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3894311
The relationship between age, live weight, body composition and energy status on the onset and maintenance of reproductive activity in females is reviewed. When possible, swine studies have been employed, although, of necessity, much data are drawn from other species. The relationship between age, weight and puberty is controversial. However, from the available data we conclude that neither age nor weight are reliable indices of reproductive development, but that minimum threshold values for these characteristics must be achieved before puberty can occur. Human data provides a strong indication that a minimum adipose to lean tissue ratio is a prerequisite for puberty onset. Limited data from swine support this contention and indeed it may be a superior measure of reproductive development than either age or weight. However, the value of this ratio remains to be defined in pigs, and again it is minimum threshold level, the attainment of which is necessary, but not in itself sufficient, for puberty onset. A positive energy balance seems to be necessary for puberty onset and the maintenance of estrous cycles in some species, but this has not been investigated in swine. The mechanisms whereby adiposity and energy status influences reproduction are discussed. Human studies demonstrate a negative correlation between energy status, body fatness and plasma gonadotrophin levels. Also, adipose tissue has the ability to metabolize sex steroids, aromatizing androgens to estrogens and changing the direction of estrogen metabolism to produce more or less biologically potent estrogens.
3894312
Differentiation of rat skeletal muscle satellite cells was studied in vitro. Linoleic acid and insulin, two unrelated compounds that reportedly stimulate differentiation of other types of myogenic cells, were used to examine the regulation of differentiation in satellite cell cultures. As in cultures of chick embryo muscle cells, linoleic acid stimulated fusion but only at low serum concentrations or in defined medium without fibroblast growth factor (FGF). The effects of insulin on differentiation were quite variable, however; at very low cell densities no stimulatory effect was observed. In intermediate and, to a lesser extent, high density satellite cell cultures, the addition of insulin at concentrations between .01 and 1.0 microM stimulated satellite cell fusion. Whenever increases in fusion were observed, however, a parallel increase in cell number was also found. A closer examination of the relationship between differentiation and the presence or absence of mitogenic agents in the medium suggested that a mitogenic signal and the resultant proliferation of cells prevented differentiation. Subsequent experiments indicated that fusion could be induced by lower serum concentration or by removal of FGF, as long as linoleic acid was present in the medium. Therefore, proliferation and differentiation appear to be antagonistic processes in cultured satellite cells. If the rate of proliferation is depressed, either by mitogen removal or by increasing cell density, differentiation is favored. Differentiation can, therefore, be regulated and applied to in vitro studies of satellite cell activity.
3894313
A method is described for the attachment to and monolayer culture of adult rat hepatocytes on collagen-coated or fibronectin-coated microbeads or both in a chemically defined serum-free medium. Protein synthesis measured by the incorporation of [3H]leucine into protein was four-fold higher in the hepatocyte microcarrier cultures than in isolated hepatocyte suspensions. The hepatocyte microcarrier cultures showed acute responsiveness to insulin of fatty acid synthesis, glucose incorporation into glycogen, and decarboxylation of [1-14 C]pyruvate. Microcarrier-cultured hepatocytes have the combined advantages of monolayer culture and suspension systems. They are a potential tool for the study of long-term as well as acute effects of hormones.
3894314
The addition of certain proteases to cultures of Friend virus-infected mouse erythroleukemia cells can induce up to 90% of the cells in culture to become hemoglobin-containing, as assessed by positive staining for benzidine (B+). Because the mechanism of this protease action is unknown, media components were studied as possible targets for protease activity. Aliquots of medium plus serum were incubated for various times with levels of protease sufficient to induce approximately 50% of the cells to the B+ state. Cells were added to protease-pretreated serum either before or after inactivation of the protease. In all cases, enzymatically active protease had to be present with the cells to induce B+ cells to form. Serum and other components of the medium pretreated with protease were inactive. Mouse erythroleukemia cells grown in the absence of serum were also induced by proteases to form B+ cells. These data imply that the inducing action of proteases cannot be passively transferred by protease-pretreated serum or medium nor is serum required for protease-mediated induction of B+ cells. Taken together, these conclusions suggest that the protease action is on the cells or on cellular products intimately associated with cells.
3894315
Primary avian tendon cells maintain a higher percentage of net collagen synthesis when cultured in low serum concentrations than in high. However, under these conditions the cells grow slowly and can only be subcultured one or two times. We therefore examined various growth factors for their effects on tendon cell multiplication in order to develop a new medium for these cells. Of the growth factors tested, epidermal growth factor, insulin, transferrin, and selenium each stimulated tendon cell division. We also investigated how these factors affected collagen synthesis, and found that they all increased both collagen and noncollagen protein synthesis equally, thus leaving the percentage of protein synthesis devoted to collagen the same. When combined with 0.2% fetal bovine serum in Ham's F12 medium, epidermal growth factor and insulin together stimulated cell multiplication to a level comparable to that of cells grown in Ham's F12 plus 10% serum. Cells could also be successfully subcultured in this medium. Thus, by using selected growth factors we have reduced significantly the serum requirements of cultured tendon cells without affecting population doubling time or subculture capability. This low-serum medium should prove useful for the study of the regulation of collagen biosynthesis.
3894316
In order to define humoral growth factors which may regulate mammalian renal development, the growth requirements of fetal metanephric organogenesis were studied in serum-free murine organ culture. Metanephric growth, determined by cell proliferation and protein content, and metanephric differentiation, determined morphometrically as epithelial glomerular formation, were compared and contrasted following 144 hours of organ culture incubation in basal medium, basal medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, and basal medium supplemented with various combinations of growth factors. The basal medium was composed of equal volumes of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium and Ham's F-12 medium. Five humoral growth factors were studied in the following concentrations: selenium, 6.8 X 10(-9) M; insulin, 8.3 X 10(-7) M; triiodothyronine, 2 X 10(-9) M; transferrin, 6.2 X 10(-8) M; and prostaglandin E1, 7.1 X 10(-8) M. Results showed that transferrin and prostaglandin E1 were necessary for optimal growth in the system and that prostaglandin E1 was necessary for maximal metanephric differentiation. Such data provide guidelines for the creation of serum-free medium for future fetal renal cell and tissue culture systems, and provide insight into the factors which may regulate normal and abnormal renal embryogenesis and the reparative processes of renal hyperplasia and hypertrophy which follow renal injury.
3894318
The commercial source of fetal bovine serum used to supplement the growth medium of human skin fibroblasts alters the activity of the lysosomal enzyme dipeptidyl aminopeptidase-1 (DAP-1). Cells grown with one serum were found to have a threefold higher level of DAP-1 than those grown with serum from another source (P less than 0.001). The effect on DAP-1 activity was specific inasmuch as no differences were found in the activities of a variety of other lysosomal and nonlysosomal hydrolases: DAP-II, DAP-III, DAP-IV, beta-glucosidase, beta-glucuronidase, and N-acetyl-beta-galactosaminidase. The effect is reversible and is observed over a wide range of cell population doublings. Cell growth kinetics were not significantly different with the different sera.
3894321
Tartrazine, a common additive in foods and drugs, often causes adverse reactions such as recurrent urticaria, angioedema, and asthma and is frequently implicated in hyperkinesis. This paper summarizes the recent literature on the subject and outlines a practical approach for the practicing physician to diagnose and treat these patients in an optimal manner.
3894319
An improved method has been developed for the determination of ethylene dibromide (EDB, 1,2-dibromoethane) in a variety of table-ready foods. Samples are mixed with water and sparged with nitrogen for 1 h with stirring in a water bath at 100 degrees C. The EDB collected on the adsorbent Tenax TA is eluted with hexane and determined by gas chromatography (GC) with electron capture (EC) and confirmed with Hall electrolytic conductivity (HECD) detection using a second GC column. The highest levels of EDB were also confirmed by full scan GC/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Twenty-five table-ready foods from the Food and Drug Administration's Total Diet Study that were analyzed by this method exhibited levels up to 70 ppb (pecans). Recoveries from fortified samples ranged from 91 to 104%. Values from this procedure were compared to those obtained by a modified Rains and Holder codistillation method. In all 25 samples this purge and trap procedure showed equivalent or superior recoveries and detected levels of EDB.
