Wilhelm Mosgoeller

Wilhelm Mosgoeller
Medical University of Vienna | MedUni Vienna · Clinical Institute of Pathology

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96
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Publications

Publications (96)
Article
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In clinical practice, the treatment of patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) can be very challenging. The aims of the present non-interventional study (NIS) were to investigate the tolerability and efficacy of PMA-zeolite under everyday conditions in patients with diarrheic IBS type (IBS-D) or constipated type (IBS-C) or mixed type (IBS-M)....
Article
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Objectives: Preclinical and clinical data suggest, that the microporous mineral with large inner surface and ion exchanger capability PMA-(Panaceo-micro-activation)-zeolite can bind irritating and inflammation associated chime-constituents. We hypothesised whether or not it can ameliorate subclinical inflammation, and investigated the potential in...
Conference Paper
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Since the introduction of wireless technology, digital devices penetrated all strata of the society. Even children use mobile phones regularly and excessively long. Excessive use may be associated with behavioral changes and symptoms of addiction. We analyzed the available literature and define the fields to respond to the association of "screen ti...
Article
Zusammenfassung Nach Ansicht verschiedener homöopathischer Schulen können Beobachtungen während der Schwangerschaft die Sicherheit bei der späteren Arzneimittelverschreibung für das Kind erhöhen. In einer Vorstudie zeigte sich, dass bei Schwangeren neue, bisher unbekannte Symptome und daraus resultierende Arzneimittelbilder auftreten. Im aktuellen...
Article
Objectives: Pregnancy is a period in life with a high demand of micronutrients. A prophylactic supplementation of folic acid to reduce the risk of neurological malformations in the newborn is common practice. The array of essential micronutrients during pregnancy includes neurotropic vitamins (Vitamin B6, B12 and folic acid), minerals like iron, a...
Article
Mindfulness-Based Bodywork and Training (Insightouch) Improves Anxiety, Depression, and Attachment Disorders Background: Attachment disorders may be associated with symptoms of anxiety and depression; these can be ameliorated through correcting emotional experiences. We aimed to investigate the therapeutic effects of Insightouch, a mindfulness-base...
Article
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Objective: Papaya and oats are natural food and used in traditional medicine in many parts of the world. Papaya has a high content of enzymes supporting digestive function. Oats are a source of minerals, beta-glucan fibres, immunmodulatory and antiinflammatory probiotic substances. Caricol®-Gastro combines both constituents, it was designed as veg...
Article
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Typically, before and after surgical correction faces are assessed on still images by surgeons, orthodontists, the patients, and family members. We hypothesized that judgment of faces in motion and by naïve raters may closer reflect the impact on patients’ real life, and the treatment impact on e.g. career chances. Therefore we assessed faces from...
Data
Class I patient as presented to the raters. (MOD)
Article
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Cleft Lip and Palate (CLP) - a common facial malformation in newborns – is typically corrected by surgical intervention to allow for normal speech development, psychosocial adjustment, and facial attractiveness. The long term treatment outcome can be evaluated after a number of years, possibly in adulthood. We investigated the aesthetics of the nas...
Article
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Background: A common pathomechanism involved in many degenerative manifestations of non-communicable diseases is nitrosative stress, giving rise to a chronic insidious inflammation causing silent inflammation at a cellular level. The release of nitric oxide inhibits multiple enzyme reactions with reduced oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial...
Article
Objectives: Neurotransmitters regulate mood, attention vigilance and other clinical symptoms linked with depression. Various medications ameliorate symptoms of depression and mood disorders by interference with the serotonic metabolism. Serotonin metabolism depends on nutritional cofactors such as pyridoxin together with essential mineral and trac...
Article
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Chronic diseases and illnesses associated with unspecific symptoms are on the rise. In addition to chronic stress in social and work environments, physical and chemical exposures at home, at work, and during leisure activities are causal or contributing environmental stressors that deserve attention by the general practitioner as well as by all oth...
