scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "University of Vienna published in 1991"


Journal ArticleDOI
15 Nov 1991-Science
TL;DR: The GPI-linked human molecules CD59, CD55, CD48, CD24, and CD14 as well as the mouse molecules Thy-1 and Ly-6 were found to associate with protein tyrosine kinases, key regulators of cell activation and signal transduction.
Abstract: Binding of ligand or antibody to certain cell-surface proteins that are anchored to the membrane by glycophosphatidylinositol (GPI) can cause activation of leukocytes. However, it is not known how these molecules, which lack intracellular domains, can transduce signals. The GPI-linked human molecules CD59, CD55, CD48, CD24, and CD14 as well as the mouse molecules Thy-1 and Ly-6 were found to associate with protein tyrosine kinases, key regulators of cell activation and signal transduction. A protein tyrosine kinase associated with the GPI-linked proteins CD59, CD55, and CD48 in human T cells, and with Thy-1 in mouse T cells was identified as p56lck, a protein tyrosine kinase related to Src. This interaction of GPI-linked molecules with protein tyrosine kinases suggests a potential mechanism of signal transduction in cells.

806 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In addition to degeneration of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic pathway, a variety of neuronal systems are involved, causing multiple neuromediator dysfunctions that account for the complex patterns of functional deficits.
Abstract: In Parkinson's disease (PD), in addition to degeneration of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic pathway, a variety of neuronal systems are involved, causing multiple neuromediator dysfunctions that account for the complex patterns of functional deficits. Degeneration affects the dopaminergic mesocorticolimbic system, the noradrenergic locus ceruleus (oral parts) and motor vagal nucleus, the serotonergic raphe nuclei, the cholinergic nucleus basalis of Meynert, pedunculopontine nucleus pars compacta, Westphal-Edinger nucleus, and many peptidergic brainstem nuclei. Cell losses in subcortical projection nuclei range from 30 to 90% of controls; they are more severe in depressed and demented PD patients. Most of the lesions are region-specific, affecting not all neurons containing a specific transmitter or harboring Lewy bodies. In contrast to Alzheimer's disease (AD), subcortical system lesions in Parkinson's disease appear not to be related to cortical pathology, suggesting independent or concomitant degeneration. The pathogenesis of multiple-system changes contributing to chemical pathology and clinical course of Parkinson's disease are unknown.

661 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
02 Aug 1991-Science
TL;DR: A complementary DNA encoding a pollen allergen from white birch that was isolated from a pollen complementary DNA library with serum immunoglobulin E from a birch pollen-allergic individual revealed significant sequence homology to profilins, and the structural similarity of conserved proteins might be responsible for maintaining immunoglOBulin E antibody titers in type I allergy.
Abstract: A complementary DNA encoding a pollen allergen from white birch (Betula verrucosa) that was isolated from a pollen complementary DNA library with serum immunoglobulin E from a birch pollen-allergic individual revealed significant sequence homology to profilins. The recombinant protein showed high affinity to poly-L-proline. Immunoglobulin E antibodies from allergic individuals bound to natural and recombinant birch profilin and also to human profilin. In addition, birch and human profilin induced histamine release from blood basophils of profilin-allergic individuals, but not of individuals sensitized to other plant allergens. The structural similarity of conserved proteins might therefore be responsible for maintaining immunoglobulin E antibody titers in type I allergy.

631 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 1991-Cancer
TL;DR: Both ES and pPNET cells express the MIC2 gene in very high amounts, which represents a highly selective and almost unique feature of these cells, making an assignment of these tumors in one entity even more likely.
Abstract: This study reports on the specific expression of the MIC2 gene, a pseudoautosomal gene located on the short arms of the X and Y chromosomes, on Ewing's sarcoma (ES) and peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (pPNET) cells. The gene product, a cell membrane protein, is recognized by the newly established monoclonal antibody (MoAb) HBA-71 and the previously described MoAb 12E7 and RFB-1. Furthermore, the reaction pattern of the MIC2 antibodies, especially HBA-71, with normal tissues and a great number of benign and malignant tumors (70 different tumors, 199 tumor samples), as well as the correlation between the specific chromosomal aberrations, i.e., the t(11;22) and the del(22) and the expression of this antigen, are demonstrated. Both ES and pPNET cells express the MIC2 gene in very high amounts, which represents a highly selective and almost unique feature of these cells, making an assignment of these tumors in one entity even more likely. The MIC2 antibodies are of great value for clinical and research purposes.

