloramphenicol prevents differentiation when added together with the inducer. This effect is probably related to the inhibition of mitochondrial translation rather than to modification of the bioenergetic needs because oligomycine, a potent inhibitor of the mitochondrial ATP synthetase, shows no effect on neurogenesis. As a working hypothesis and in keeping with independently published models, we postulate that products resulting from mitochondrial translation could be involved in the organization of the cytoskeleton or of certain membrane components whose rearrangements should be the prerequisite or the correlates to early stages of neuronal differentiation.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 1992-Neuron
TL;DR: The isolation of the complete nucleotide sequence of SMP reveals that SMP is a transmembrane molecule of the immunoglobulin superfamily showing sequence similarities with several surface glycoproteins expressed in the nervous and immune systems.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the absence of extracellular calcium, the effects of endothelins were largely prevented, suggesting that second messengers linked to the activation of phospholipases C and/or A2, which both are dependent on external calcium, could be involved in the uncoupling mechanism.
Abstract: Endothelins, a family of potent vasoconstrictor peptides initially characterized in peripheral tissues, have also been reported to be synthesized in the brain. In this structure several cell types, including astrocytes, endothelial cells and certain neurons, are potential targets for these peptides. In astrocytes, endothelins induce changes in the concentration of several second messengers (calcium, diacylglycerol, arachidonic acid, cAMP) known to be involved in the regulation of gap junction channels. Using the scrape loading/dye transfer technique we have observed that two isoforms of endothelin, endothelin-1 and endothelin-3, strongly inhibit the extent of dye-coupling between confluent astrocytes, suggesting that gap junction permeability was reduced. This inhibitory effect on dye coupling was reproduced by the snake venom sarafotoxin. When used at 10-7 M, these three compounds had inhibitory effects on gap junction channels which were comparable to those induced by the well known uncoupling agents octanol and halothane. In the absence of extracellular calcium, the effects of endothelins were largely prevented, suggesting that second messengers linked to the activation of phospholipases C and/or A2, which both are dependent on external calcium, could be involved in the uncoupling mechanism.

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Mar 1992-Nature
TL;DR: The discovery of a Miocene hominoid from Berg Aukas, Namibia, is reported, the first known from the African continent south of equatorial East Africa, and represents a major range extension of Miocene Hominoidea in Africa to latitude 20° S.
Abstract: WE report here the discovery of a Miocene hominoid from Berg Aukas, Namibia, the first known from the African continent south of equatorial East Africa. This represents a major range extension of Miocene Hominoidea in Africa to latitude 20° S. The holotype, a right mandibular corpus preserving the crowns of the P4–M3, partial crown and root of the P3, partial root of the canine, alveoli for all four incisors, and partial alveolus for the left canine, was found during paleontological explorations of karst-fill breccias in the Otavi region of northern Namibia. The mandible has unique characteristics that differentiate it from other middle Miocene hominoids of Africa and Eurasia and represents the only fossil evidence documenting a pre-australopithecine stage of hominoid evolution in southern Africa. Faunal analyses indicate that the breccia block containing the specimen accumulated during the latter part of the middle Miocene, about 13 ± 1 Myr. Fauna from other breccia blocks at Berg Aukas are of diverse ages, including the earlier part of the middle Miocene, the upper Miocene, Plio-Pleistocene and Holocene.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The activity of hypothalamic monoamines in response spontaneous feeding was investigated using the in vivo technique of brain microdialysis together with the instrumental recording of feeding pattern to suggest a possible causal relation between monoaminergic changes and behavioral initiatives.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new approach to coherent population trapping in a A-type three level atomic configuration is presented, which is based on scattering theory, and applies when one of the two driving laser fields is much weaker than the other one.
Abstract: This paper presents a new approach to coherent population trapping in a A-type three level atomic configuration. This approach, which is based on scattering theory, applies when one of the two driving laser fields is much weaker than the other one. We show that the scattering amplitude of the weak field is the sum of 2 resonant amplitudes. The positions and the widths of these resonances are identified and physically interpreted in the low saturation limit, in terms of Rayleigh scattering, stimulated and spontaneous Raman scattering. Finally, we show that the interference between the two scattering amplitudes gives rise to Fano profiles in the curves giving the frequency dependence of the total scattering cross-section.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two-dimensional gel isoelectric focusing/electrophoresis and tryptic digestion revealed that the heterogeneity could be accounted for by limited proteolysis of the 62 kDa component and the presence of covalently bound phosphate; depending on assay conditions, up to 80-110-fold activation could be observed when measured at high TH (i.e. high endogenous catecholamine) concentration.