Article
Background: Many Vitamins and minerals for dietary supplements lack a standard scientific and regulatory definition that accurately reflects the bioavailabilities in humans. Especially the bioavailability of natural compounds in complex mixtures, where the different ingredients may interfere with each other, is unknown. Methods: To learn more ab...
Article
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Neurotoxic metabolites and oxidative and nitrosative stress reactions play a crucial role in the pathways leading to neuronal cell death and neurodegeneration. The bioavailability of the many antioxidant ingredients a vitamin and trace element composition was investigated, to reveal the neuroprotective (preventive) potential of the composition. We...
Article
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Background Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) exerts immune-modulatory actions mainly via VPAC1 receptor stimulation. VPAC1 may be a treatment target of inflammatory diseases, but little is known about the receptor expression profile in immune-competent cells in vivo. Material and methods 20 male healthy subjects received a single intravenous bol...
Conference Paper
CAM Education and CAM Research – Austria’s 1st National Survey* Hedda Sützl-Klein1, Slavica Mladen1, Gerald Pohler1, Michaela Kaplaner1, Ulrike Bruckner1,2, Manuela Ried-Keita1, Michael Frass3,4, Wilhelm Mosgöller3, Erich Stumptner5 1) European Society for Integrative Health Research (ESIHR), A-1070 Vienna, Austria, hedda.suetzl-klein@esihr.eu, w...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Papaya (Carica papaya L.) is used as a natural remedy in abnormal digestion in tropical and industrialized countries. Besides this wide distribution little evidence has been produced with reference to its physiological effect in humans and the proof of efficacy. Former clinical observations had revealed positive effects for patients wit...
Article
Nanomedicine is an emerging field with great opportunities to improve the treatment of diseases which are currently not curable. Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is one of these diseases treatable by inhalation of medicines that provide novel depots for drugs with short pharmacological half-lives to improve the quality of life for patients. In...
Article
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) conveys various physiological effects in the digestive tract, nervous and cardiovascular system, airways, reproductive system, endocrine system, and more. A family of specific membrane bound receptors, termed VPAC1, VPAC2, and PAC1, binds VIP and triggers the effects. Many of them are of clinical interest. To dat...
Article
The receptors for vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), VPAC1-, VPAC2-, and PAC1-receptor are overexpressed by various tumor cells. VIP can target these receptors and transport conjugates into the cell. However, the use of VIP for tumor cell targeting is hampered by the peptides short half-lives due to enzymatic degradation. Because protamine-based...
Article
Full-text available
To investigate whether or not low intensity radio frequency electromagnetic field exposure (RF-EME) associated with mobile phone use can affect human cells, we used a sensitive proteome analysis method to study changes in protein synthesis in cultured human cells. Four different cell kinds were exposed to 2 W/kg specific absorption rate in medium c...
Article
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is one of the most abundant molecules found in the respiratory tract. Due to its anti-inflammatory and bronchodilatatory properties, it has been proposed as a novel treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The actions of VIP are mediated via three different G-protein-coupled receptors (VPAC1, V...
Article
Full-text available
Many traditional healing plants successfully passed several hundred years of empirical testing against specific diseases and thereby demonstrating that they are well tolerated in humans. Although quite a few ethno-pharmacological plants are applied against a variety of conditions there are still numerous plants that have not been cross-tested in di...
Article
Drug delivery of protein and peptide-based drugs, which represent a growing and important therapeutic class, is hampered by these drugs' very short half-lives. High susceptibility towards enzymatic degradation necessitates frequent drug administration followed by poor adherence to therapy. Among these drugs is vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), a...
Article
Inhalation of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) was suggested as promising treatment option of various lung diseases like asthma and pulmonary hypertension. However, the medical use of peptides is limited by their short half-life due to rapid enzymatic degradation in the airways. For that reason, we recently developed unilamellar nano-sized VIP-l...
Article
Inhalative administration of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is a promising approach for the treatment of severe lung diseases. However, the clinical use of VIP is limited by the fact that the peptide is prone to rapid degradation mechanisms and proteolytic digestion. Accordingly, VIP exhibits a very short period of activity in the lung. To ove...