620 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Electromobility Spectrometer as mentioned in this paper is an automated measurement system for the size analysis of fine and ultrafine aerosols using Differential Mobility Analysers (DMA) for the classification of particles and an electrical sensor for their detection.

541 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the potential-model approach is presented, together with a brief survey of the motivations for various potential models and the application of the developed theoretical framework.

494 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Neuropathologic and other data suggest two major pathogenetic pathways of HIV‐associated CNS damage: systemic and local increase of the virus load leads to HIV encephalitis or HIV leukoencephalopathy; this is corroborated by prominent HIV production within such lesions.
Abstract: Neuropathology has defined novel HIV-specific diseases at tissue level: HIV encephalitis and HIV leukoencephalopathy. Both occur usually in the later stages of the AIDS infection and consistently demonstrate large amounts of HIV products. In contrast to this HIV-specific neuropathology, HlV-asso-ciated neuropathology features unspecific syndromes with disputed relation to HIV infection: myelin pallor, vacuolar myelopathy, vacuolar leukoencephalopathy, lymphocytic meningitis, and diffuse poliodystrophy. All types of neuropathology may contribute to clinical manifestation according to severity, extent, and distribution of lesions, but clinico-pathologic correlation may be poor in the individual case. Neuropathologic and other data suggest two major pathogenetic pathways of HIV-associated CNS damage: First, systemic and local increase of the virus load leads to HIV encephalitis or HIV leukoencephalopathy; this is corroborated by prominent HIV production within such lesions. Second, neuronotoxicity by HIV proteins or factors secreted from infected cells is supported by histological changes of diffuse poliodystrophy and by morphometric loss of frontocortical neurons.

423 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The advantages of the laser doppler interferometry (LDI) technique are high accuracy, high transversal resolution, and more comfort for the patient (it is a noncontact method; no anesthesia is needed).
Abstract: A new technique has been developed to determine the axial length of the human eye in vivo. Based on laser interferometry in conjunction with the Doppler technique, it uses partially coherent light. This new technique complies with laser safety regulations. High accuracy is achieved, the optical length (OL) can be determined within +/- 30 microns, and the reproducibility of the geometric eye length is greater than +/- 25 microns. Possible errors are discussed. First comparisons with the ultrasound technique yield good agreement for emmetropic subjects and for subjects with a myopia of up to 10 diopters. The advantages of the laser doppler interferometry (LDI) technique are high accuracy, high transversal resolution, and more comfort for the patient (it is a noncontact method; no anesthesia is needed). Possible future applications of LDI, like measurements of fundus profiles and of retinal thickness, are mentioned.

351 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Herbert Budka 1, Clayton A. Wiley 2, Paul Kleihues 3, Juan Artigas 4, Arthur K. Asbury 5, Eun-Sook Cho 6, David R. Cornblath 7, Mauro C. Dal Canto 8, Umberto DeGirolami 9, Dennis Dickson 10, Leon G. Epstein 11, Margaret M. Esiri 12, Felice Giangaspero 13, Georg Gosztonyi 14,
Abstract: Herbert Budka 1, Clayton A. Wiley 2, Paul Kleihues 3, Juan Artigas 4, Arthur K. Asbury 5, Eun-Sook Cho 6, David R. Cornblath 7, Mauro C. Dal Canto 8, Umberto DeGirolami 9, Dennis Dickson 10, Leon G. Epstein 11, Margaret M. Esiri 12, Felice Giangaspero 13, Georg Gosztonyi 14, Francoise Gray 15, John W. Griffin 7, Dominique Henin 16, Yuzo lwasaki 17, Robert S. Janssen '8, Richard T. Johnson 7, Peter L. Lantos 19, William D. Lyman 10, Justin C. McArthur 7, Kazuo Nagashima 20, Nancy Peress 21, Carol K. Petito 22, Richard W. Price 23, Roy H. Rhodes Z4, Marc Rosenblum 25, Gerard Said 26, Francesco Scaravilli 27, Leroy R. Sharer 6, Harry V. Vinters 28

