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Incubation

About: Incubation is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5748 publications have been published within this topic receiving 126541 citations.


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TL;DR: Results suggest that during incubation in capacitating conditions, there is an opening up of the HE5 glycoprotein molecule, increasing accessibility of some sialic acid residues and of the core peptide, particularly the GPI anchor.
Abstract: HE5 (CD52) is a glycoprotein which is secreted by the epididymis and which becomes inserted onto maturing spermatozoa. We have previously shown that, in cynomolgus monkey spermatozoa, changes occur upon maturation rendering cryptic the epitope to the monoclonal antibody CAMPATH-1G; the recognition site is then re-exposed during incubation under capacitation conditions. The present study investigated human ejaculated spermatozoa during incubation under similar conditions, using monoclonal antibodies that recognize different epitopes of the HE5 molecule comprising parts of the N-glycan (2E5) or peptide segments, including (CAMPATH-1G) or excluding (097) the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor, to reveal modifications of sperm surface HE5. Flow cytometric analysis showed equally high percentages (∼90%) of viable spermatozoa cross-reacting with the antibodies before and after 6 h incubation. However, during incubation, the staining intensity increased 57% with CAMPATH-1G, 31% with 097, but remained unchanged with 2E5. The lymphocyte CD52 antibody CF1D12 stained only ∼10% of spermatozoa either before or after incubation. Western blotting of sperm protein extracts using lectins indicated an increase in the exposure of sialic acid residues of HE5 after incubation. These results suggest that during incubation in capacitating conditions, there is an opening up of the HE5 glycoprotein molecule, increasing accessibility of some sialic acid residues and of the core peptide, particularly the GPI anchor.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Virus loss in activated sludge appeared to be caused by microorganisms, supported by the finding that poliovirus infectivity decreased during incubation in mixed-liquor suspended solids, primarily because of a sedimentable, heat-sensitive component.
Abstract: Virus loss in activated sludge appeared to be caused by microorganisms. This conclusion is supported by the finding that poliovirus infectivity decreased during incubation in mixed-liquor suspended solids, primarily because of a sedimentable, heat-sensitive component. Furthermore, broth spiked with mixed-liquor suspended solids acquired antiviral activity during incubation.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The freezing preservation method of rumen inocula for subsequent in vitro gas production studies does not affect microbial fermentation pattern or bacterial biodiversity, provided that processing is rapid enough by using a high surface to volume ratio.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The formation of ammonia and changes in the contents of free amino acids have been investigated in slices of guinea pig cerebral cortex incubated under the following conditions: aerobically in glucose‐free saline, an inhibitor of glutamate dehydrogenase, and anaerobic in saline.
Abstract: The formation of ammonia and changes in the contents of free amino acids have been investigated in slices of guinea pig cerebral cortex incubated under the following conditions: (1) aerobically in glucose-free saline; (2) aerobically in glucose-free saline containing 10 mM-bromofuroic acid, an inhibitor of glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2); (3) aerobically in saline containing 11-1 mM-glucose and (4) anaerobically in glucose-free saline. Ammonia was formed at a steady rate aerobically in glucose-free medium. The formation of ammonia was largely suppressed in the absence of oxygen or in the presence of glucose whereas the inhibitor of glutamate dehydrogenase produced about 50 per cent inhibition. Other inhibitors of glutamate dehydrogenase exerted a similar effect. Ammonia formation was also inhibited by some inhibitors of aminotransferases but not by others. Inhibition was generally more pronounced during the second and third hour of incubation. With the exception of glutamine which decreased slightly, the contents of all amino acids increased markedly during the anaerobic incubation. During aerobic incubation in a glucose-free medium, there was an almost complete disappearance of glutamic acid and GABA. Glutamine also decreased, but to a relatively smaller extent. The content of all other amino acids increased during aerobic incubation in glucose-free medium, although to a lesser extent than under anaerobic conditions. The greater increase of amino acids appearing anaerobically in comparison to the increase or decrease occurring under aerobic conditions corresponded closely to the greater amount of ammonia formed aerobically over that formed anaerobically. This finding is interpreted as indicating a similar degree of proteolysis under anaerobic and aerobic conditions; aerobically, the amino acids are partly metabolized with the concomitant liberation of ammonia. In glucose-supplemented medium, the content of glutamine was markedly increased. The content of glutamate and aspartate remained unchanged, whereas that of some other amino acids increased but to a lesser extent than in the absence of glucose. Proteolysis in the presence of glucose was estimated at about 65 per cent of that in its absence. In the presence of bromofuroate the rate of disappearance of glutamate was unchanged, but there was a larger increase in the content of aspartate and a smaller decrease of GABA and glutamine. Other changes did not differ significantly from those observed in the absence of bromofuroate. We conclude that the metabolism of amino acids in general and of glutamic acid in particular differs according to whether they are already present within the brain slice or are added to the incubation medium. Only the endogenous amino acids appear to be able to serve as precursors of ammonia and as substrates for energy production.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the first half of embryonic development contained the critical windows for the detrimental effects of hypoxia, and the second half contained the Critical Window for the compensatory response of Hypoxia in key organs.

39 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023688
20221,316
2021104
2020123
2019136