3894325
Two membrane-bound hydrogenase isoenzymes present in Escherichia coli during anaerobic growth have been resolved. The isoenzymes are immunologically and electrophoretically distinct. The physically more abundant isoenzyme (hydrogenase 1) contains a subunit of Mr 64,000 and is not released from the membrane by exposure to either trypsin or pancreatin. The second isoenzyme (hydrogenase 2) apparently contributes the greater part of the membrane-bound hydrogen:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase activity and exists in two electrophoretic forms revealed by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel analysis. This isoenzyme is irreversibly inactivated at alkaline pH and gives rise to an active, soluble derivative when the membrane-bound enzyme is exposed to either trypsin or pancreatin. Both hydrogenase isoenzymes contain nickel.
3894326
The synthesis of rRNA was unbalanced by the introduction of plasmids containing rRNA operons with large internal deletions. Significant unbalanced synthesis was achieved only when the deletions affected both 16S and 23S RNA genes or when the deletions affected the 23S RNA gene alone. Although large imbalances in rRNA synthesis resulted from deletions affecting 16S and 23S RNA genes or only 23S RNA genes, excess 16S RNA and defective rRNA species were rapidly degraded. Large imbalances in the synthesis of regions of rRNA did not result in significantly unbalanced synthesis of ribosomal proteins. It therefore is probable that excess intact 16S RNA is degraded because ribosomal proteins are not available for packaging the RNA into ribosomes. Defective RNA species also may be degraded for this reason or because proper ribosome assembly is prevented by the defects in RNA structure. We propose two possible explanations for the finding that unbalanced overproduction of binding sites for feedback ribosomal protein does not result in significant unbalanced translational feedback depression of ribosomal protein mRNAs.
3894320
Shigella species were recovered from foods by the procedure described in the Bacteriological Analytical Manual, 5th Ed. The method is effective if Shigella species are present at about 10(6) cells/g. A 25 g food portion was incubated in Gram-negative (GN) and selenite cystine broths for 16 h at 35 degrees C and streaked onto MacConkey, Levine's eosin methylene blue, desoxycholate citrate, and xylose lysine desoxycholate agars. S. sonnei cells were recovered quantitatively at 44.5 degrees C, and along with other Shigella species, were grown with Escherichia coli in a tryptone broth under anaerobic conditions. Shigella species were also grown in a mixed microflora from foods. S. sonnei cells were inoculated into an enrichment broth containing 20 g tryptone, 2 g K2HPO4, 2 g KH2PO4, 1 g glucose, 5 g NaCl, 1.5 mL Tween 80, and 0.5 mg novobiocin/L (pH 7.0) and incubated for 20 h at 44 degrees C. Enrichments were streaked onto MacConkey agar and the plates were incubated 20 h at 35 degrees C. Suspect Shigella colonies were screened in glucose, tryptone, and lysine broths and in triple sugar iron and motility agars. The sensitivity varied from 0.3 to 1000 bacteria/g. The method has been examined with artificially inoculated lettuce, celery, brussels sprouts, mushrooms, and hamburger. It is also applicable to S. flexneri if incubation is conducted at 42 degrees C.
3894327
Growth of Salmonella typhimurium pyrC or pyrD auxotrophs was severely inhibited in media that caused derepressed pyr gene expression. No such inhibition was observed with derepressed pyrA and pyrB auxotrophs. Growth inhibition was not due to the depletion of essential pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway intermediates or substrates. This result and the pattern of inhibition indicated that the accumulation of the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway intermediate carbamyl aspartate was toxic. This intermediate is synthesized by the sequential action of the first two enzymes of the pathway encoded by pyrA and pyrB and is a substrate for the pyrC gene product. It should accumulate to high levels in pyrC or pyrD mutants when expression of the pyrA and pyrB genes is elevated. The introduction of either a pyrA or pyrB mutation into a pyrC strain eliminated the observed growth inhibition. Additionally, a direct correlation was shown between the severity of growth inhibition of a pyrC auxotroph and the levels of the enzymes that synthesize carbamyl aspartate. The mechanism of carbamyl aspartate toxicity was not identified, but many potential sites of growth inhibition were excluded. Carbamyl aspartate toxicity was shown to be useful as a phenotypic trait for classifying pyrimidine auxotrophs and may also be useful for positive selection of pyrA or pyrB mutants. Finally, we discuss ways of overcoming growth inhibition of pyrC and pyrD mutants under derepressing conditions.
3894328
The biosynthetic form of arginine decarboxylase (ADC) catalyzes the synthesis of agmatine, a precursor of putrescine, in Escherichia coli. Selective disruption of the cell envelope and an assessment of ADC activity or immunoprecipitable ADC in various fractions demonstrated its location between the cytoplasmic membrane and peptidoglycan layer. Expression in minicells of the speA gene encoding ADC resulted in the production of two immunoprecipitable species (74 and 70 kilodaltons). Studies in vivo with a pulse and chase of radiolabeled amino acid into the two species suggest a precursor-product relationship. This relationship was corroborated by demonstrating the accumulation of the 74-kilodalton species in a strain of E. coli unable to process signal sequences. Peptide mapping experiments with V8 protease, trypsin, and alpha-chymotrypsin demonstrated that the two species of ADC were very similar except for a minor difference. These data were used to substantiate the compartmentalization hypothesis as to how exogenous arginine can be channeled preferentially into putrescine.
3894329
The spoT gene of Salmonella typhimurium has been identified. Mutations in spoT map between gltC and pyrE at 79 min. The spoT1 mutant has elevated levels of guanosine 5'-diphosphate-3'-diphosphate (ppGpp) during steady-state growth and exhibits a slower than normal decay of ppGpp after reversal of amino acid starvation. The spoT1 mutation elevates his operon expression but is distinct from known his regulatory mutations. Elevated his operon expression in spoT mutants causes resistance to the histidine analogs, 1,2,4-triazole-3-alanine and 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. These properties of spoT mutants allowed us to identify and characterize additional spoT mutants. Approximately 40% of these mutants are temperature sensitive for growth on minimal medium, suggesting that the spoT function is essential or that excessive accumulation of ppGpp is lethal.
3894330
Double mutants which carry mutations in genes (rodA, pbpA) required for cell elongation (i.e., maintenance of rod shape) in combination with mutations in genes (ftsA, ftsI, ftsQ, or ftsZ) required for septation were constructed. Such mutants were able to grow for about two mass doublings at a normal rate at the restrictive temperature (42 degrees C). The morphology of the cells formed under these conditions was interpreted by assuming the existence of a generalized system for peptidoglycan growth together with two additional systems which modify the shape of the growing peptidoglycan layer. The results also showed that different fts genes probably control different stages in septation. ftsZ (sulB or sfiB) appears to be required for the earliest step in septation, ftsQ and ftsI (pbpB or sep) are required for a later step or steps, and ftsA is required only for the latest stages in septation.
3894331
We isolated mutants of Escherichia coli in which the maltose-binding protein (MBP) is no longer required for growth on maltose as the sole source of carbon and energy. These mutants were selected as Mal+ revertants of a strain which carries a deletion of the MBP structural gene, malE. In one class of these mutants, maltose is transported into the cell independently of MBP by the remaining components of the maltose system. The mutations in these strains map in either malF or malG. These genes code for two of the cytoplasmic membrane components of the maltose transport system. In some of the mutants, MBP actually inhibits maltose transport. We demonstrate that these mutants still transport maltose actively and in a stereospecific manner. These results suggest that the malF and malG mutations result in exposure of a substrate recognition site that is usually available only to substrates bound to MBP.
3894332
A computer simulation routine has been made to calculate the DNA distributions of exponentially growing cultures of Escherichia coli. Calculations were based on a previously published model (S. Cooper and C.E. Helmstetter, J. Mol. Biol. 31:519-540, 1968). Simulated distributions were compared with experimental DNA distributions (histograms) recorded by flow cytometry. Cell cycle parameters were determined by varying the parameters to find the best fit of theoretical to experimental histograms. A culture of E. coli B/r A with a doubling time of 27 min was found to have a DNA replication period (C) of 43 min and an average postreplication period (D) of 22 to 23 min. Similar cell cycle parameters were found for a 60-min B/r A culture. Initiations of DNA replication at multiple origins in one and the same cell were shown to be essentially synchronous. A slowly growing B/r A culture (doubling time, 5.5 h) had an average prereplication period (B) of 2.3 h; C = 2.4 h and D = 0.8 h. It was concluded the the C period has a constant duration of 43 min (at 37 degrees C) at fast growth rates (doubling times, less than 1 h) but increases at slow growth rates. Thus, our results obtained with unperturbed exponential cultures in steady state support the model of Cooper and Helmstetter which was based on data obtained with synchronized cells.