322 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The correlation of the motility of the animals to linalool in serum is experimentally proven, thus furnishing evidence of the aromatherapeutical use of herbal pillows employed in folk medicine since ancient times in order to facilitate falling asleep or to minimize stressful situations of man.
Abstract: The sedative properties of the essential oil of Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia Miller) and of its main constituents--linalool and linalyl acetate--were investigated in mice followed up in a series of experimental procedures. The significant decrease in the motility of female and male laboratory animals under standardized experimental conditions is found to be closely dependent on the exposure time to the drugs. Nevertheless after an injection of caffeine into mice a hyperactivity was observed which was reduced to nearly a normal motility only by inhalation of these fragrance drugs. In particular the correlation of the motility of the animals to linalool in serum is experimentally proven, thus furnishing evidence of the aromatherapeutical use of herbal pillows employed in folk medicine since ancient times in order to facilitate falling asleep or to minimize stressful situations of man.

283 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Native bone was studied as a function of age by a quantitative small-angle X-ray scattering method (SAXS) and results indicate that the mineral nucleates as thin layers of calcium phosphate within the hole zone of the collagen fibrils.
Abstract: The mechanism of calcification in bone and related tissues is a matter of current interest. The mean size and the arrangement of the mineral crystals are important parameters difficult to obtain by electron microscopy. Furthermore, most studies have been carried out on poorly calcified model systems or chemically treated samples. In the work presented here, native bone was studied as a function of age by a quantitative small-angle X-ray scattering method (SAXS). Bone samples (calvariae and ulnae) from rats and mice were investigated. Measurements were performed on native bone immediately after dissection for samples up to 1 mm thick. The size, shape, and predominant orientation of the mineral crystals in bone were obtained for embryonal, young, and adult animals. The results indicate that the mineral nucleates as thin layers of calcium phosphate within the hole zone of the collagen fibrils. The mineral nuclei subsequently grow in thickness to about 3 nm, which corresponds to maximum space available in these holes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The concept that antigens in birch pollen and apples share allergenic epitopes leading to IgE cross-reactivities that may cause clinical manifestations when a special threshold level of specific IgE antibodies is reached is supported.
Abstract: Eighty-three sera from patients with birch-pollen allergy were investigated for IgE antibodies against apple allergens by means of immunoblotting. In immunoblots, 81 patients (97.6%) exhibited IgE directed against the major allergen of birch, Bet v I (17 kd), and these patients also demonstrated IgE binding to apple allergens in the molecular weight range 17 to 18 kd. Inhibition studies by preincubation of sera with birch-pollen extract led to complete blocking of IgE binding to this 17 to 18 kd protein, whereas preincubation with apple extract could not diminish IgE binding to Bet V I. Furthermore, a 17 kd protein in apple extract could be detected by immunoblotting with a Bet v I-specific monoclonal antibody. Northern blotting with a Bet v I cDNA clone as a probe revealed cross-hybridization of birch and apple allergen coding nucleic acids under conditions of high stringency, suggesting significant homology of the nucleic acid level. Our results support the concept that antigens in birch pollen and apples share allergenic epitopes leading to IgE cross-reactivities that may cause clinical manifestations when a special threshold level of specific IgE antibodies is reached.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A survey of different enzymes of microbial origin that are utilized for microbiological identification and differentiation and the corresponding methods are presented and particular emphasis is given to the examination of Escherichia coli.

