نتایج جستجو برای: persian musk rose

تعداد نتایج: 37005  

2017
Saif Huda Patrick Waters Mark Woodhall Maria Isabel Leite Leslie Jacobson Anna De Rosa Michelangelo Maestri Roberta Ricciardi Jeannine M. Heckmann Angelina Maniaol Amelia Evoli Judy Cossins David Hilton-Jones Angela Vincent

OBJECTIVE To increase the detection of MuSK-Abs using a CBA and test their pathogenicity. METHODS Sera from 69 MuSK-RIA-positive patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) (Definite MuSK-MG), 169 patients negative for MuSK-RIA and AChR-RIA (seronegative MG, SNMG), 35 healthy individuals (healthy controls, HCs), and 16 NMDA receptor-Ab-positive (NMDAR-Ab) disease controls were tested for binding to ...

Journal: :Neuron 1997
Elizabeth D Apel David J Glass Lisa M Moscoso George D Yancopoulos Joshua R Sanes

Agrin-induced clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in the postsynaptic membrane is a key step in synaptogenesis at the neuromuscular junction. The receptor tyrosine kinase MuSK is a component of the agrin receptor, while the cytoplasmic protein rapsyn is necessary for the clustering of AChRs and all other postsynaptic membrane components studied to date. We show here that MuSK remains ...

Journal: :Molecular and cellular neurosciences 2000
F C Ip D G Glass D R Gies J Cheung K O Lai A K Fu G D Yancopoulos N Y Ip

Muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) is part of the receptor complex that is involved in the agrin-induced formation of the neuromuscular junction. In the rodent, prominent mRNA expression of MuSK is restricted to skeletal muscle while the expression of agrin can also be detected in brain and certain nonneuronal tissues. The recent identification of Xenopus MuSK reveals that MuSK can be detected in ti...

Journal: :The European journal of neuroscience 1999
A K Fu F D Smith H Zhou A H Chu K W Tsim B H Peng N Y Ip

A muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase, designated MuSK, mediates agrin-induced aggregation of acetylcholine receptors at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction. cDNAs encoding Xenopus MuSK were isolated from embryonic cDNA libraries. The full-length MuSK cDNA encodes for a polypeptide of 948 amino acids and possesses the features unique to mammalian MuSK, including four Ig-like domains, C6 ...

Journal: :Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology 2013
Steven J Burden Norihiro Yumoto Wei Zhang

Muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) is essential for each step in neuromuscular synapse formation. Before innervation, MuSK initiates postsynaptic differentiation, priming the muscle for synapse formation. Approaching motor axons recognize the primed, or prepatterned, region of muscle, causing motor axons to stop growing and differentiate into specialized nerve terminals. MuSK controls presynaptic di...

2010
Ricardo A. Maselli Juan Arredondo Órla Cagney Jarae J. Ng Jennifer A. Anderson Colette Williams Bae J. Gerke Betty Soliven Robert L. Wollmann

We describe a severe congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS) caused by two missense mutations in the gene encoding the muscle specific receptor tyrosine kinase (MUSK). The identified MUSK mutations M605I and A727V are both located in the kinase domain of MuSK. Intracellular microelectrode recordings and microscopy studies of the neuromuscular junction conducted in an anconeus muscle biopsy reveale...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Maartje G Huijbers Wei Zhang Rinse Klooster Erik H Niks Matthew B Friese Kirsten R Straasheijm Peter E Thijssen Hans Vrolijk Jaap J Plomp Pauline Vogels Mario Losen Silvère M Van der Maarel Steven J Burden Jan J Verschuuren

Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a severely debilitating autoimmune disease that is due to a decrease in the efficiency of synaptic transmission at neuromuscular synapses. MG is caused by antibodies against postsynaptic proteins, including (i) acetylcholine receptors, the neurotransmitter receptor, (ii) muscle-specific kinase (MuSK), a receptor tyrosine kinase essential for the formation and maintenan...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2006
Kazuhiro Shigemoto Sachiho Kubo Naoki Maruyama Naohito Hato Hiroyuki Yamada Chen Jie Naoto Kobayashi Katsumi Mominoki Yasuhito Abe Norifumi Ueda Seiji Matsuda

Muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) is critical for the synaptic clustering of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and plays multiple roles in the organization and maintenance of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). MuSK is activated by agrin, which is released from motoneurons, and induces AChR clustering at the postsynaptic membrane. Although autoantibodies against the ectodomain of MuSK have been...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1999
Heather Zhou David J. Glass George D. Yancopoulos Joshua R. Sanes

Agrin released from motor nerve terminals activates a muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase (MuSK) in muscle cells to trigger formation of the skeletal neuromuscular junction. A key step in synaptogenesis is the aggregation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in the postsynaptic membrane, a process that requires the AChR-associated protein, rapsyn. Here, we mapped domains on MuSK necessary fo...

2016
B. Z. Camurdanoglu C. Hrovat G. Dürnberger M. Madalinski K. Mechtler R. Herbst

The neuromuscular junction (NMJ) forms when a motor neuron contacts a muscle fibre. A reciprocal exchange of signals initiates a cascade of signalling events that result in pre- and postsynaptic differentiation. At the centre of these signalling events stands muscle specific kinase (MuSK). MuSK activation, kinase activity and subsequent downstream signalling are crucial for NMJ formation as wel...

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