3894333
The phenomena of flocculation and floc formation by Azospirillum brasilense Sp7 (ATCC 29145) and Azospirillum lipoferum Sp59b (ATCC 29707) were studied in aerobic liquid cultures. Carbon sources representative of various entry pathways in combination with various nitrogen sources induced flocculation in both species of azospirilla. Noticeably, the combination of fructose and nitrate was the most effective in terms of floc yields. Phase-contrast microscopic observations revealed a transition in cell morphology from freely motile, vibrioid cells to nonmotile, highly refractile encysting forms during the formation of flocs. The nonmotile forms in flocs appeared to be entangled within a fibrillar matrix, and the cells were highly resistant to desiccation. Dried flocs kept for almost 6 months still maintained the highly refractile encysting forms, and their viability was confirmed by pellicle formation and acetylene reduction in semisolid malate medium. Electron microscopic observations of the desiccated flocs revealed the presence of cell forms containing abundant poly beta-hydroxybutyrate granules within a central body and surrounded by a thick layer of exopolysaccharides. The latter were characterized by alkali and acid digestion, crude cellulase hydrolysis, and calcofluor staining. It was concluded that the overproduction of exocellular polymers induces the flocculent growth and is associated with the concomitant transformation of vegetative cells to the desiccation-resistant encysting forms under limiting cultural conditions.
3894334
A new rff mutation (rff-726) of Escherichia coli is described which affects the biosynthesis of the enterobacterial common antigen. This mutation was detected in an rfe-defective strain. A Tn10 insertion near the rfe locus was isolated to facilitate further mapping. Both mutations rfe and rff were mapped by transduction with bacteriophage P1, giving the gene order ilv rfe rff uvrD metE. The F' factor F14 was able to complement both mutations rfe and rff, whereas the F' factor F16 could complement the rfe but not the rff mutation. The rff mutation did not affect the biosynthesis of N-acetyl-D-mannosaminuronic acid, as the previously described rff mutations in Salmonella typhimurium do (H. C. Lew, H. Nikaido, and P. H. Mäkelä, J. Bacteriol. 136:227-233, 1978), and also did not affect the biosynthesis of other enterobacterial common antigen components; however, the biosynthesis of the complete enterobacterial common antigen molecule was blocked.
3894335
Published studies of gene density (the number of genetic loci per unit of length on the linkage map) for Escherichia coli report a nonrandom frequency distribution and indicate notable symmetry in spatial clustering of gene density. We reexamined these results and found that gene density is a random variable with a frequency distribution that is lognormal. That is, the logarithm of gene density is a normally distributed random variable. Furthermore, comparison of the observed E. coli map and computer-generated random maps showed that symmetries in the spatial clustering of gene density are not exceptional; these features arise naturally among genes (or loci) whose density has this frequency distribution. These results are discussed along with other related examples that illustrate the emerging importance of statistical inference in molecular genetics.
3894336
The Lithium Information Center's experience over the past 7 years is discussed. The center is a computer-based reference service which specializes in dissemination of information about the medical uses of lithium. At the heart of the center is the Lithium Library, a bibliographic retrieval system containing references to the lithium literature. More than 5,000 requests for literature searches and patient information have been answered by Lithium Library staff members since 1977. The center has recently expanded its services, creating the Lithium Index and Lithium Consultation, computerized programs that provide immediate answers to specific questions about lithium. The center's services are directed to patient care, lithium research, and medical and patient education. Because of topical specialization and use of computers, the Lithium Information Center has been able to provide more immediate, comprehensive, relevant, integrated, and up-to-date information than other bibliographic services.
3894337
The comparative efficacy of molindone and haloperidol, given by injection for the first 2-3 days of hospitalization and then continued orally for up to 4 weeks, is reported from an ongoing double-blind study. Efficacy and side effects were assessed by the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Clinical Global Impressions, Treatment Emergent Symptom Scale, and Target Symptom Ratings. Analyses based on the first 35 patients who entered the study indicate that both drugs were effective and well tolerated. There were slight advantages for molindone early during the injectable phase of treatment and for haloperidol late during the oral portion of the study, but these differences were not clinically significant. No significant differences in side effects were found between the two drugs.
3894338
Treatment-emergent symptoms and behavioral changes were assessed during an 8-week double-blind study comparing molindone and thioridazine in 31 aggressive hospitalized children (ages 6-11). Molindone was found to be as effective as thioridazine in this sample. Adverse effects differed (nonsignificantly) for the two groups, with more sedation in the thioridazine-treated children. Clinical records from 6 adolescent inpatients treated with molindone were reviewed as a comparison group. Molindone is a relatively safe neuroleptic for child and adolescent inpatients because of its short half-life and minimal prolonged tissue accumulation. Additional studies on different child populations are necessary before the proper indications for molindone usage in the pediatric group can be established.
3894339
Elderly patients (N = 28) with a variety of psychiatric disorders were treated with molindone in an 8-week open clinical trial. Many patients had concomitant medical illnesses, and many were on other medications in addition to molindone. Molindone appeared to be safe, clinically effective, and well-tolerated. The most common adverse effects were extrapyramidal side effects, but the occurrence of these symptoms was relatively low.
3894340
The literature concerning the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, receptor physiology, and clinical use of molindone is reviewed. Unanswered questions about the drug are addressed. Although molindone is reputed to have a short half-life (1.5 hours), clinical observations report a prolonged effect from a once-daily dose. Early in treatment, some patients show intolerance due to akathisia or extrapyramidal symptoms. This may be withdrawal dyskinesia due to discontinuation of another drug or an early adverse effect of molindone. Different effects on dopamine receptors have been described, but the significance of these properties for the development of tardive dyskinesia remains unclear.
3894341
Sodium butyrate prevented the accumulation of casein mRNA induced by the combined action of prolactin and glucocorticoid in the presence of insulin in the cultured mammary gland. This inhibition was reversible and dose-dependent. In addition to the inhibition of the mRNA induction, both nuclear histone acetylase and deacetylase activities were inhibited by the incubation of the glands with butyrate, whereas these enzyme activities were stimulated by glucocorticoid and prolactin, or by glucocorticoid alone, in the presence of insulin. These data strongly suggest that the increased metabolism of histone acetyl groups is involved in the hormone-mediated casein mRNA induction and that glucocorticoid plays a preferential role on this increased metabolism.
3894342
Tryptophanase purified from Escherichia coli B/It7-A was irreversibly inactivated by 3-bromopyruvate following pseudo-first-order kinetics. The inactivation rate for the holoenzyme tended to saturate as the concentration f bromopyruvate increased. L-Alanine and DL-3-phenylserine, potent competitive inhibitors with respect to L-tryptophan decomposition, protected the enzyme from inactivation. Titration of SH groups in the enzyme protein with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) showed that modification of one SH group per enzyme subunit resulted in a complete inactivation. When the enzyme was subjected to bromopyruvate-modification following pretreatment with DTNB, the activity was almost completely restored upon reduction with dithiothreitol. Modification of the enzyme with bromopyruvate quenched the absorption peak near 500 nm, characteristic of a quinoidal structure formed by labilization of the alpha-proton. These results support the possibility that bromopyruvate reacts with the enzyme as an affinity labeling agent.
3894343
Antigens prepared from culture supernatants or whole cells of several cariogenic strains were examined by immunoelectrophoresis for their crossed antigenicity, with reference to Streptococcus mutans OMZ175, serotype f. Crossed immunoelectrophoresis revealed a crossreactivity between soluble extracellular and wall associated antigens of six strains of Streptococcus mutans and one strain of Streptococcus sanguis. Protease destroyed the immunoreactivity of crossreactive antigens. One of them was shown to be localized on the bacterial surface.