Journal ArticleDOI
26 Sep 1991-Nature
TL;DR: It is reported that a set of aminoglycoside antibiotics, which are known to interact with the decoding region of the 16S ribosomal RNA of Escherichia coli2–4, inhibit the second step of splicing of the T4 phage-derived td intron.
Abstract: THE discovery of catalytically active RNA has provided the basis for the evolutionary concept of an RNA world. It has been proposed that during evolution the functions of ancient catalytic RNA were modulated by low molecular weight effectors, related to antibiotics, present in the primordial soup. Antibiotics and RNA may have coevolved in the formation of the modern ribosome1. Here we report that a set of aminoglycoside antibiotics, which are known to interact with the decoding region of the 16S ribosomal RNA of Escherichia coli2–4, inhibit the second step of splicing of the T4 phage-derived td intron. Thus catalytic RNA seems to interact not only with a mononucleotide5 and an amino acid6, but also with another class of biomolecules, the sugars. Splicing of other group I introns but not group II introns was inhibited. The similarity in affinity and specificity of these antibiotics for group I introns and rRNAs may result from recognition of evolutionarily conserved structures.

Book ChapterDOI
08 Jul 1991
TL;DR: The comparison focuses on the issues of predictability, testability, resource utilization, extensibility, and assumption coverage of event-triggered and timetriggered distributed real-time systems.
Abstract: This paper compares the temporal properties of event-triggered and timetriggered distributed real-time systems. In an event triggered system a processing activity is initiated as a consequence of the occurrence of a significant event. In a time-triggered system, the activities are initiated periodically at predetermined points in real-time. In the first part of this paper, a model of a distributed real-time system is presented and the characteristic attributes of TT-systems and ET-systems are described. The comparison focuses on the issues of predictability, testability, resource utilization, extensibility, and assumption coverage.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a miniaturized glucose sensor by means of thin-film technology is reported, which can be placed on glass or flexible polymer substrates by using a double working electrode array for reproducibility tests or differential measurements to suppress interferences.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study demonstrates that in the rhesus monkey MPTP mimicked, in addition to the profound striatal dopamine loss, some of the extrastriatal dopamine, noradrenaline and serotonin changes often seen in the brain of patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Drug resistance of Plasmodium falciparum is not a recent phenomenon, but it became a major problem when the parasite became resistant to chloroquine, the cheapest and initially the most effective antimalarial compound that could be used for treatment and suppression.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the apparent carboxylation efficiency appears to be the initial cause of decline in photosynthesis in vivo following acute O(3) fumigation.
Abstract: The basis of inhibition of photosynthesis by single acute O(3) exposures was investigated in vivo using analyses based on leaf gas exchange measurements. The fully expanded second leaves of wheat plants (Triticum aestivum L. cv Avalon) were fumigated with either 200 or 400 nanomoles per mole O(3) for between 4 and 16 hours. This reduced significantly the light-saturated rate of CO(2) uptake and was accompanied by a parallel decrease in stomatal conductance. However, the stomatal limitation, estimated from the relationship between CO(2) uptake and the internal CO(2) concentration, only increased significantly during the first 8 hours of exposure to 400 nanomoles per mole O(3); no significant increase occurred for any of the other treatments. Analysis of the response of CO(2) uptake to the internal CO(2) concentration implied that the predominant factor responsible for the reduction in light-saturated CO(2) uptake was a decrease in the efficiency of carboxylation. This was 58 and 21% of the control value after 16 hours at 200 and 400 nanomoles per mole O(3), respectively. At saturating concentrations of CO(2), photosynthesis was inhibited by no more than 22% after 16 hours, indicating that the capacity for regeneration of ribulose bisphosphate was less susceptible to O(3). Ozone fumigations also had a less pronounced effect on light-limited photosynthesis. The maximum quantum yield of CO(2) uptake and the quantum yield of oxygen evolution showed no significant decline after 16 hours with 200 nanomoles per mole O(3), requiring 8 hours at 400 nanomoles per mole O(3) before a significant reduction occurred. The photochemical efficiency of photosystem II estimated from the ratio of variable to maximum chlorophyll fluorescence and the atrazine-binding capacity of isolated thylakoids demonstrated that photochemical reactions were not responsible for the initial inhibition of CO(2) uptake. The results suggest that the apparent carboxylation efficiency appears to be the initial cause of decline in photosynthesis in vivo following acute O(3) fumigation.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ultrastructural relation between microglial cells and cerebral blood vessels was studied in rat brains by immune electron microscopy and suggests that microglia cells may play an important role in antigen recognition at the blood‐brain barrier.