Article
Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide 1-38 (PACAP38) displays biological activities (e.g. bronchodilatory, pulmonary vasodilatory and anti-inflammatory properties) that are relevant in several pulmonary diseases. The aim of this study was to assess the safety and tolerability and the pulmonary and systemic effects of inhaled PACAP38 in...
Article
A polymer-grafted liposomal formulation that has the potential to be developed for aerosolic pulmonary delivery of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), a potent vasodilatory neuropeptide, is described. As VIP is prone to rapid proteolytic degradation in the microenvironment of the lung a proper delivery system is required to increase the half-life...
Article
The endothelium and its interaction with smooth muscle play a central role in the local control of the pulmonary vasculature, and endothelial dysfunction is thought to contribute to pulmonary hypertension and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), a 28-amino acid neuropeptide, relaxes the rat pulmonary artery, b...
Article
Full-text available
Pulmonary arterial hypertension is a progressive disease, characterised by increased proliferation of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, vasoconstriction and remodelling of the vascular wall leading to right heart failure and death. The idiopathic form is rare (idiopathic arterial primary hypertension (IPAH); formerly PPH, MIM# 178600). Our grou...
Article
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The replacement of endothelium by endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) for therapeutic use in order to ameliorate the vascular status of ischemic organs is now in the focus of vascular research. The aim of our studies was to investigate whether EPCs derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNCs-derived EPCs) or EPCs propagated from CD34(+)...
Article
We describe fluorescent-labeled peptide (FLP) studies on living cells. The new technique is nonradioactive and it allows monitoring of the binding and internalization of Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide (VIP) in VIP receptor-expressing cells. The technique is easy to perform and the observed reaction is peptide sequence specific.
Article
Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is a potent vasorelaxing peptide that plays a role in lung physiology and possibly in pulmonary hypertension. We investigated the turnover of the VIP receptors on rat pulmonary arteries ex vivo. There was evidence for a fast receptor turnover in pulmonary arteries, which underlines the important role of VIP for t...
Article
There is only limited morphologic information on long-term alterations and neurotransmitter changes after perinatal asphyxia, and no long-term study showing neurodegeneration has been reported so far. We used an animal model for perinatal asphyxia well documented in the rat to investigate the guinea pig as a species highly mature at birth. Cesarean...
Article
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Primary pulmonary hypertension is a fatal disease causing progressive right heart failure within 3 years after diagnosis. We describe a new concept for treatment of the disease using vasoactive intestinal peptide, a neuropeptide primarily functioning as a neurotransmitter that acts as a potent systemic and pulmonary vasodilator. Our rationale is ba...
Article
RNA polymerases (POL) are integral constituents of the protein synthesis machinery, with POL I and POL III coding for ribosomal RNA and POL II coding for protein. POL I is located in the nucleolus and transcribes class I genes, those that code for large ribosomal RNA. It has been reported that the POL system is seriously affected in perinatal asphy...
Article
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Neutrophil azurophil granules, traditionally regarded as the neutrophil counterpart to lysosomes, lack the lysosomal marker lysosome-associated membrane glycoprotein and have recently been suggested to be nonlysosomal secretory organelles. The membrane of the azurophil granules is poorly characterized-CD63 and CD68 are the only membrane proteins id...
Article
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Lipid rafts are detergent-resistant, cholesterol- and sphingolipid-rich membrane domains that are involved in important cellular processes such as signal transduction and intracellular trafficking. Stomatin, a major lipid-raft component of erythrocytes and epithelial cells, is also an abundant platelet protein. Microscopical methods and subcellular...
Article
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Defined angiographically, no-reflow (NR) manifests as an acute reduction in coronary flow in the absence of epicardial vessel obstruction. One candidate protein to cause coronary NR is tissue factor (TF), which is abundant in atherosclerotic plaque and a cofactor for activated plasma coagulation factor VII. Scrapings from atherosclerotic carotid ar...