3894344
Denture plaque has been studied by transmission electron microscopy in glycolmethacrylate-embedded specimens from six patients presenting with typical denture stomatitis. Different types of thin and thick pellicles were found applied to the denture surface. These were in contact with a denture plaque made up predominantly of loosely packed Gram- positive and Gram- negative bacteria. Rounded, rod-shaped and filamentous micro-organisms were all evident. Group of Candida albicans with normal ultrastructure were noted in some limited zones. When surrounded by bacteria, especially by bacteria in corn-cob configurations the Candida showed cytological signs of degeneration. In one case out of six a bacterial penetration of the acrylic denture base was observed, through narrow and straight channels and subsurface cavities filled with micro-organisms. Bacterial penetration was also seen in the most superficial cell layers of the palatal mucous membrane.
3894345
GMP synthetase (EC 6.3.4.1), a glutamine amido-transferase encoded by the guaA gene, catalyzes the synthesis of GMP from XMP. The guaA gene was subcloned from the Clarke and Carbon (Clarke, L., and Carbon, J. (1976) Cell 9, 91-99) plasmid pLC34-10, and the nucleotide sequence was determined. The structural gene encodes a protein of 525 amino acid residues having a calculated Mr of 58,604. The amino acid sequence of the NH2 terminus of GMP synthetase was determined and used to verify the translation start site determined from the DNA sequence. A 68-base pair intercistronic region separates guaA from the upstream guaB gene in the polycistronic guaBA operon. The 3' end of the guaA mRNA was determined by S1 nuclease mapping. The 3' end of guaA mRNA is 36-37 nucleotides downstream of the translation stop codon within a region of dyad symmetry that resembles a rho-independent transcription termination site.
3894346
The ribonuclease resistance assay has been used to probe the effect of trypsin modification of the Escherichia coli elongation factor Tu X GTP on the interaction with E. coli aminoacyl-tRNAs. First, the equilibrium dissociation constant of the trypsin-modified Tu X GTP X Thr-tRNA complex was determined to be 2.3 (0.1) X 10(-5)M at 4 degrees C, pH 7.4. Second, binding of 17 of 20 noninitiator aminoacyl-tRNAs and four sets of purified isoacceptor tRNAs to the modified protein was measured. At 4 degrees C, the complex stabilities vary 500-fold over the range of aminoacyl-tRNAs, with Gln-tRNA forming the strongest ternary complex and Val-tRNA, the weakest. The results are compared to a similar study of ternary complex formation using intact elongation factor Tu X GTP, and the major differences are discussed. An analysis of both data sets, particularly that for the leucine isoacceptor tRNAs, suggests that the trypsin modification of elongation factor Tu X GTP disrupts a region of protein that is involved with the aminoacyl side chain rather than that of the acceptor stem helix region of the aminoacyl-tRNA.
3894347
The synthesis of osteocalcin, the major non-collagenous protein of adult bone, was examined in cultures of 21-day fetal rat calvariae. Osteocalcin was measured by a sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay. Osteocalcin concentration in unincubated calvariae was 14.5 +/- 0.5 ng/calvaria. After incubation, there was a continuous increase in bone and medium osteocalcin, and by 96 h the values were about 100% higher than in unincubated calvariae. 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25-(OH)2D3) at 10(-11) to 10(-8)M increased osteocalcin synthesis. The effect appeared as early as 6 h after treatment and was primarily observed in the culture medium, and 1,25-(OH)2D3 stimulated osteocalcin up to 9-fold by 96 h. Concomitant with the effect on osteocalcin synthesis, 1,25-(OH)2D3 inhibited collagen synthesis. Cycloheximide markedly decreased osteocalcin concentrations in control and 1,25-(OH)2D3-treated calvariae. The stimulatory effect on osteocalcin synthesis was specific to 1,25-(OH)2D3 since 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, parathyroid hormone, epidermal growth factor, and prostaglandin E2 did not stimulate osteocalcin synthesis, and parathyroid hormone and epidermal growth factor opposed the 1,25-(OH)2D3 stimulatory effect. Insulin did not alter osteocalcin concentration by itself but enhanced the effect of 1,25-(OH)2D3. In conclusion, 1,25-(OH)2D3 stimulates osteocalcin synthesis in cultures of normal calvariae, but this effect is not shared by other hormones known to affect bone metabolism.
3894348
The repair of O6-methylguanine present in N-methylnitrosourea (MNU)-treated alternating polynucleotides MNU-poly(dG-dC) X poly(dG-dC) and MNU-poly(dG-me5dC) X poly(dG-me5dC] was investigated using O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase purified from Escherichia coli. Both modified polynucleotides are equally good substrates for the DNA methyltransferase when they are in the B-form. The substrate properties of the MNU-treated polynucleotides do not differ from those of MNU-treated DNA. One of these modified polynucleotides, MNU-poly(dG-me5dC) X (dG-me5dC), can adopt the Z-conformation under physiological conditions. The conformational transition of the poly(dG-me5dC) X poly(dG-me5dC) from the B-form to the Z-form was monitored by the modification of its spectroscopic properties and by the specific binding of antibodies raised against Z-DNA. The O6-methylguanine residues are repaired in MNU-poly(dG-me5dC) X poly(dG-me5dC) in B-form. At variance, the conversion of this template to the Z-form completely inhibits the repair of the O6-methylguanine residues. The cooperative transition from the Z- to the B-form of MNU-poly(dG-me5dC) X poly(dG-me5dC), mediated by intercalating drugs such as ethidium bromide, restores the ability of MNU-poly(dG-me5dC) X poly(dG-me5dC) to be substrate for the transferase. These results imply that the promutagenic DNA lesion O6-methylguanine persists in Z-DNA fragments and suggest that DNA conformation modulates the extent of DNA repair and, as a result, plays an important role in determining the mutagenic potency of chemical carcinogens.
3894349
The solvent structure of alpha-chymotrypsin has been determined in the restrained least squares refinement (1.67-A resolution) of the dimeric molecule (Blevins, R. A., and Tulinsky, A. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 4264-4275). A total of 247 water molecules reduced the R-factor by 0.039 to 0.179. The average occupancy of solvent is 0.77 and the average isotropic thermal parameter is 22 A2. About 80% of the solvent is around the surface, 10% is in the dimer interface, and 10% is interior. There are 49 pairs of water molecules related by 2-fold noncrystallographic symmetry (within 1.0 A) and 199 waters that can potentially hydrogen bond with protein or themselves. The specificity sites contain 5 water molecules, 2 of which are displaced by substrate binding. The remainder probably aid in identifying and positioning the latter for catalysis. Four of these waters also occur in gamma-chymotrypsin. Considering the water structure in the dimer interface region of alpha-chymotrypsin with that of gamma-chymotrypsin reveals that about two-thirds of the solvent in this region is lost on dimerization. Last, 4 of the water molecules of alpha-chymotrypsin have been identified to be sulfate ions from a difference map based on crystals with selenate exchanged mother liquor.
3894350
Equilibrium dialysis and protection from heat inactivation and proteolysis show that initiation factor 2 (IF-2) interacts not only with GTP but also with GDP and that its conformation is changed upon binding of either nucleotide. The apparent Ka (at 25 degrees C) for the IF-2 X GDP and IF-2 X GTP complexes was 8.0 X 10(4) and 7.0 X 10(3) M(-1), respectively. The lower affinity for GTP is associated with a more negative delta S0. The interaction, monitored by 1HNMR spectroscopy, is characterized by fast exchange and results in line broadening and downfield shift of the purine C-8 and ribose C-1' protons of GTP as well as of the beta, gamma-methylene protons of (beta-gamma-methylene)guanosine 5'-triphosphate. The interaction of guanosine nucleotides with IF-2 requires an H bond donor (or acceptor) group at position C-2 of the purine and involves the beta- and/or gamma-phosphate of the nucleotide while the ribose 2'-OH group or the integrity of the furan ring are less critical. IF-2 binds to ribosomal particles with decreasing affinity: 30 S greater than 70 S greater than 50 S. GTP and GDP have no effect on the binding to 70 S. GTP stimulates the binding to the 30 S and depresses somewhat the binding to the 50 S subunits; GDP has the opposite effect. These results seem to rule out that the release of IF 2 from 70 S is due to a "GDP-conformation" of the factor incompatible with its permanence on the ribosome. The rate and the extent of 30 S initiation complex formation are approximately 2-fold higher with IF-2 X GTP than with IF-2 alone. At low concentrations of IF-2 and 30 S subunits, GDP inhibits this reaction, acting as a strong competitive inhibitor of GTP (Ki = 1.25 X 10(-5)m) and preventing IF-2 from binding to the ribosomal subunit.
