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  • Sebum secretion  (2)
  • Cardiac muscle contraction  (1)
  • Ceramides  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Cyproterone acetate ; Ethinyl estradiol ; Sebum secretion ; Sebum composition ; Linoleic acid ; Acne
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effect of high-dose cyproterone acetateethinyl estradiol treatment on rates of sebum secretion and on the proportions of linoleic acid (18∶2Δ9,12) and sebaleic acid (18∶2Δ5,8) in the skin surface lipids of three female acne patients was examined. Changes in rates of sebum secretion were evaluated indirectly by measuring the ratio of wax esters/(cholesterol +cholesterol esters) in the subjects' skin surface lipid. In two of the subjects, this ratio indicated a reduction of sebum secretion rates to the childhood range. Concomitantly, there was an increase in linoleic acid and a decrease in sebaleic acid in all lipid classes. In the third subject, in whom there was only a small reduction in sebum secretion rate, the proportion of linoleic acid in the cholesterol esters more than doubled, but the changes in the other lipid classes were small or nonexistent. The results indicate that the proportions of linoleic acid and sebaleic acid in sebum are influenced by sebum secretion rates.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of dermatological research 277 (1985), S. 284-287 
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Desquamation ; Epidermal lipids ; Ceramides ; Cholesteryl sulfate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The ceramides and steryl-sulfate components from desquamated and cohesive human stratum corneum were examined using a combination of chemical and chromatographic means. Six structurally distinct series of ceramides were identified, and the relative amounts of these species, as measured by quantitative thin-layer chromatography, did not differ in cohesive and desquamated stratum corneum. In contrast, the level of cholesteryl sulfate was significantly reduced in the desquamated material. The results are in accord with the hypothesis that cholesteryl sulfate serves in cell-to-cell cohesion within the stratum corneum, and its hydrolysis may be necessary to permit shedding of cells from the surface.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of dermatological research 279 (1987), S. 266-269 
    ISSN: 1432-069X
    Keywords: Sebum secretion ; Bentonite method ; Thin-layer chromatography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Sebaceous was ester secretion rates were measured in six subjects on six occasions each, using absorption into bentonite clay and analysis of the collected lipid by quantitative thin-layer chromatography. On each occasion eight samples were collected, four from the left and four from the right side of the forehead in four successive intervals. The first two intervals, which totaled 14 h, were intended to deplete the follicular reservoir of sebum so that a constant rate of absorption could be obtained during the third and fourth intervals, which were 3 h each. Thin-layer analysis of each sample was done in triplicate. The data were examined using analysis of variance techniques to determine the reproducibility of the measurement method and to identify possible sources of variability. The intraclass correlation coefficient (r 1) for all 432 post-depletion determinations was 0.80. The reproducibility was considerably better for three of the subjects (r 1=0.93) than for the other three (r 1=0.75). Variability within the latter three subjects did not seem to be attributable to lack of reproducibility in the thinlayer analysis. Real biological variability also seems unlikely considering the holocrine mechanisms of sebum secretion. Therefore, the variability probably arises from non-representative collection of sebum into the bentonite absorbent.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Key words Troponin I ; Calcium sensitivity ; Cardiac muscle contraction ; Skinned fibers ; Site-directed mutagenesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Using treatment with vanadate solutions, we extracted native cardiac troponin I and troponin C (cTnI and cTnC) from skinned fibers of porcine right ventricles. These proteins were replaced by exogenously supplied TnI and TnC isoforms, thereby restoring Ca2+-dependent regulation. Force then depended on the negative logarithm of Ca2+ concentration (pCa) in a sigmoidal manner, the pCa for 50% force development, pCa50, being about 5.5. For reconstitution we used fast-twitch rabbit skeletal muscle TnI and TnC (sTnI and sTnC), bovine cTnI and cTnC or recombinant sTnIs that were altered by site-directed mutagenesis. Incubation with TnI inhibited isometric tension in TnI-extracted fibers in the absence of Ca2+, but restoration of Ca2+ dependence required incubation with both TnI and TnC. Relaxation at low Ca2+ levels and the steepness of the force/pCa relation depended on the concentration of exogenously supplied TnI in the reconstitution solution (range 20–150 μM), while Ca2+ sensitivity, i.e. the pCa50, was dependent on the isoform, and also on the concentration of TnC in the reconstitution solution. At pH 6.7, skinned fibers reconstituted with optimal concentrations of sTnC and sTnI (120 μM and 150 μM, respectively) were more sensitive to Ca2+ than those reconstituted with cTnC and cTnI (difference in pCa50 approx. 0.2 units). Rabbit sTnI was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli using a high yield expression plasmid. We introduced point mutations into the TnI inhibitory region comprising the sequence of the minimal common TnC/actin binding site (-G104-K-F-K-R-P-P-L-R-R-V-R115-). The four mutants produced by substitution of T for P110, G for P110, G for L111, and G for K105 were chosen, based on previous work with synthetic peptides showing that single amino acid substitution in this region diminished the capacity of these peptides to inhibit acto-S1 ATPase or contraction of skinned fibers. Therefore, all amino acid residues of the inhibitory region are thought to contribute to biological activity of TnI. However, each of the recombinant TnIs could substitute for endogenous TnI. In combination with exogenous TnC, Ca2+ dependence could be restored when gly110sTnI, thr110sTnI or gly111sTnI was used for reconstitution. The mutant gly105sTnI, on the other hand, reduced the ability of skinned fibers to relax at low Ca2+ concentrations and it caused an increase in Ca2+ sensitivity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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