Abstract: The ultrastructural relation between microglial cells and cerebral blood vessels was studied in rat brains by immune electron microscopy using antibodies against the common leukocyte antigen (Ox1), the complement receptor 3 (Ox42), and against class I and class II histocompatibility antigens (MHC antigens; Ox3, Ox6, Ox18, and I1-69). Microglial cell processes were found incorporated between the astrocytic foot processes of the glia limitans in 4-13% of cerebral microvessels. After intravenous injection of gamma-interferon, either alone or in combination with tumor necrosis factor, these microglial cell processes expressed classes I and II MHC antigens. Studies in (Lewis X DA)F1-DA bone marrow chimeras demonstrated that these cell processes belonged to resident microglia. This study suggests that microglial cells may play an important role in antigen recognition at the blood-brain barrier.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nitroblue tetrazolium chloride method, when compared with hematoxylin and eosin staining, allowed an easier and more accurate definition of laser injury because of the color difference between damaged and normal tissue.
Abstract: Reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium chloride, a redox indicator, by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase produces in frozen tissue sections an intense blue cytoplasmic pigment. The activity of this enzyme has been shown to subside immediately upon cell death. Twelve patients with port-wine stains were treated with an argon laser. Frozen tissue sections from biopsy specimens obtained before and 10 minutes, 24 hours, and 48 hours after laser application were processed for nitroblue tetrazolium chloride staining. In normal skin all epidermal and dermal cells displayed dense cytoplasmic blue granular pigment that spared the nuclei. In port-wine stains the laser-induced coagulation necrosis was first seen as an arc-shaped, sharply demarcated, unstained, nitroblue tetrazolium chloride-negative area. Initiation of epidermal repair could be observed in all 48-hour sections. The nitroblue tetrazolium chloride method, when compared with hematoxylin and eosin staining, allowed an easier and more accurate definition of laser injury because of the color difference between damaged and normal tissue.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The posterior portion of the ulnar collateral ligament, which arises from the posterior surface of the medial epicondyle, is taut in maximal flexion.
Abstract: The posterior portion of the ulnar collateral ligament, which arises from the posterior surface of the medial epicondyle, is taut in maximal flexion. The anterior portion, which takes its origin from the anterior and inferior surfaces of the epicondyle, contains three functional fibre bundles. One of these is taut in maximal extension, another in intermediate positions between middle position and full flexion while the third bundle is always taut and serves as a guiding bundle. Movements of the elbow joint are checked by the ligaments well before the bony processes forming the jaws of the trochlear notch lock into the corresponding fossae on the humerus.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The fusion activity of TBE virus and Japanese encephalitis virus was assessed by inducing fusion from without of C6/36 mosquito cells with purified virus preparations, suggesting that the proteolytic processing of prM may be necessary for the generation of fusion-competent virions.
Abstract: The fusion activity of flaviviruses [tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus and Japanese encephalitis virus] was assessed by inducing fusion from without of C6/36 mosquito cells with purified virus preparations. Membrane fusion and polykaryocyte formation was observed only after incubating the viruses at acidic pH. Two groups of monoclonal antibodies reacting with distinct non-overlapping antigenic domains on the TBE virus protein E inhibited fusion from without. One of these domains contains the most highly conserved and putative fusion-active sequence of the flavivirus protein E. Of five TBE virus monoclonal antibody escape mutants, each defined by a single amino acid substitution in the envelope protein E, one revealed a reduced fusion activity and another one a lower pH threshold. TBE virus grown in the presence of ammonium chloride as well as Langat virus purified from the supernatant of infected chick embryo cells contained the precursor of protein M (prM) rather than M itself. These ‘immature’ virions did not cause fusion from without, suggesting that the proteolytic processing of prM may be necessary for the generation of fusion-competent virions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Findings indicate that increased IL-6 production by EC after UVB irradiation may mediate local and systemic inflammatory reactions following extensive sun exposure, and the therapeutic effect of corticosteroids observed in various inflammatory diseases may be partly due to their downregulating capacity of IL- 6 production.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1991-Virology
TL;DR: It is reported that inoculation of rats with vaccinia recombinants expressing E6 or E7 retarded or prevented tumor development in a proportion of animals challenged by subcutaneous seeding of tumor cells whereas the recombinant expressing E5 was inactive.