3894351
Spermatozoa of the California red abalone (Haliotis rufescens; Phylum Mollusca, order Archeogastropoda) possess an acrosomal protein that dissolves the egg vitelline layer during fertilization. Evidence strongly suggests that the dissolution mechanism is a stoichiometric, nonenzymatic process that depends on the hydrophobic nature of the sperm protein which should therefore be termed an egg-lysin. Here we report the complete amino acid sequence of this unique protein. Peptides obtained by cyanogen bromide cleavage and trypsin and V8 protease digestions were isolated and subjected to automated Edman degradation. Seven unique CNBr fragments accounted for the intact lysin and the proteolytically derived peptides were used to establish the order of these fragments. The protein is composed of 134 amino acids and contains 36 charged amino acids. The majority of these occur at distances of 2 or 3 residues from each other. A stretch of 41 amino acids contains 10 positively charged amino acids and no negatively charged residue. Model building experiments demonstrated that the charged residues that may occur in alpha-helical regions of the protein would occupy one-half of the circumference of such helices. The other half would display predominantly hydrophobic residues. This arrangement of the charged and hydrophobic residues may account for the biological properties of the lysin.
3894352
Consistent with its specialized role in DNA synthesis, the activity of ribonucleotide reductase is cell cycle-dependent, reaching its maximum during S-phase. This paper demonstrates, however, the levels of the two protein subunits, M1 and M2, of this enzyme vary independently of one another. The level of protein M1 was determined by use of a two-site monoclonal antibody-enzyme immunoassay and found to be constant throughout the cell cycle in bovine kidney MDBK cells. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the half-life of protein M1 was 15 h. This contrasts with our previous results demonstrating an S-phase-correlated increase in the concentration of protein M2 and a half-life of this subunit of 3 h. Therefore, ribonucleotide reductase is controlled during the cell cycle by the level of protein M2.
3894353
In the isolated Tyrode's perfused rabbit kidney, metabolism of [9-3H]prostacyclin was examined. In addition to 7,9-dihydroxy-4,13-diketo-dinor-prostanoic acid, dinor-6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha, and pentanorprostaglandin (PG)F1 alpha gamma-lactone, a new, previously unreported, metabolite was isolated and identified by radio-gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry as 5-hydroxy-6-keto-PGF1 alpha. The structure of this metabolite was further confirmed by comparison of the mass spectra to that of the synthetic standard. The formation of 5-hydroxy-6-keto-PGF1 alpha in the kidney suggested epoxidation of prostacyclin via the renal epoxygenase pathway.
3894354
The primary structure of human preprorenin has recently been determined from its cDNA sequence. It includes a 46-amino acid NH2-terminal prosegment. Six peptides corresponding to the entire prosegment (9-40), except for the NH2-terminal (1-8) and COOH-terminal (41-46) ends have been synthesized. These peptides were tested for their inhibitory effect on human plasma renin activity. Boc-Tyr-Thr-Thr-Phe-Lys-Arg-Ile-Phe-Leu-Lys-Arg-Met-Pro-OMe (where Boc represents t-butoxycarbonyl and OMe represents methoxy) (h Y(9-20) and its fragment Boc-Leu-Lys-Arg-Met-Pro-OMe h (16-20) were the most potent inhibitors with IC50 values of 2 X 10(-4) and 3 X 10(-4)M, respectively. Peptides located near the COOH-terminus were less inhibitory. The inhibitory capacity of h (16-20) was studied further on highly purified human renin acting on either pure human angiotensinogen or a synthetic human tetradecapeptide substrate. In both of these assays its inhibitory potency was about 10-fold greater than that found on plasma renin activity. Peptide h (16-20) was 3-6 times less potent in inhibiting human renin than its mouse counterpart m (15-19) was in inhibiting mouse renin. Kinetic studies carried out with h (16-20) showed a mixed type of inhibition. When human angiotensinogen was used as substrate, Ki and K'i values were 17.7 +/- 3.9 and 2.9 +/- 0.9 microM, respectively. These studies showed that human renin, like mouse renin and pepsin, can be inhibited by peptides derived from its prosegment. In addition, as in the case of pepsin, they suggest that the NH2-terminal part of the prosegment interacts more strongly with the active enzyme.
3894355
The prothrombin activator present in the venom of the mainland tiger snake (Notechis scutatus scutatus) was purified to homogeneity by gel chromatography on Sephadex G-200 followed by ion-exchange chromatography on SP-Sephadex. The venom activator has an apparent molecular weight of 54,000. It consists of a heavy chain (Mr = 32,000) and a light chain (Mr = 23,000) held together by one or more disulfide bridges. The active site is located at the heavy chain region of the molecule. The venom activator contains 8 gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues/molecule. Gel electrophoretic analysis of prothrombin activation indicates that the venom activator is capable of cleaving both the Arg 274-Thr 275 and Arg 323-Ile 324 bonds of bovine prothrombin. The order of bond cleavage appears to be random since prethrombin-2 and meizothrombin occur as intermediates during prothrombin activation. Prothrombin activation by the venom activator alone is very slow. This is explained by the unfavorable kinetic parameters for the reaction (Km for prothrombin = 105 microM, Vmax = 0.0025 nmol of prothrombin activated per min/microgram of venom activator). Phospholipids plus Ca2+ and Factor Va greatly stimulate venom-catalyzed prothrombin activation. In the presence of 50 microM phospholipid vesicles composed of 20 mol % phosphatidylserine and 80 mol % phosphatidylcholine, the Km drops to 0.2 microM, whereas there is hardly any effect on the Vmax. Factor Va causes a 3,500-fold increase of the Vmax (8.35 nmol of prothrombin activated per min/microgram of venom activator) and a 10-fold decrease of the Km (9.5 microM). The most favorable kinetic parameters are observed in the presence of both 50 microM phospholipid and Factor Va (Km = 0.16 microM, Vmax = 27.9 nmol of prothrombin activated per min/microgram of venom activator). These changes of the kinetic parameters explain the stimulatory effects of Factor Va and phospholipid on venom-catalyzed prothrombin activation. The venom activator slowly converts the Factor Xa-specific chromogenic substrates CH3SO2-D-leucyl-glycyl-L-arginine-p-nitroanilide and N-benzoyl-L-isoleucyl-L-glutamyl-(piperidyl)-glycyl-L-arginyl-p-nitroani lide hydrochloride. Factor Va causes a 7-fold stimulation of chromogenic substrate conversion by the venom activator. This stimulation appears to be the result of the formation of a tight 1:1 complex between the venom activator and Factor Va.
3894356
The effects of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and the subsequent treatment of diabetic animals with insulin were studied using a dose of streptozotocin that produces highly ketotic animals 48 h after injection. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase of diabetic animals had apparent Ki values for malonyl-CoA that were approximately 10 times greater than control animals, indicating a greatly decreased affinity for malonyl-CoA in the diabetic state. Subsequent treatment of diabetic animals with insulin for 5 days produced non-ketotic animals with normal blood glucose, and the affinity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase for malonyl-CoA was increased to the control level. Treatment of other groups of ketotic diabetic animals with insulin produced substantial changes in the carnitine palmitoyltransferase apparent Ki value for malonyl-CoA within 4 h. These results suggest that insulin modulates the ketotic state, at least in part, by increasing the affinity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase for malonyl-CoA to bring about inhibition of fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis.