Article
Information on the consequences of perinatal asphyxia (PA) on brain morphology and function in the aging rat is missing although several groups have hypothesized that PA may be responsible for neurological and psychiatric deficits in the adult. We therefore decided to study the effects of PA on the central nervous system (CNS) in terms of morpholog...
Article
We investigated how the transcribing ribosomal genes ("Christmas trees") of HeLa cells are arranged in the nucleolus. Hypotonic conditions let the granular component disperse, while fibrillar centres and parts of the dense fibrillar component were resistant to low ionic strength conditions. Both remained within the former nucleolar territory. We us...
Article
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Continuous intravenous treatment with epoprostenol significantly improves pulmonary haemodynamics and survival in patients with primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH). Its beneficial effect, however, may be blunted due to adverse effects such as catheter sepsis and systemic hypotension. Recent investigations have shown that inhaled iloprost is effect...
Article
The Harvey-ras gene encodes small guanine nucleotide binding proteins, mutant forms of which are associated with a number of human malignancies. Based on studies with truncated forms of the protein it is known that correct post-translational processing of Ras is essential for cytoplasmic membrane localization and function. Surprisingly, immunofluor...
Article
Perinatal asphyxia remains a major cause of acute mortality and of permanent neurodevelopmental disability in infants and children. However, the pathophysiologic features of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy are still incompletely understood. Animal studies have been focussing on grey matter pathology but information on white matter lesions is limite...
Article
Nucleoli develop when preribosomes are synthesized at the chromosomal nucleolar organizer regions. Typically they consist of at least three nucleolar subcompartments, the fibrillar center (FC), the dense fibrillar component (DF), and the granular component (GC). The understanding of the functional arrangements of these subcompartments relates to as...
Article
Perinatal hypoxic-ischemic states can cause irreversible damage to the brain, ranging from minimal brain dysfunction to death. Only few studies have been reported describing neurological, cognitive and behavioral deficits following perinatal asphyxia. We therefore decided to study long term effects of perinatal asphyxia in a well-documented animal...
Article
Ribosomes are integral constitutens of the protein synthesis machinery. Polymerase I (POL I) is located in the nucleolus and transcribes the large ribosomal genes. POL I activity is decreased in ischemia but nothing is known so far on POL I in perinatal asphyxia. We investigated the involvement of POL I in a well-documented model of graded systemic...
Article
Full-text available
In patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), the progression of pulmonary disease differs considerably, even in identical cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator-genotypes which could reflect an additional influence of the host's immune response. This study therefore measured cytokine expression patterns in CF patients with different clinical...
Article
Perinatal asphyxia (PA) is considered to lead to a variety of brain disorders including spasticity, epilepsy, mental retardation, and minimal brain disorder syndromes and may form the basis for psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases later in life. We examined markers for neuronal transmission involved in the pathomechanisms of PA and candidates...
Article
The involvement of excitatory amino acids (EAA) in the pathogenesis of hypoxic-ischemic states is well-documented. Information on the role of overexcitation by EAA in perinatalasphyxia (PA), however, is limited and data from adult models cannot be directly extrapolated to immature systems. Moreover, most adult models of ischemia are representing st...
Article
The trophoblast of human placenta is directly exposed to the maternal circulation. It forms the main barrier to maternal-fetal glucose transport. The present study investigated the effect of sustained hyperglycemia in vitro on the glucose transport system of these cells. Trophoblasts isolated from term placentas and immunopurified were cultured for...
Article
To elucidate the pathogenic role of synovial B cells in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), nine human IgG/lambda-secreting B-cell hybridomas from rheumatoid synovial tissue of a patient with definite RA were screened by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and indirect immunofluorescence on tissue cryosections for detection of antibodies against autoantigens....
Article
RNA polymerases transcribe nuclear genes for ribosomal RNA thus representing ribosomal biogenesis. RNA polymerase I transcribes class I genes, coding for large ribosomal RNA and is located in the nucleolus. RNA polymerase III transcribes class III genes, those that encode a number of small ribosomal RNA molecules. Both RNA polymerases form ribosoma...
