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  • Drug discrimination  (6)
  • Life Sciences  (6)
  • SOLID Retrieval/Processing System  (6)
  • Agaricus  (5)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Agaricus ; MtDNA ; Restriction map ; Inverted repeat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Mitochondrial (mt) DNA from the commercial mushroom Agaricus brunnescens Peck [= A. bisporus (Lange) Imbach] was purified by cesium chloride/bisbenzimide gradient centrifugation. A physical map of the mtDNA fragments produced by BamHI, EcoRl, and PvuII digestion was generated by filter hybridizations with radiolabelled BamHI mtDNA probes. The A. brunnescens mtDNA was a circular molecule 136 kilo-basepairs (kbp) in length and contained an inverted repeat between 4.6 and 9.2 kbp in size. Orientational isomers of the mitochondrial genome were not detected. The positions of six genes were located on the A. brunnescens mtDNA map by heterologous hybridization. No coding function has yet been ascribed to the inverted repeat. The large rRNA gene was located on the smaller single copy region. The genes for cytochrome b, cytochrome oxidase (subunit III), ATPase (subunits 8 and 6) and the small rRNA were located on different regions of the larger single copy region.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Agaricus ; Mitochondria ; Plasmid ; RNA polymerase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Agaricus bisporus, the cultivated mushroom, contains a mitochondrial fragment (50H) which was previously demonstrated by Southern hybridization to have sequence similarity to an internal region of pEM, a linear mitochondrial plasmid of Agaricus bitorquis. The nucleotide sequence of 50H was determined and compared to the sequence of the corresponding pEM fragment. The region of sequence homology on pEM is contained within an open reading frame (ORF) that may encode an RNA polymerase, but 50H is neither an intact nor a complete copy of the ORF. pEM also contains an ORF with characteristics of genes for virus-encoded DNA polymerases. pEM appears to be very similar to other linear mitochondrial plasmids (in fungi and higher plants) reported to contain ORFs that may encode the same types of polymerases. The potential functionality of the pEM sequence suggests that it has diverged less than the mitochondrial fragment from a common ancestor.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Fentanyl ; Morphine ; Narcotic cue ; Sensitivity ; Oscillation ; Drug discrimination
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract With a discrete-trial, food-reward, two-lever procedure, rats were trained to discriminate 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl from saline. Individual threshold doses for seneralization of fentanyl and for cross-generalization of morphine were determined repeatedly during a 17-week posttraining period. Threshold doses of both drugs almost continuously shifted in both the up- and downward direction. Shifts of fentanyl threshold doses covaried with those of morphine threshold doses. These shifts can best be described by a sustained oscillation, the mean amplitude of which amounts to a factor 3.65 of the dose-range for fentanyl, and to a factor 1.85 for morphine. The upper and lower limits of oscillation were symmetrical with respect to baseline. The oscillation can be described by a function expressing that the more distant a point along the function is from the baseline, the more it is susceptible to (positive/negative) acceleration along the intensity (i.e., dose) axis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Cocaine ; Haloperidol ; Pimozide ; Spiperone ; Internal stimulus ; Drug discrimination ; Schizophrenia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The ability of cocaine to exert internal stimulus control of behavior was investigated by training rats to discriminate 10 mg/kg cocaine from saline in a discrete-trial, two-lever, food-reward procedure. Acquisition of response control by cocaine (1) succeeded in all animals tested, (2) proceeded rapidly, and (3) was associated with a high Commission Error: Omission Error ratio. These findings support the hypothesis that cocaine, a prototype of drugs inducing a psychotic condition in humans, can act as a powerful internal stimulus in rats. The cocaine cue was also responsive to the action of the dopamine-receptor-blocking agents spiperone (ED50: 0.06 mg/kg), haloperidol (0.24 mg/kg), and pimozide (1.90 mg/kg). d,l-Amphetamine (1.25 mg/kg) induced stimulus generalization with cocaine, and this generalization was blocked by dosages of the same neuroleptics comparable to those of cocaine antagonism. The results are discussed in terms of internal stimulus control of behavior and its relevance to the psychophysiology of schizophrenia.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Fentanyl ; Narcotic cue ; Analgesia ; Drug discrimination
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract By using a discrete-trial, two-lever, food-reinforced discrimination learning paradigm, rats were trained to discriminate the narcotic analgesic fentanyl (0.04 mg/kg) from saline. Stimulus generalization experiments with lower fentanyl doses (0.0025 to 0.02 mg/kg) were carried out to generate individual threshold doses. The latter were compared with the sensitivity of the same rats to the analgesic effect of fentanyl, and it was found that there is no correlation between these two sets of data. In a time-effect experiment, the duration of fentanyl's cuing effect was compared with that of its analgesic effect, and it was found that the time-effect characteristics of the narcotic cue are similar to those of analgesia. Again, however, there was no correlation between the duration of both effects within the same group of animals. The results further deliniate the associative and dissociative characteristics of the narcotic cue and narcotic analgesia.