3894357
The ability of aspartate transcarbamylase from Escherichia coli to catalyze carbamylation of amino acids other than the natural substrate, L-aspartate, was examined. Cysteine, cysteate, cysteinesulfinate, and 3-nitroalanine showed kcat values at pH 7 of 0.16, 0.58, 5.2, and 62 s-1, respectively, while kcat with aspartate was 320 s-1. In a parallel study, competitive inhibition constants of 3-nitropropionate, 3-mercaptopropionate, 3-sulfopropionate, and 3-sulfinopropionate were found to be high, about 0.1 M, compared with that of succinate, 0.56 mM. Although cysteinesulfinate had low activity as a substrate, the pH dependences of kcat and kcat/Km in H2O and D2O observed with the compound closely paralleled those of aspartate. The results of these studies suggest that substrate specificity and reactivity are achieved in part by a strong, highly specific interaction of one or more active site residues with the beta-carboxylate of L-aspartate. Unlike the sigmoidal kinetics found with aspartate, saturation of native aspartate transcarbamylase by cysteine sulfinate showed a lack of cooperativity, even under conditions of activation of the reaction by ATP and inhibition by CTP. The cysteinesulfinate reaction was increased 9-fold by the bisubstrate analog N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate. These results were interpreted in terms of an inability of cysteinesulfinate to cause the allosteric conformational change promoted by aspartate.
3894358
Bacterium W3A1, a restricted facultative methylotroph, produces a periplasmic methanol dehydrogenase composed of two identical subunits of Mr = 57,300, and two noncovalently bound methoxatin prosthetic groups. A precursor form of Mr = 1,500 larger than the mature subunit was identified among the products of an in vitro translation of total RNA isolated from bacterium W3A1. The precursor form of the protein could not be detected in cells during in vivo pulse-labeling studies, suggesting that the processing of this precursor occurs entirely co-translationally. Whereas the holoenzyme was detectable only as a dimer, removal of the prosthetic group yielded an apoenzyme that could be detected as either a dimeric or monomeric species. After readdition of the purified prosthetic group to the apoenzyme, only the dimeric form of the protein, bearing the cofactor and exhibiting an absorption spectrum similar to that of the holoenzyme, was detected. Neither the mature apoprotein nor the holoenzyme demonstrated any affinity for phospholipid membranes, as assayed by their inability to bind to liposomes. Taken together, these data suggest a scheme of co-translational processing and export of the apoprotein subunits, followed by assembly of the subunits and prosthetic groups in the periplasmic space to form the mature holoenzyme. The suitability of bacterium W3A1, and other methylotrophic bacteria, for use in studies of protein biosynthesis and export, is also discussed.
3894359
Maltose-binding protein (MBP) is essential for maltose transport and chemotaxis in Escherichia coli. To perform these functions it must interact with two sets of cytoplasmic membrane proteins, the MalFGK transport complex and the chemotactic signal transducer Tar. MBP is present at high concentrations, on the order of 1 mM, in the periplasm of maltose-induced or malTc constitutive cells. To determine how the amount of MBP affects transport and taxis, we utilized a series of malE signal-sequence mutations that interfere with export of MBP. The MBP content in shock fluid from cells carrying the various mutations ranged from 4 to 23% of the malE+ level. The apparent Km for maltose transport varied by less than a factor of 2 among malE+ and mutant strains. At a saturating maltose concentration 9% (approximately 90 microM) of the malE+ amount of MBP was required for half-maximal uptake rates. Transport exhibited a sigmoidal dependence on the amount of periplasmic MBP, indicating that MBP may be involved in a cooperative interaction at some stage of the transport process. The chemotactic response to a saturating maltose stimulus exhibited a first-order dependence on the amount of periplasmic MBP. Thus, interaction of a single substrate-bound MBP with Tar appears sufficient to initiate a chemotactic signal from the transducer. A half-maximal chemotactic response occurred at 25% of the malE+ MBP level, suggesting that in vivo the KD for binding of maltose-loaded MBP to Tar is quite high (approximately 250 microM).
3894360
The N1 imino units in Escherichia coli tRNAfMet, tRNAGlu, tRNAPhe, and tRNATyr were studied by 1H-15N NMR using three different techniques to suppress signals of protons not attached to 15N. Two of the procedures, Fourier internuclear difference spectroscopy and two-dimensional forbidden echo spectroscopy permitted 1H and 15N chemical shifts to be measured simultaneously at 1H sensitivity. The tRNAs were labeled by fermentation of the uracil auxotroph S phi 187 on a minimal medium containing [1-15N]uracil. 1H and 15N resonances were detected for all of the N1 psi imino units except psi 13 at the end of the dihydrouridine stem in tRNAGlu. Chemical shifts for imino units in the tRNAs were compared with "intrinsic" values in model systems. The comparisons show that the A X psi pairs at the base of the anticodon stem in E. coli tRNAPhe and tRNATyr have psi in an anti conformation. The N1 protons of psi in other locations, including psi 32 in the anticodon loop of tRNAPhe, form internal hydrogen bonds to bridging water molecules or 2'-hydroxyl groups in nearby ribose units. These interactions permit psi to stabilize the tertiary structure of a tRNA beyond what is provided by the U it replaces.
3894361
A method is presented for the detection in crude lysates of subnanogram amounts of proteins covalently bound to a specific nucleic acid sequence. The sensitivity of this method enabled us to study proteins cross-linked to specific DNA and mRNA sequences by irradiation of intact Escherichia coli cells with ultraviolet light. Among the proteins cross-linked to pBR322 DNA, the single strand binding protein, the HU-proteins, and the RNA polymerase beta and sigma subunits were present. Some, but not all proteins were cross-linked to 5-bromodeoxyuridine-substituted DNA more efficiently than to normal DNA. Ribosomal protein S1 is by far the most prominent protein cross-linked to mRNAs. Among the proteins cross-linked in smaller amounts to mRNAs are translation initiation factor IF 1, and at least six proteins of the 30 S ribosomal subunit, among which is S21. No 50 S proteins, nor IF-2, IF-3 or any of the elongation factors could be detected. Some UV-induced nucleic acid-protein cross-links were found to be heat-labile. It is concluded that the method employed may be used to compare the proteins interacting with different mRNAs, as well as single-copy DNA sequences from bacteria and eucaryotes with low complexity genomes.
3894362
Proteins cross-linked to pBR322 mRNAs and DNA by formaldehyde treatment of intact Escherichia coli cells have been detected with the use of a novel detection method. Among the proteins cross-linked to pBR322 mRNAs were S1, S21, and at least six other proteins of the small ribosomal subunit, initiation factor 1, elongation factor (EF) Tu, and very small amounts of EF-G and EF-Ts. The single strand binding protein, the HU-proteins, and RNA polymerase subunits alpha and beta were among the proteins cross-linked to pBR322 DNA. The results obtained suggest that the procedures described, can also be used to study interactions between different nucleic acid-bound polypeptides. The results are discussed in relation to the working mechanism of formaldehyde, and are compared to the results obtained with cross-linking induced by ultraviolet light. The methods presented should also be of use for the study of nucleic acid-protein interactions in other organisms.
3894364
Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes (insect gut stage) incubated with [U-14C]glucose synthesized Man9GlcNAc2-P-P-dolichol as practically the sole dolichol-P-P derivative. On the other hand, amastigotes (intracellular stage) of the same parasite synthesized four to five times more Man7GlcNAc2-P-P-dolichol than Man9GlcNAc2-P-P-dolichol. Evidence is presented indicating that, whereas in epimastigotes only Man9GlcNAc2 was transferred to proteins, in amastigotes both Man7GlcNAc2 and Man9GlcNAc2 were transferred in direct proportion to their respective amounts bound to dolichol-P-P. The change in the mechanism of protein N-glycosylation could be observed upon in vitro differentiation of amastigotes to epimastigotes. The dissimilar size of the main oligosaccharides transferred to proteins in epimastigotes and amastigotes was responsible for differences in two structural features of high mannose-type oligosaccharides present in mature glycoproteins of both forms of the parasite, namely the average size of the compounds and the structure of the main species of some isomer oligosaccharides.