Article
We investigated how only three morphologically distinguished nucleolar components can integrate the many necessary tasks in ribosome biogenesis. For the mapping of ribosomal (r)DNA transcription loci, we combined non-autoradiographic in situ transcription assays with the immunological analysis of the ultrastructural distribution of transcription-as...
Article
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Acidosis, energy depletion, overstimulation by excitatory amino acids, and free radical-mediated reactions are the major current concepts for the explanation of damage and death resulting from asphyxia. Impaired phosphorylation by protein kinase C (PKC) represents another mechanism incriminated for cell death. We used an unsophisticated perinatal a...
Article
Hyperhomocyst(e)inemia is strongly associated with occlusive arterial disease. A direct effect of homocysteine on the proliferation of smooth muscle cells was proposed recently. This observation led us to examine the effect of homocysteine on cyclin-dependent kinase, the starter of mitosis and reflecting proliferation. Seventy Him:OFA rats were div...
Article
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The combined effects of hypoxia and interleukin 1, lipopolysaccharide, or tumor necrosis factor alpha on the expression of genes encoding endothelial constitutive and inducible nitric oxide synthases, endothelin 1, interleukin 6, and interleukin 8 were investigated in human primary pulmonary endothelial cells and whole pulmonary artery organoid cul...
Article
Purpose: Prolonged downregulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (ec-NOS) is thought to be one of the major causes for the development of pulmonary hypertension. Recently, it has been shown in human umbilical vein endothelial cells and bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells that hypoxia causes downregulation of ecNOS and increased expressi...
Article
Full-text available
A monospecific autoimmune serum for poly(ADP-ribosyl)transferase (pADPRT) was used to localise the enzyme in ultrastructural cellular compartments. We detected enzyme in mitochondria of HeLa and Sertoli cells. Within the nucleoplasm the enzyme concentration was positively correlated with the degree of chromatin condensation, with interchromatin spa...
Article
The new data presented by the participants during the 'Colloquium on the Nucleolus' were reviewed and regrouped in different topics concerning the molecular and functional significance of nucleolar structure. The topics included: rRNA transcription and nucleolar organization, the nucleolus in relation to cell proliferation including nucleolus in pa...
Article
Indirect immunolabeling with anti-UBF antibodies, in situ hybridization with an rDNA probe, and confocal scanning laser microscopy were used to study nucleolar organizer regions (NORs) during the cell cycle in pig embryonic kidney (PK) cells. The chromosomal distribution of the polymerase I transcription factor UBF and rDNA was compared with the nu...
Article
The new data presented by the participants during the ‘Colloquium on the Nucleolus’ were reviewed and regrouped in different topics concerning the molecular and functional significance of nucleolar structure. The topics included: rRNA transcription and nucleolar organization, the nucleolus in relation to cell proliferation including nucleolus in pa...
Article
A simple and reliable method has been developed for the in situ LR White embedding of cell monolayers grown on glass cover-slips. Combined with cytochemical or immunological procedures, this technique allows light and/or electron microscopy investigations of a large number of cells in the same horizontal plane within a relatively short period of ti...
Article
Chromosomes from ten human male fibroblast metaphases were completely reconstructed from electron micrographs of serially sectioned material. Chromosome centromere positions were determined by finding the three-dimensional coordinates of the centromere midpoint. The data set showed the identity of nine chromosome types (chromosomes 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, 1...
Article
Micromolar concentrations of dehydroascorbic acid in aqueous solutions react with methanol-containing phosphate or citrate buffers to form a mixture of derivatives with an absorption maximum at 346 nm. The compounds, different methyl ketals, were analyzed using fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry. After calibration, kinetic analysis of the form...
Article
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Sites of transcription of ribosomal RNA in HeLa cells were visualized by electron microscopy. Cells were either incubated with Br-uridine, or permeabilized and then incubated with BrUTP, before sites containing Br-RNA were immunolabeled with gold particles. Short incubations ensured that most incorporated analogue remained at synthetic sites. Fibri...
