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Bilateral vulvar basal cell carcinomata [Case Report]

Stiller M; Klein W; Dorman R; Albom M
Vulvar basal cell carcinoma is rare, accounting for less than 5% of vulvar neoplasms. There is great variation in the clinical appearance of this neoplasm, which occurs most commonly in older women. Metastasis seldom occurs, but the tumor may extend deeply into local tissues. We report the first case of bilateral vulvar basal cell carcinomata in a 66-year-old woman who had received radiotherapy for urethral carcinoma 35 years earlier. Both tumors were treated with Mohs micrographic surgery and have not recurred after 13 years
PMID: 8491875
ISSN: 0190-9622
CID: 13169

Tinea corporis gladiatorum: an epidemic of Trichophyton tonsurans in student wrestlers [see comments] [Comment]

Stiller MJ; Klein WP; Dorman RI; Rosenthal S
PMID: 1401322
ISSN: 0190-9622
CID: 13420

Trehalose synthesis genes are controlled by the putative sigma factor encoded by rpoS and are involved in stationary-phase thermotolerance in Escherichia coli

Hengge-Aronis, R; Klein, W; Lange, R; Rimmele, M; Boos, W
The rpoS (katF) gene of Escherichia coli encodes a putative sigma factor (sigma S) required for the expression of a variety of stationary phase-induced genes, for the development of stationary-phase stress resistance, and for long-term starvation survival (R. Lange and R. Hengge-Aronis, Mol. Microbiol. 5:49-59, 1991). Here we show that the genes otsA, otsB, treA, and osmB, previously known to be osmotically regulated, are also induced during transition into stationary phase in a sigma S-dependent manner. otsA and otsB, which encode trehalose-6-phosphate synthase and trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase, respectively, are involved in sigma S-dependent stationary-phase thermotolerance. Neither sigma S nor trehalose, however, is required for the development of adaptive thermotolerance in growing cells, which might be controlled by sigma E.
PMCID:212585
PMID: 1744047
ISSN: 0021-9193
CID: 4350172

Trehalose transport and metabolism in Escherichia coli

Boos, W; Ehmann, U; Forkl, H; Klein, W; Rimmele, M; Postma, P
Trehalose metabolism in Escherichia coli is complicated by the fact that cells grown at high osmolarity synthesize internal trehalose as an osmoprotectant, independent of the carbon source, although trehalose can serve as a carbon source at both high and low osmolarity. The elucidation of the pathway of trehalose metabolism was facilitated by the isolation of mutants defective in the genes encoding transport proteins and degradative enzymes. The analysis of the phenotypes of these mutants and of the reactions catalyzed by the enzymes in vitro allowed the formulation of the degradative pathway at low osmolarity. Thus, trehalose utilization begins with phosphotransferase (IITre/IIIGlc)-mediated uptake delivering trehalose-6-phosphate to the cytoplasm. It continues with hydrolysis to trehalose and proceeds by splitting trehalose, releasing one glucose residue with the simultaneous transfer of the other to a polysaccharide acceptor. The enzyme catalyzing this reaction was named amylotrehalase. Amylotrehalase and EIITre were induced by trehalose in the medium but not at high osmolarity. treC and treB encoding these two enzymes mapped at 96.5 min on the E. coli linkage map but were not located in the same operon. Use of a mutation in trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase allowed demonstration of the phosphoenolpyruvate- and IITre-dependent in vitro phosphorylation of trehalose. The phenotype of this mutant indicated that trehalose-6-phosphate is the effective in vivo inducer of the system.
PMCID:209157
PMID: 2160944
ISSN: 0021-9193
CID: 4350202

Unusual complications of mercurial (cinnabar) tattoo. Generalized eczematous eruption following laceration of a tattoo [Case Report]

Biro L; Klein WP
PMID: 6039153
ISSN: 0003-987x
CID: 16503

XERODERMA PIGMENTOSUM [Meeting Abstract]

KLEIN, WP
ISI:A19679127000039
ISSN: 0003-987x
CID: 1524982