3894363
The responses of three recA-dependent operons (recA, lambda, and phi 80), with three different repressors, to five DNA damage treatments were compared. Each operon shows a unique induction onset time constant over a wide dose range. However, the extent of response is variable within the same dose range. Individual Escherichia coli cells show a graded SOS response to different levels of DNA damage. Apparently phage repressors have evolved to discriminate between lethal and sublethal DNA damage to a host by a wide variety of agents. Multiple induction signals could account for the complex behavior of this system. For example, the absence of the recBC enzyme from a cell leads to complex changes in SOS induction onset times and extents.
3894365
We have covalently modified the recA protein from Escherichia coli with the adenine nucleotide analog 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (5'-FSBA). The rate at which the protein is modified shows a sigmoidal dependence on the concentration of 5'-FSBA suggesting that binding of the analog is characterized by positive cooperativity. Covalent modification of the protein results in irreversible inactivation of its single-stranded DNA-dependent ATPase activity such that 100% inactivation is achieved when 25% of the enzyme monomers have been modified. Attachment of 5'-FSBA is specific for the ATP-binding site of recA protein as judged by the following criteria: (i) attachment of the affinity label to the protein appears to saturate at 1 mol of 5'-FSBA/mol of protein; (ii) binding of 5'-FSBA to recA protein is inhibited by ATP and competitive inhibitors of its ATP hydrolytic activity, e.g. adenosine-5'-O-(thiotriphosphate), ADP, UTP, and GTP, but not by adenosine; (iii) attachment of 5'-FSBA to the protein occurs at a single site as determined by high pressure liquid chromatography peptide separation. Following trypsin digestion of recA protein that had been covalently modified with [3H]5'-FSBA we isolated a single labeled peptide (T31) containing the exclusive site of 5'-FSBA attachment. A secondary proteolytic digestion was performed on both 5'-FSBA modified T31 and unmodified T31 using Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, and by comparison of the amino acid compositions of the resulting peptides we identified Tyr-264 as the exclusive site of 5'-FSBA attachment in recA protein.
3894367
Limited proteolysis of rat brain tubulin (alpha beta) by subtilisin cleaves a 1-2-kDa fragment from the carboxyl-terminal ends of both the alpha and beta subunits with a corresponding loss in negative charge of the proteins. The beta subunit is split much more rapidly (and exclusively at 5 degrees C), yielding a protein with cleaved beta and intact alpha subunit, called alpha beta s, which is of intermediate charge. Further proteolysis cleaves the carboxyl terminus of the alpha subunit leading, irreversibly, to the doubly cleaved product, named tubulin S, with a composition alpha s beta s. Both cleavage products are polymerization-competent and their polymers are resistant to 1 mM Ca2+- and 0.24 M NaCl-induced depolymerization. The two polymers differ in that the alpha beta s polymer is stable to cold, GDP, and podophyllotoxin, whereas tubulin S polymer is disassembled by these agents; moreover, alpha beta s forms ring-shaped polymers, whereas alpha s beta s forms filaments associated into bundles and sheets. Tubulin S co-polymerizes with native tubulin yielding a mixed product of intermediate stability. The presence of low mole fractions of tubulin S leads to a marked reduction in the critical concentration for polymerization of the mixture.
3894366
The photoaffinity label 8-azidoadenosine 5'-triphosphate (N3-ATP) was used to covalently modify the recA protein from Escherichia coli within its ATP-binding site. We have previously demonstrated that N3-ATP modification of recA protein is specific for the ATP-binding site and have isolated a unique tryptic peptide (T31), spanning residues 257-280, that contains the exclusive site of attachment of this ATP analog (Knight, K. L., and McEntee, K. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 867-872). We performed a secondary proteolytic digestion of the [alpha-32P]N3-ATP-labeled T31 peptide using Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease and purified the resulting peptide fragments by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). Based on a comparison of the amino acid compositions of all purified fragments and sequence analysis of one labeled fragment we determined that Tyr-264 is the exclusive site of N3-ATP attachment in recA protein. Photoaffinity labeling of recA protein was also performed in the presence of single-stranded DNA. Following trypsin treatment and separation of peptides by HPLC we showed that tryptic peptide T31 contained the exclusive site of N3-ATP attachment. A secondary proteolytic digestion was performed on both [alpha-32P]N3ATP-modified T31 and unmodified T31 using alpha-chymotrypsin. Comparison of the HPLC profiles and amino acid compositions of the resulting fragments was consistent with Tyr-264 as the exclusive site of N3-ATP attachment to recA protein.
3894369
We studied the proximal tibial physes of mice, seven, fifteen, twenty-two, and twenty-eight days old, to define in mathematical terms the changes in cell profile and profile orientation among growth-plate zones and to determine if cell profile and profile orientation change with changes in the rate of growth. Using electron microscopy, we identified five growth-plate zones: the reserve zone, the upper proliferative zone, the lower proliferative zone, the upper hypertrophic zone, and the lower hypertrophic zone. In transverse sections, cell profiles did not change among growth-plate zones and the degree of cell-profile orientation approached zero in all zones. In longitudinal sections, cell profiles and profile orientations differed significantly among zones. Cell profiles in the upper and lower proliferative zones were eccentric and highly oriented. They became more rounded and the degree of cell orientation decreased between the proliferative and hypertrophic zones. As the rate of longitudinal bone growth decreased, cell profiles and cell-profile orientation changed. The cell profiles in the reserve zone became flatter and in the other zones the cell profiles became more rounded. The degree of cell-profile orientation decreased quadratically in the upper and lower proliferative zones, decreased linearly in the reserve and upper hypertrophic zones, and remained unchanged in the lower hypertrophic zone.
3894368
Previous work (Nicholson, A. W., Hall, C. C., Strycharz, W. A., and Cooperman, B. S. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 3797-3808) showed that [3H]p-azidopuromycin photoaffinity labeled 70 S Escherichia coli ribosomes and that photoincorporation into 50 S subunit proteins was in the order L23 greater than L18/22 greater than L15. In the present work we report on immunoelectron microscopic studies of the complexes formed by p-azidopuromycin-modified 50 S subunits with antibodies to the N6,N6-dimethyladenosine moiety of the antibiotic. The p-azidopuromycin-modified 50 S subunits appear to be identical to unmodified control subunits in electron micrographs. Complexes of modified subunits with antibodies to the N6,N6-dimethyladenosine moiety of p-azidopuromycin were visualized in micrographs. Individual subunits with a single bound antibody (monomeric complexes) and pairs of subunits cross-linked by a single antibody (dimeric complexes) were separately evaluated and showed similar results. Two regions of p-azidopuromycin photoincorporation were identified. The primary site, seen in about 75% of the complexes, is between the central protuberance and small projection, on the side away from the L7/L12 arm, in a region thought to contain the peptidyltransferase center. The secondary site, of unknown significance, is at the base of the subunit maximally distant from the arm. These placements are essentially identical to those we observed in analyses of puromycin photoincorporation (Olson, H. M., Grant, P. G., Cooperman, B. S., and Glitz, D. G. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 2649-2656) and quantitatively similar to evaluations of monomeric puromycin-50 S subunit complexes. The data support the placement of proteins L23, L18/22, and L15 at or near the peptidyltransferase center at the primary site and suggest, in addition, that the secondary site includes a genuine area of puromycin affinity.
3894371
We describe a method of examination of the excluded distal stomach after gastric bypass for obesity using Chiba needle puncture of the distal stomach and water soluble contrast injection.
3894372
An unusual position of the spleen may cause diagnostic difficulties and may mimic disease. We report two patients with an unusual position of the spleen. In one, congenital absence of the lieno-renal ligament allowed unusual mobility of a bilobed spleen with intermittent torsion. In the other the spleen descended into the left renal fossa following left adrenalectomy and nephrectomy.
3894373
The lung scan findings in 22 normal patients (9 men, 13 women; mean age 39.3 years) obtained using a GE CT/T 8800 scanner have been analyzed. Central arteries and veins can be distinguished on the unenhanced scan by following their course from the hilum on sequential scans, by identifying their relationship to bronchi, or by their vertical or horizontal orientation in the upper and lower lobes. However, arteries cannot be distinguished from veins in the lung periphery. The center of the lung (medulla) harbors "trunk" arteries, veins, bronchi and an alveolar meshwork while the periphery (cortex) is characterized by small vessels (1-3 mm) perpendicularly oriented to the pleural surface. Attenuation densities from the right lung at the aortic arch, carina and above the right hemidiaphragm were obtained followed by systematic analysis of various parameters including the mean anterior and posterior cortical and medullary attenuation density, anterior and posterior mean lung density, total mean lung density for each slice and the entire right lung, and the anteroposterior gradients. Different attenuation densities and gradients will be obtained using other models of scanners. The evidence suggests that the medulla is a "reservoir" zone, capable of accommodating increased blood flow under appropriate conditions. Clinical application of these parameters to the diagnosis of diffuse lung disease is illustrated.