Abstract: Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) was purified from tumours of rat phaeochromocytoma (PC12) cells by a three-step purification procedure giving 30 mg of pure enzyme in 3 days. The enzyme sedimented with an S(eo),w value of 9.2 S and revealed an apparent subunit molecular mass of 62 kDa with a minor 60 kDa component. Two-dimensional gel isoelectric focusing/electrophoresis and tryptic digestion revealed that the heterogeneity could be accounted for by limited proteolysis of the 62 kDa component and the presence of covalently bound phosphate. The enzyme had a strong blue-green colour (epsilon 700 = 3.1 +/- 0.2 mM-iron-1.cm-1). The resonance Raman spectrum obtained with lambda excitation = 605 nm revealed the presence of an Fe(III)-catecholamine complex in the isolate enzyme, similar to that observed in the bovine adrenal enzyme [Andersson, Cox, Que, Flatmark & Haavik (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18621-18626]. In the rat PC12 enzyme, all of the iron present (0.53 +/- 0.03 atom per subunit) seems to be chelated by the feedback inhibitors (0.49 +/- 0.05 mol of dopamine and 0.10 +/- 0.03 mol of noradrenaline per mol of subunit). The e.p.r. spectra at 3.6 K show g-values at 7.0, 5.2 and 1.9 as observed for other catecholate-complexed enzymes. After phosphorylation of serine-40 and addition of L-tyrosine a new rhombic (magnitude of E/D = 0.33) e.p.r. species could be observed. Phosphorylation of serine-40 by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase increased the catalytic activity; depending on assay conditions, up to 80-110-fold activation could be observed when measured at high TH (i.e. high endogenous catecholamine) concentration.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that cell to cell interaction between crest derived cells are critical in eliciting the differentiation of the adrenergic phenotype in the dormant autonomic neuronal precursors of the DRG.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two clones were isolated by screening a shrimp hepatopancreas cDNA library with a DNA fragment obtained by PCR amplification using two oligonucleotides based on the partial protein sequence of Penaeus vanamei chymotrypsin purified earlier, and the deduced amino acid sequence shows the existence of a putative zymogen form of the enzyme containing a 30 amino acid‐long peptide.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest a mechanism whereby mononuclear phagocytes could favor their own recruitment in the CNS by producing cytokines, a mechanism known to stimulate the proliferation of brain macrophages.
Abstract: Astrocytes have the ability to secrete colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1), a growth factor known to stimulate the proliferation of brain macrophages. We have studied the effect of cytokines such as interleukin 1 (IL-1), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), and interleukin 6 (IL-6) on the production of CSF-1 by cultured primary astrocytes and an astrocytic cell line derived from embryonic mouse brain. We observed that both TNF alpha and IL-1 increased CSF-1 mRNA and protein levels in the astrocytic cultures. In contrast, IL-6 was ineffective. The CSF-1 mRNA levels were strongly reduced by incubating immortalized astrocytic cells with staurosporine, a protein kinase C inhibitor, both in the absence and in the presence of cytokines. Conversely, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate, a protein kinase C activator, increased CSF-1 mRNA levels. These results suggest a mechanism whereby mononuclear phagocytes could favor their own recruitment in the CNS by producing cytokines.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Barrel Ring Imaging CHerenkov (BRICH) detector as mentioned in this paper is a photoensitive gas-filled drift chamber where the photoelectrons drift to a MWPC of special construction.
Abstract: A short explanation is given of the Barrel Ring Imaging CHerenkov (BRICH) detector and its performance. We discuss in brief some of the requirements to run this detector. Special attention is paid to the functioning of the Cherenkov photon detector — a photosensitive gas-filled drift chamber where the photoelectrons drift to a MWPC of special construction. We illustrate the BRICH performance with some preliminary results.