Main View
This view is used for searching all possible sources.
First Page Previous Page 1 2 Next Page Last Page
 
1
Barbiturate tolerance: effects on GABA-operated chloride channel function.
1992-08-21

Male ICR mice were fed powdered laboratory chow containing phenobarbital for 7 days to induce tolerance. Mice were sacrificed and brains assayed for changes in GABA-mediated chloride flux into brain membrane vesicles (microsacs). Concentration-dependent stimulation of chloride flux by GABA alone was not affected by the development of ...

PubMed

2
Tolerating failures of continuous-valued sensors
1990-01-01

One aspect of fault tolerance in process control programs is the ability to tolerate sensor failure.

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

3
Responses and tolerance to salt stress in bryophytes
2008-08-01

During exposure to salt environments, plants could perceive salt signal and transmit the signal to cellular machinery to activate adaptive responses. In bryophytes, salt signal components and transcript factor identified suggest that salt activate adaptive responses to tolerate adverse environments. The ability of bryophytes to ...

PubMed Central

4
Implementing Fault-Tolerant Sensors.
1989-05-01

... Title : Implementing Fault-Tolerant Sensors ... Abstract : One aspect of fault-tolerance in process control programs is the ability to tolerate sensor failure ...

DTIC Science & Technology

5
Linking biogeography to physiology: Evolutionary and acclimatory adjustments of thermal limits
2005-01-17

Temperature-adaptive physiological variation plays important roles in latitudinal biogeographic patterning and in setting vertical distributions along subtidal-to-intertidal gradients in coastal marine ecosystems. Comparisons of congeneric marine invertebrates reveal that the most warm-adapted species may live closer to their thermal tolerance limits and have lower ...

PubMed Central

6
Cutting edge: contact-mediated suppression by CD4+CD25+ regulatory cells involves a granzyme B-dependent, perforin-independent mechanism.
2005-02-15

CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg) are potent immunosuppressive cells that are pivotal in the regulation of peripheral tolerance. In this report, we identify granzyme B (GZ-B) as one of the key components of Treg-mediated suppression. Induction of regulatory activity is correlated with the up-regulation of GZ-B expression. Proof of a functional ...

PubMed

7
Race and sex differences in primary appraisals, catastrophizing, and experimental pain outcomes.
2011-02-01

The aims of this study were: 1) to examine race and sex differences in primary pain appraisals and catastrophizing; 2) to test the unique ability of race, sex, primary pain appraisals, and catastrophizing to predict experimental pain outcomes; and 3) to conduct mediational analyses testing pain appraisals and catastrophizing as explanatory mechanisms for ...

PubMed

8
Realized tolerance to nectar robbing: compensation to floral enemies in Ipomopsis aggregata
2009-06-20

Background and AimsAlthough the ecological and evolutionary consequences of foliar herbivory are well understood, how plants cope with floral damage is less well explored. Here the concept of tolerance, typically studied within the context of plant defence to foliar herbivores and pathogens, is extended to floral damage. Variation in tolerance to floral ...

PubMed Central

9
Assessing the role of root plasma membrane and tonoplast Na+/H+ exchangers in salinity tolerance in wheat: in planta quantification methods.
2011-03-24

This work investigates the role of cytosolic Na+ exclusion in roots as a means of salinity tolerance in wheat, and offers in planta methods for the functional assessment of major transporters contributing to this trait. An electrophysiological protocol was developed to quantify the activity of plasma membrane Na+ efflux systems in roots, using the microelectrode ion flux ...

PubMed

10
The Comprehension and Use of Self-Control Strategies for Delay Tolerance in Adjusted and Behaviorally-Disordered Kindergarten Children.
1981-04-01

In order to investigate the relationship between problems in behavioral control and children's capacity to utilize mediational strategies for self control, the responses of a group of disruptive (N=20) and nondisruptive (N=20) kindergarten children were compared in their approach to delay of gratification tasks. Subjects were compared on three forms of potential deficiencies ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

11
Focus Issue--Tailoring the Immune Response
2004-07-13

Recent advances have led to increasing sophistication in our ability to manipulate the immune response to prevent or treat disease. Monoclonal antibodies have emerged as a viable therapeutic approach against both cancer and autoimmune disease. Rituximab, the first monoclonal antibody approved by the FDA for cancer therapy, appears to achieve its therapeutic effects through a ...

NSDL National Science Digital Library

12
Hormone balance and abiotic stress tolerance in crop plants.
2011-03-04

Plant hormones play central roles in the ability of plants to adapt to changing environments, by mediating growth, development, nutrient allocation, and source/sink transitions. Although ABA is the most studied stress-responsive hormone, the role of cytokinins, brassinosteroids, and auxins during environmental stress is emerging. Recent evidence indicated ...

PubMed

13
Anti-inflammatory effects of tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-? are mediated via TNF-R2 (p75) in tolerogenic transforming growth factor-?-treated antigen-presenting cells
2009-05-01

Exposure of macrophages to transforming growth factor (TGF)-? is known to alter their functional phenotype such that antigen presentation by these cells leads to tolerance rather than an inflammatory immune response. Typically, eye-derived antigen-presenting cells (APCs) exposed to TGF-? in the local environment are known to induce a form of peripheral ...

PubMed Central

14
Developing combination immunotherapies for type 1 diabetes: recommendations from the ITN�JDRF Type 1 Diabetes Combination Therapy Assessment Group
2010-05-01

Like many other complex human disorders of unknown aetiology, autoimmune-mediated type 1 diabetes may ultimately be controlled via a therapeutic approach that combines multiple agents, each with differing modes of action. The numerous advantages of such a strategy include the ability to minimize toxicities and realize synergies to enhance and prolong ...

