Institution
University of Missouri
Education•Columbia, Missouri, United States•
About: University of Missouri is a education organization based out in Columbia, Missouri, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 41427 authors who have published 83598 publications receiving 2911437 citations. The organization is also known as: Mizzou & Missouri-Columbia.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Gene, Context (language use), Health care
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Exposure of COCs to dbcAMP for the first 20 h of culture for maturation increases the homogeneity of oocyte nuclear maturation and improves the efficiency of in vitro production of swine embryos.
Abstract: The effect of stage of maturation of the germinal vesicle of porcine oocytes at the time of in vitro maturation on subsequent developmental competence was examined. A large variation exists in the germinal vesicle morphology of oocytes at the time of collection of cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) and after culture in the absence of dibutyryl cAMP (dbcAMP) for 20 h. However, the morphology of the germinal vesicle was synchronized to a specific stage after culture in the presence of 1 mM dbcAMP for 20 h. There was no difference in germinal vesicle breakdown rate (total mean, 75.0 +/- 5.4%) or in maturation rate (total mean, 82.1 +/- 2.1 %) at 28 and 44 h of culture, respectively. However, differences in meiotic progress of oocytes were observed (p < 0.05) at 36 h of culture when COCs were exposed to dbcAMP for the first 20 h of maturation, as compared to controls. The incidence of embryos that developed to the blastocyst stage after in vitro fertilization was higher (p < 0.05) when COCs were exposed to dbcAMP (21.5 +/- 2.5%) as compared to controls (9.2 +/- 1.6%). After transfer of experimental embryos to four recipient gilts, the three pregnant recipients delivered 19 live piglets. These results indicate that exposure of COCs to dbcAMP for the first 20 h of culture for maturation increases the homogeneity of oocyte nuclear maturation and improves the efficiency of in vitro production of swine embryos.
352 citations
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TL;DR: The functional characterization of NRT1.8, a member of the nitrate transporter (NRT1) family in Arabidopsis thaliana, suggests that NRT 1.8-regulated nitrate distribution plays an important role in Cd2+ tolerance.
Abstract: Long-distance transport of nitrate requires xylem loading and unloading, a successive process that determines nitrate distribution and subsequent assimilation efficiency. Here, we report the functional characterization of NRT1.8, a member of the nitrate transporter (NRT1) family in Arabidopsis thaliana. NRT1.8 is upregulated by nitrate. Histochemical analysis using promoter-beta-glucuronidase fusions, as well as in situ hybridization, showed that NRT1.8 is expressed predominantly in xylem parenchyma cells within the vasculature. Transient expression of the NRT1.8:enhanced green fluorescent protein fusion in onion epidermal cells and Arabidopsis protoplasts indicated that NRT1.8 is plasma membrane localized. Electrophysiological and nitrate uptake analyses using Xenopus laevis oocytes showed that NRT1.8 mediates low-affinity nitrate uptake. Functional disruption of NRT1.8 significantly increased the nitrate concentration in xylem sap. These data together suggest that NRT1.8 functions to remove nitrate from xylem vessels. Interestingly, NRT1.8 was the only nitrate assimilatory pathway gene that was strongly upregulated by cadmium (Cd(2+)) stress in roots, and the nrt1.8-1 mutant showed a nitrate-dependent Cd(2+)-sensitive phenotype. Further analyses showed that Cd(2+) stress increases the proportion of nitrate allocated to wild-type roots compared with the nrt1.8-1 mutant. These data suggest that NRT1.8-regulated nitrate distribution plays an important role in Cd(2+) tolerance.
351 citations
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TL;DR: Ulasonography screening in a low-risk pregnant population had no significant impact on the frequency of abortion for fetal anomalies and survival rates for anomalous fetuses were also unaffected by screening.
351 citations
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TL;DR: This review covers chamber design, commercial equipment sources, tissue preparation, step-by-step instruction for operation, troubleshooting, and examples of interpretation difficulties to provide a practical guide for investigators who are new to the Ussing chamber method.
Abstract: The Ussing chamber provides a physiological system to measure the transport of ions, nutrients, and drugs across various epithelial tissues. One of the most studied epithelia is the intestine, which has provided several landmark discoveries regarding the mechanisms of ion transport processes. Adaptation of this method to mouse intestine adds the dimension of investigating genetic loss or gain of function as a means to identify proteins or processes affecting transepithelial transport. In this review, the principles underlying the use of Ussing chambers are outlined including limitations and advantages of the technique. With an emphasis on mouse intestinal preparations, the review covers chamber design, commercial equipment sources, tissue preparation, step-by-step instruction for operation, troubleshooting, and examples of interpretation difficulties. Specialized uses of the Ussing chamber such as the pH stat technique to measure transepithelial bicarbonate secretion and isotopic flux methods to measure net secretion or absorption of substrates are discussed in detail, and examples are given for the adaptation of Ussing chamber principles to other measurement systems. The purpose of the review is to provide a practical guide for investigators who are new to the Ussing chamber method.
351 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a semiclassical two-step heating model is proposed to investigate thermal transport in metals caused by ultrashort laser heating, based on the Boltzmann transport equation, three equations of the conservation of number density, momentum and energy are derived for the electron subsystem.
351 citations
Authors
Showing all 41750 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Walter C. Willett | 334 | 2399 | 413322 |
Meir J. Stampfer | 277 | 1414 | 283776 |
Russel J. Reiter | 169 | 1646 | 121010 |
Chad A. Mirkin | 164 | 1078 | 134254 |
Robert Stone | 160 | 1756 | 167901 |
Howard I. Scher | 151 | 944 | 101737 |
Rajesh Kumar | 149 | 4439 | 140830 |
Joseph T. Hupp | 141 | 731 | 82647 |
Lihong V. Wang | 136 | 1118 | 72482 |
Stephen R. Carpenter | 131 | 464 | 109624 |
Jan A. Staessen | 130 | 1137 | 90057 |
Robert S. Brown | 130 | 1243 | 65822 |
Mauro Giavalisco | 128 | 412 | 69967 |
Kenneth J. Pienta | 127 | 671 | 64531 |
Matthew W. Gillman | 126 | 529 | 55835 |