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Feb 1991-Blood
TL;DR: Together, rhGM-CSF recruits kinetically quiescient AML cells in vivo to enter drug-sensitive phases of the cell cycle and promotes early myeloid recovery from aplasia after exposure to standard induction chemotherapy for AML.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded, that amylin and insulin are co-secreted in humans, and that the amylIn release is under feedback-control by insulin.
Abstract: Amylin is a 37-amino acid pancreatic polypeptide, probably involved in the pathophysiology of Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. We have determined amylin in human plasma by extraction-based radioimmunoassay (Sep-Pak C18). Of 23 healthy control subjects plasma amylin was determined as 11.9+-3.5 ng/l. Of 27 patients with Type 2 diabetes receiving insulin the amylin levels were lower, and in 16 patients with Type 2 diabetes on oral medication they were higher than in the control subjects: 8.2+-4.4 ng/l (p<0.01) vs 18.8+-9.9 ng/l (p<0.05). In 14 Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients we found extremely low mean amounts of amylin: 2.9+-1.9 ng/l (p<0.002). Thus, basal amylin appears to be associated with the capacity to release insulin. An oral glucose load stimulated the release of amylin, this was more pronounced in patients with Type 2 diabetes than in healthy subjects. An excellent correlation of mean amylin with mean insulin concentrations was obtained (r=0.949). In patients with Type 2 diabetes amylin was reduced congruent to a decrease in C-peptide during a hyperinsulinaemic, euglycaemic glucose clamp experiment (r=0.971 for linear correlation between C-peptide levels and amylin). We conclude, that amylin and insulin are co-secreted in humans, and that the amylin release is under feedback-control by insulin.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Northern blot analysis indicated that there is a significant degree of conservation of plectin genes between rat, human, and chicken and that, as shown previously at the protein level, plect in has a wide tissue distribution.
Abstract: We have determined the complete cDNA sequence of rat plectin from a number of well-characterized overlapping lambda gt11 clones. The 4,140-residue predicted amino acid sequence (466,481 D) is consistent with a three-domain structural model in which a long central rod domain, having mainly an alpha-helical coiled coil conformation, is flanked by globular NH2- and COOH-terminal domains. The plectin sequence has a number of repeating motifs. The rod domain has five subregions approximately 200-residues long in which there is a strong repeat in the charged amino acids at 10.4 residues that may be involved in association between plectin molecules. The globular COOH-terminal domain has a prominent six-fold tandem repeat, with each repeat having a strongly conserved central region based on nine tandem repeats of a 19-residue motif. The plectin sequence has several marked similarities to that of desmoplakin (Green, K. J., D. A. D. Parry, P. M. Steinert, M. L. A. Virata, R. M. Wagner, B. D. Angst, and L.A. Nilles. 1990. J. Biol. Chem. 265:2,603-2,612), which has a shorter coiled-coil rod domain with a similar 10.4 residue charge periodicity and a COOH-terminal globular domain with three tandem repeats homologous to the six found in plectin. The plectin sequence also has homologies to that of the bullous pemphigoid antigen. Northern blot analysis indicated that there is a significant degree of conservation of plectin genes between rat, human, and chicken and that, as shown previously at the protein level, plectin has a wide tissue distribution. There appeared to be a single rat plectin gene that gave rise to a 15-kb message. Expression of polypeptides encoded by defined fragments of plectin cDNA in E. coli has also been used to localize the epitopes of a range of monoclonal and serum antibodies. This enabled us to tentatively map a sequence involved in plectin-vimentin and plectin-lamin B interactions to a restricted region of the rod domain.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Current health care policies offer only limited prospects for the reactivation or implementation of systematic malaria control before the potential of the affordable antimalarials has been exhausted.