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Psychopharmacology 90 (1986), S. 222-228 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Drug discrimination ; Dose-dose discrimination ; Opiates ; Fentanyl ; Morphine ; Naloxone ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The experiments characterized the effects of fentanyl, morphine, naloxone, cyclazocine, nalorphine, ketocyclazocine and N-allylnormetazocine in rats that were trained to discriminate 0.04 mg/kg from 0.02 mg/kg fentanyl (dose-dose discrimination). The data are compared to results obtained previously in rats discriminating 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl from saline (drug-saline discrimination). In the dose-dose discrimination fentanyl and morphine produced responding appropriate to 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl at doses which were 3.0- and 1.6-fold higher, respectively, than in drug-saline discrimination. Naloxone antagonized the stimulus effects of 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl at 9.8-fold lower doses than in drug-saline discrimination. The dose-effect curves of fentanyl and naloxone in rats discriminating 0.04 mg/kg from 0.02 mg/kg fentanyl, were steeper than in rats discriminating 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl from saline. While cyclazocine, nalorphine and N-allylnormetazocine acted as mixed and partial agonists/antagonists in drug-saline discrimination, those compounds acted as pure and complete antagonists of 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl in dose-dose discrimination. The rank order of compounds in antagonizing the stimulus effects of 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl in dose-dose discrimination was naloxone 〉 N-allylnormetazocine 〉 cyclazocine 〉 nalorphine. It is suggested that a greater magnitude of opiate activity is required for producing generalization with the same 0.04 mg/kg dose of fentanyl in dose-dose as compared with drug-saline discrimination. Dose-dose discrimination may afford a more accurate method than drug-saline discrimination for assessing the equivalence of the discriminative stimulus properties of drugs. The data obtained in the present study are consistent with the hypothesis that the discriminative stimulus effects of the opiate compounds studied are mediated by a molecular mechanism involving only a single opiate receptor.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Current genetics 29 (1996), S. 370-376 
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Plasmid ; RNA polymerase ; Mitochondrion ; Agaricus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A linear mitochondrial plasmid, pEM, found in certain isolates of the basidiomyceteAgaricus bitorquis potentially encodes virus-like DNA and RNA polymerases. Mitochondrial DNA fromAgaricus bisporus that hybridizes to an internal region of pEM contains a fragmented and potentially non-functional version of the carboxy terminal end of the plasmid RNA polymerase. In this study, we present the sequence of the corresponding region of mitochondrial DNA fromA. bitorquis. This sequence contained the same region of the plasmid RNA polymerase gene as was reported for the mitochondrial DNA ofA. bisporus, and the level of similarity between theA. bisporus andA. bitorquis mitochondrial sequences was much higher than the level of similarity between either mitochondrial sequence and the plasmid. We propose that this plasmid RNA polymerase-like sequence was present in theAgaricus mitochondrial genome before the divergence ofA. bisporus andA. bitorquis, and thus is unlikely to be a recent derivative of the plasmid pEM.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Agaricus ; Plasmid-like DNAs ; Mitochondrial DNA
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Two unique plasmid-like DNA components were localized in isolated mitochondria of the commercially important mushroom genus Agaricus: pEM (7.35 ± 0.15 kilobases) and pMPJ (3.65 ± 0.15 kilobases). These DNA moieties were linear; pEM possessed regions of terminal inverted repeated sequences. No homology was detected between pEM or pMPJ DNA and the nuclear or mitochondrial genomes. No homology existed between pEM and pMPJ. This suggests independent replication of pEM and pMPJ. Restriction endonuclease digests indicated that pEM consisted of two components (pEM1 and pEM2) with uniquely different restriction sites and copy number.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Agaricus ; Mitochondrial DNA ; Restriction pattern polymorphism ; Restriction endonuclease analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Mitochondrial DNAs were isolated from four cultivated strains of the commercial two-spored mushroom Agaricus brunnescens (bisporus) and from ten isolates of the four spored mushroom Agaricus bitorquis. Digestion of the fungal mitochondrial DNA with restriction endonucleases yielded numerous fragments. Summation of the fragment sizes gave a mitochondrial DNA size of 98.3 ± 2.4 kilobases (kb) (64.9 x 106 daltons) for A. brunnescens. The size of the mitochondrial DNA ranged from 148.5 ± 10.8 kb (98.0 x 106 daltons) to 176.3 ± 12.0 kb (116.4 x 106 daltons) for A. bitorquis. The restriction patterns, produced by a variety of endonucleases, were identical for all four isolates of A. brunnescens. The ten isolates of A. bitorquis demonstrated extensive restriction pattern heterogeneity and have been tentatively assigned into four groups. Approximately 60% of the A. bitorquis mitochondrial DNA restriction fragments show sequence homology with A. brunnescens mitochondrial DNA based on DNA — DNA hybridizations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Haloperidol ; Fentanyl ; Drug discrimination ; Narcotic cue ; Discrimination index
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Using a discrete-trial, two-lever, foodreward discrimination learning paradigm, we trained rats (n=6) to discriminate 0.04 mg/kg fentanyl (s.c. t-30′) from saline. Stimulus generalization experiments with an adequate dose range (0.01–0.04 mg/kg) of fentanyl revealed that the ED50 value for drug lever selection is 0.02 mg/kg, irrespective of whether the animals were pretreated (s.c., t-60′) with either saline or 0.08 mg/kg haloperidol. With increasing doses of the haloperidol-fentanyl combination, the percentage of total responding on the selected lever progressively decreased, and reached the 50% level at the highest drug combination. It is concluded that this percentage is heavily contaminated by factors unrelated to the discrimination condition being studied; these factors seem to invalidate this percentage as a discrimination index under experimental conditions (e.g., behaviorally toxic doses of drugs) where they are likely to operate. The use of response selection as a discrimination index in drug discrimination research is further argued.
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