Sam Bussy - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Sam Bussy

Research paper thumbnail of Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson

Research paper thumbnail of Bullous pemphigoid: a correlative study of autoantibodies, circulating immune complexes and dermo‐epidermal deposits

British Journal of …, 1982

Twenty bullous pemphigoid (BP) patients were studied to establish any correlation between free an... more Twenty bullous pemphigoid (BP) patients were studied to establish any correlation between free anti-basement membrane zone (BMZ) antibodies, circulating immune complexes (CIC) and dermo-epidermal junction deposits. CIC levels were evaluated by 2% polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation. The twenty patients were found to have IgG and/or C3 deposited in the BMZ. Eight of the twelve patients who had no free anti-BMZ antibodies displayed a positive in vivo C4 and/or CIq staining and high levels of CIC. Moreover, CIC were detected in only one patient with positive circulating free anti-BMZ antibodies. The presence of free anti-BMZ antibodies was generally found to correlate with the absence of cutaneous deposits of CIq and /or C4 and with negative CIC; on the other hand, the absence of free anti-BMZ antibodies was generally found to correlate with high levels of CIC and with deposits of C3 and CIq and/or C4. The absence of circulating free anti-BMZ antibodies in BP patients, could be explained by the formation of CIC. It is possible that BMZ antigens released from damaged tissue could combine with free antibodies and form complexes in the blood. The release could involve locally formed immune complexes. Elevated CIC levels were generally found to correlate with the presence of active disease.

Research paper thumbnail of U–Pb and Rb–Sr geochronology of magmatism and metamorphism in the Dalradian of Connemara, western Ireland

Journal of the Geological …, 1996

... in black, titanite from pegmatite stippled, other symbols refer to fractions of titanite from... more ... in black, titanite from pegmatite stippled, other symbols refer to fractions of titanite from the diopside rock, recalculated from Cliff et al. ... that this is consistent with recent revision of the geological interpretation of the metamorphic history of the Scottish Dalradian (Tanner & Leslie ...

Research paper thumbnail of review Viroids: an Ariadne's thread into the RNA labyrinth

Viroids are structurally, functionally and evolutionarily different from viruses. Despite their s... more Viroids are structurally, functionally and evolutionarily different from viruses. Despite their small, non-protein-encoding, singlestranded circular RNA genome, viroids can infect higher plants and cause certain diseases. Members of the two viroid families, Pospiviroidae and Avsunviroidae, have evolved to usurp the transcriptional machinery of their host nuclei and chloroplasts, respectively, in which replication proceeds through a rolling-circle mechanism involving RNA polymerization, cleavage and ligation. Remarkably, viroids subvert certain DNA-dependent RNA polymerases to transcribe RNA templates, and, in the family Avsunviroidae, post-transcriptional cleavage is catalysed by hammerhead ribozymes. Viroids are models for studying RNA evolution and for analysing RNA transport in plants, because they can move intracellularly, intercellularly through plasmodesmata and to distal parts of the plant through the vascular system. Viroids elicit RNA-silencing phenomena, which might mediate some of their biological properties, including pathogenesis. As some viroids behave as catalytic RNAs, they are regarded as remnants of the RNA world.

Research paper thumbnail of The roundhead: an original drama in three acts

Research paper thumbnail of Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson

Research paper thumbnail of Bullous pemphigoid: a correlative study of autoantibodies, circulating immune complexes and dermo‐epidermal deposits

British Journal of …, 1982

Twenty bullous pemphigoid (BP) patients were studied to establish any correlation between free an... more Twenty bullous pemphigoid (BP) patients were studied to establish any correlation between free anti-basement membrane zone (BMZ) antibodies, circulating immune complexes (CIC) and dermo-epidermal junction deposits. CIC levels were evaluated by 2% polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation. The twenty patients were found to have IgG and/or C3 deposited in the BMZ. Eight of the twelve patients who had no free anti-BMZ antibodies displayed a positive in vivo C4 and/or CIq staining and high levels of CIC. Moreover, CIC were detected in only one patient with positive circulating free anti-BMZ antibodies. The presence of free anti-BMZ antibodies was generally found to correlate with the absence of cutaneous deposits of CIq and /or C4 and with negative CIC; on the other hand, the absence of free anti-BMZ antibodies was generally found to correlate with high levels of CIC and with deposits of C3 and CIq and/or C4. The absence of circulating free anti-BMZ antibodies in BP patients, could be explained by the formation of CIC. It is possible that BMZ antigens released from damaged tissue could combine with free antibodies and form complexes in the blood. The release could involve locally formed immune complexes. Elevated CIC levels were generally found to correlate with the presence of active disease.

Research paper thumbnail of U–Pb and Rb–Sr geochronology of magmatism and metamorphism in the Dalradian of Connemara, western Ireland

Journal of the Geological …, 1996

... in black, titanite from pegmatite stippled, other symbols refer to fractions of titanite from... more ... in black, titanite from pegmatite stippled, other symbols refer to fractions of titanite from the diopside rock, recalculated from Cliff et al. ... that this is consistent with recent revision of the geological interpretation of the metamorphic history of the Scottish Dalradian (Tanner & Leslie ...

Research paper thumbnail of review Viroids: an Ariadne's thread into the RNA labyrinth

Viroids are structurally, functionally and evolutionarily different from viruses. Despite their s... more Viroids are structurally, functionally and evolutionarily different from viruses. Despite their small, non-protein-encoding, singlestranded circular RNA genome, viroids can infect higher plants and cause certain diseases. Members of the two viroid families, Pospiviroidae and Avsunviroidae, have evolved to usurp the transcriptional machinery of their host nuclei and chloroplasts, respectively, in which replication proceeds through a rolling-circle mechanism involving RNA polymerization, cleavage and ligation. Remarkably, viroids subvert certain DNA-dependent RNA polymerases to transcribe RNA templates, and, in the family Avsunviroidae, post-transcriptional cleavage is catalysed by hammerhead ribozymes. Viroids are models for studying RNA evolution and for analysing RNA transport in plants, because they can move intracellularly, intercellularly through plasmodesmata and to distal parts of the plant through the vascular system. Viroids elicit RNA-silencing phenomena, which might mediate some of their biological properties, including pathogenesis. As some viroids behave as catalytic RNAs, they are regarded as remnants of the RNA world.

Research paper thumbnail of The roundhead: an original drama in three acts