PubMed Central

15
Genetic Analysis of Desiccation Tolerance in Sachharomyces cerevisiae.
2011-08-11

Desiccation tolerance, the ability to survive nearly total dehydration, is a rare strategy for survival and reproduction observed in all taxa. However, the mechanism and regulation of this phenomenon are poorly understood. Correlations between desiccation tolerance and potential effectors have been reported in many species, but their ...

PubMed

16
Gene therapy for immunological tolerance: using 'transgenic' B cells to treat inhibitor formation.
2010-05-01

B cells have been shown to function as tolerogenic antigen presenting cells (APCs) both in vivo and in vitro. We have taken advantage of this property, as well as the ability of IgG carriers to be potent 'schleppers' for tolerogenic entities, to develop a gene therapy approach to induce unresponsiveness in a number of systems, including the elimination of haemophilia ...

PubMed

17
Oral tolerance to dextrin mediated by specific suppressor T-cells induced in the intestinal intraepithelium and their systemic migration.
2003-03-01

Antigens presented to the immune system through the oral route induce antigen specific secretory IgA and systemic unresponsiveness, termed oral tolerance (OT). We studied the induction of OT towards a diet antigen: dextrin (DEX) in rats that underwent protein deprivation and were further re-fed. Peyer's patches (PP), mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) and spleen (Sp) cells from ...

PubMed

18
Tissue-type plasminogen activator has a neuroprotective effect in the ischemic brain mediated by neuronal TNF-?
2011-07-27

Cerebral cortical neurons have a heightened sensitivity to hypoxia and their survival depends on their ability to accommodate to changes in the concentration of oxygen in their environment. Tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) is a serine proteinase that activates the zymogen plasminogen into plasmin. Hypoxia induces the release of tPA from cerebral cortical neurons, and it ...

PubMed

19
ars1, an Arabidopsis mutant exhibiting increased tolerance to arsenate and increased phosphate uptake.
2003-09-01

Arsenic is one of the most toxic pollutants at contaminated sites, yet little is known about the mechanisms by which certain plants survive exposure to high arsenic levels. To gain insight into the mechanisms of arsenic tolerance in plants, we developed a genetic screen to isolate Arabidopsis thaliana mutants with altered tolerance to arsenic. We report ...

PubMed

20
The temperature and desiccation tolerance limits of protozoa found ...

Abstract: Protozoa found in the glacial melt waters and freshwater ponds or streams of Antarctica were investigated for their ability to tolerate freezing ...

NASA Website

First Page Previous Page 1 2 Next Page Last Page
 
First Page Previous Page 1 2 Next Page Last Page
 
21
The temperature and desiccation tolerance limits of protozoa found ...

Abstract: Protozoa found in the glacial melt waters and freshwater ponds or streams of Antarctica were investigated for their ability to tolerate freezing ...

NASA Website

22
CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT BRANCH/FDP ...

Verify the ability to accomplish i.e. ceiling plenums, mechanical shafts. Verify the ability to meet specified tolerances. Verify that additives and or options are ...

NASA Website

23
Transcription factors regulating the response to oxidative stress in yeast.
2002-02-01

A main avenue of defense against fungal infection uses oxidative killing of these and other microorganisms. Consequently, the ability of fungi to withstand an oxidative challenge has important implications for their ultimate pathogenicity in a host organism. Fungi also serve as an excellent model system for handling of reactive oxygen species in eukaryotic cells. For these ...

PubMed

24
GM-CSF is an essential regulator of T cell activation competence in uterine dendritic cells during early pregnancy in mice.
2010-10-25

Uterine dendritic cells (DCs) are critical for activating the T cell response mediating maternal immune tolerance of the semiallogeneic fetus. GM-CSF (CSF2), a known regulator of DCs, is synthesized by uterine epithelial cells during induction of tolerance in early pregnancy. To investigate the role of GM-CSF in regulating uterine DCs ...

PubMed

25
Monophosphoryl lipid A as a prophylactic for sepsis and septic shock.
1995-01-01

The ability of monophosphoryl lipid A (MLA) to provide prophylactic protection against septic shock was evaluated in a mouse model of induced endotoxin hypersensitivity. Treatments of hypersensitized animals with low doses of MLA attenuated endotoxin lethality and endotoxin-mediated liver damage. These effects were related to the ...

PubMed

26
Improved phytoremediation of oilseed rape (Brassica napus) by Trichoderma mutant constructed by restriction enzyme-mediated integration (REMI) in cadmium polluted soil.
2008-12-23

In this study, oilseed rape (Brassica napus) was exploited in remediation of Cd-contaminated soil in combination of Trichodermakoningii. To improve its phytoextracting efficiency, restriction enzyme-mediated integration was used to construct Trichoderma mutants with higher Cd resistance. Of 200 mutants, 10 mutants were shown with higher Cd tolerance and ...

PubMed

27
Regulatory roles for NKT cell ligands in environmentally induced autoimmunity.
2008-11-15

The development of autoimmune diseases is frequently linked to exposure to environmental factors such as chemicals, drugs, or infections. In the experimental model of metal-induced autoimmunity, administration of subtoxic doses of mercury (a common environmental pollutant) to genetically susceptible mice induces an autoimmune syndrome with rapid anti-nucleolar Ab production and immune system ...

PubMed

First Page Previous Page 1 2 Next Page Last Page