Article
Satellite nucleoli of lymphocytes were studied to provide additional information on the cytochemistry of these nucleoli particularly with respect to the presence of rDNA and RNA polymerase I. According to the results of the in situ hybridization satellite nucleoli contain rDNA similarly as characteristic nucleoli. Immunostaining demonstrated that s...
Article
Full-text available
For better understanding of nucleolar architecture, different techniques have been used to localize DNA within the dense fibrillar component (DF) or within the fibrillar centers (FC) by electron microscopy (EM). Since it still remains controversial which components contain DNA, we investigated the distribution of DNA in human Sertoli cells using va...
Article
Although large amounts of information have been accumulated regarding the role of dendritic cells during HIV infection (Armstrong and Home 1984, Tenner-Racz et al. 1985, Tschachler et al. 1987) no attention has been payed so far to the role of thymic interdigitating dendritic cells (IDCs). The goal of this study was to investigate whether thymic ID...
Chapter
Nucleoli were noted by biologists very early (Fontana, 1781) and a lot of data has been accumulated on the structure of nucleoli in the last decades. Due to the work of Perry (1962; Perry et al., 1961) it is known that the nucleolus is the site of ribosome biogenesis. Its visibility both in the light-and the electron microscope is due to the fact t...
Article
Bronchial epithelial cells obtained by brush biopsy during fiberoptic bronchoscopy performed in 12 patients with chronic bronchitis and 12 healthy control subjects, were investigated for HLA-DR antigen expression and nucleolar silver staining patterns. In all patients with chronic bronchitis the number of bronchial epithelial cells positive to HLA-...
Article
Full-text available
The physical location of the rDNA repeating units (25 S, 18 S and 5.8 S rRNA genes and the intergenic spacer sequences) was investigated in rye (Secale cereale L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) root tip meristematic cells by in situ hybridization using light and electron microscopy. The rDNA sequences are organized differently in the two related...
Article
The distribution of the human ribosomal gene repeat within human Sertoli cell nucleoli was investigated with the help of DNA-DNA in situ hybridization at the light and electron microscopic level. Probes from both the transcribed part of the gene repeat and the "non-transcribed" spacer were found to hybridize predominantly to the dense fibrillar com...
Article
The formation and development of nucleoli and their connections with the nucleolar chromosomes were studied in human spermatocytes using electron microscopy, silver staining of nucleolus organizer regions (NORs), high resolution autoradiography and in situ hybridization in order to localize rRNA genes and their transcription in the different stages...
Article
The positions of the centromeres of all 46 human chromosomes were analysed in three dimensional reconstructions of electron micrographs of 10 serially sectioned unpretreated human male fibroblast cells. The reconstructions show that the spatial positioning of the chromosomes during division is not random. The centromeres were arranged on a metaphas...
Article
The positions of the genomes originating from each parent were analysed in root-tip nuclei of the mature, sexual F1 hybrid plant Hordeum vulgare (barley) x Secale africanum (a wild rye). The two genomes of the hybrid were identified in both spread and sectioned material by non-radioactive DNA:DNA in situ hybridization using labelled total genomic D...
Article
The distribution of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) in the nucleoli of human lymphocytes was revealed by in situ hybridization with a nonautoradiographic procedure at the electron microscopic level. rDNA is located in the dense fibrillar component of the nucleolus but not in the fibrillar centers. In the same cells the incorporation of tritiated uridine takes...
Article
Full-text available
In situ hybridization using biotinylated total genomic DNA and avidin detection systems was adapted for examination of thin-sectioned plant material in the light and electron microscopes. Root tip material was preserved prior to sectioning, so that the in vivo disposition of the chromatin was maintained. Use of total genomic DNA from Secale african...
Article
Non-stimulated human lymphocytes from peripheral blood usually contain only one ring-shaped nucleolus. Polyethyleneglycol-mediated cell fusion with mitotic Chinese hamster ovary cells induces premature chromosome condensation in human lymphocytes. Subsequent silver staining reveals that more than one nucleolus organizer region (NOR) is silver-posit...

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