3894374
A variety of approaches are used to study carcinogenesis. Recent advances in techniques for culture of human tissues and cells have provided additional experimental systems of study the process of carcinogenesis and the genetics of cancer.
3894376
The desmosome junction is an important component in the cohesion of epithelial cells, especially epidermal keratinocytes. To gain insight into the structure and function of desmosomes, their morphogenesis has been studied in a primary mouse epidermal (PME) cell culture system. When these cells are grown in approximately 0.1 mM Ca2+, they contain no desmosomes. They are induced to form desmosomes when the Ca2+ level in the culture medium is raised to approximately 1.2 mM Ca2+. PME cells in medium containing low levels of Ca2+, and then processed for indirect immunofluorescence using antibodies directed against desmoplakins (desmosomal plaque proteins), display a pattern of discrete fluorescent spots concentrated mainly in the perinuclear region. Double label immunofluorescence using keratin and desmoplakin antibodies reveals that the desmoplakin-containing spots and the cytoplasmic network of tonofibrils (bundles of intermediate filaments [IFB]) are in the same juxtanuclear region. Within 1 h after the switch to higher levels of Ca2+, the spots move toward the cell surface, primarily to areas of cell-cell contact and not to free cell surfaces. This reorganization occurs at the same time that tonofibrils also move toward cell surfaces in contact with neighboring cells. Once the desmoplakin spots have reached the cell surface, they appear to aggregate to form desmosomes. These immunofluorescence observations have been confirmed by immunogold ultrastructural localization. Preliminary biochemical and immunological studies indicate that desmoplakin appears in whole cell protein extracts and in Triton high salt insoluble residues (i.e., cytoskeletal preparations consisting primarily of IFB) prepared from PME cells maintained in medium containing both low and normal Ca2+ levels. These findings show that certain desmosome components are preformed in the cytoplasm of PME cells. These components undergo a dramatic reorganization, which parallels the changes in IFB redistribution, upon induction of desmosome formation. The reorganization depends upon both the extracellular Ca2+ level and the establishment of cell-to-cell contacts. Furthermore, the data suggests that desmosomes do not act as organizing centers for the elaboration of IFB. Indeed, we postulate that the movement of IFB and preformed desmosomal components to the cell surface is an important initiating event in desmosome morphogenesis.
3894377
Monoclonal antibodies were prepared to identify molecular components specific to the mitotic apparatus of sea urchin eggs. The mitotic apparatus or asters induced within unfertilized eggs by taxol treatment were isolated from Strongylocentrotus purpuratus and used for immunization of mice. After fusion with spleen cells, the supernatant of hybridomas were screened in two stages by indirect immunofluorescence staining, first on isolated sea urchin mitotic spindles in 96-well microtiter plates to identify rapidly potential positive hybridomas, and second, on whole mitotic eggs on coverslips to distinguish between spindle-specific staining and adventitious contamination. Two hybridomas, SU4 and SU5, secreted antibodies reactive to microtubule-containing structures in eggs during the course of development. They preferentially stained the centrosphere both in isolated mitotic apparatus and in whole metaphase eggs, which was further confirmed by staining the isolated centrospheres with these antibodies. SU4 recognized a major 190-kD polypeptide on immunoblots as well as a species at 180 and 20 kD, whereas hybridoma SU5 stained a species at 50 kD. Thus, these polypeptides may be components of the centrosphere.
3894375
To screen invertebrate tissues for the possible expression of intermediate filaments (IFs), immunofluorescence microscopy with the monoclonal antibody anti-IFA known to detect all mammalian IF proteins was used (Pruss, R. M., R. Mirsky, M. C. Raff, R. Thorpe, A. J. Dowding, and B. H. Anderton. 1981. Cell, 27:419-428). In a limited survey, the lower chordate Branchiostoma as well as the invertebrates Arenicola, Lumbricus, Ascaris, and Helix pomatia revealed a positive reaction primarily on epithelia and on nerves, whereas certain other invertebrates appeared negative. To assess the nature of the positive reaction, Helix pomatia was used since a variety of epithelia was strongly stained by anti-IFA. Fixation-extraction procedures were developed that preserve in electron micrographs of esophagus impressive arrays of IFs as tonofilament bundles. Fractionation procedures performed on single cell preparations document large meshworks of long and curvilinear IF by negative stain. These structures can be purified. One- and two-dimensional gels show three components, all of which are recognized by anti-IFA in immunoblotting: 66 kD/pl 6.35, 53 kD/pl 6.05, and 52 kD/pl 5.95. The molar ratio between the larger and more basic polypeptide and the sum of the two more acidic forms is close to 1. After solubilization in 8.5 M urea, in vitro filament reconstitution is induced when urea is removed by dialysis against 2-50 mM Tris buffer at pH 7.8. The reconstituted filaments contain all three polypeptides. The results establish firmly the existence of invertebrate IFs outside neurones and demonstrate that the esophagus of Helix pomatia displays IFs which in line with the epithelial morphology of the tissue could be related to keratin IF of vertebrates.
3894378
The structural and biochemical changes of cytoskeletal components of retinal pigmented epithelial cells were studied during the development of chicken eyes. When the cytoskeletal components of the pigmented epithelial cells from various stages of development were examined by SDS PAGE, actin contents in the cells markedly increased between the 15-d-old and hatching stages. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that chicken pigmented epithelial cells have two types of actin bundles. One is the circumferential bundle associated with the zonula adherens region as previously reported (Owaribe, K., and H. Masuda, 1982, J. Cell Biol., 95:310-315). The other is the paracrystalline bundle forming the core of the apical projections. The increase in actin contents after the 15-d-old stage is accompanied by the formation and elongation of core filaments of apical projections in the cells. During this period the apical projections extend into extracellular space among outer and inner segments of photoreceptor cells. Accompanying this change is an elongation of the paracrystalline bundles of actin filaments in the core of the projection. By electron microscopy, the bundles decorated with muscle heavy meromyosin showed unidirectional polarity, and had transverse striations with approximately 12-nm intervals, as determined by optical diffraction of electron micrographs. Since the shape of these bundles was not altered in the presence or absence of Ca2+, they seemed not to have villin-like proteins. Unlike the circumferential bundles, the paracrystalline bundles did not contract when exposed to Mg-ATP. These observations indicate that the paracrystalline bundles are structurally and functionally different from the circumferential actin bundles.
3894379
We have investigated the developmental transitions of myosin heavy chain (MHC) gene expression in the rat extraocular musculature (EOM) at the mRNA level using S1-nuclease mapping techniques and at the protein level by polypeptide mapping and immunochemistry. We have isolated a genomic clone, designated lambda 10B3, corresponding to an MHC gene which is expressed in the EOM fibers (recti and oblique muscles) of the adult rat but not in hind limb muscles. Using cDNA and genomic probes for MHC genes expressed in skeletal (embryonic, neonatal, fast oxidative, fast glycolytic, and slow/cardiac beta-MHC), cardiac (alpha-MHC), and EOM (lambda 10B3) muscles, we demonstrate the concomitant expression at the mRNA level of at least six different MHC genes in adult EOM. Protein and immunochemical analyses confirm the presence of at least four different MHC types in EOM. Immunocytochemistry demonstrates that different myosin isozymes tend to segregate into individual myofibers, although some fibers seem to contain more than one MHC type. The results also show that the EOM fibers exhibit multiple patterns of MHC gene regulation. One set of fibers undergoes a sequence of isoform transitions similar to the one described for limb skeletal muscles, whereas other EOM myofiber populations arrest the MHC transition at the embryonic, neonatal/adult, or adult EOM-specific stage. Thus, the MHC gene family is not under the control of a strict developmental clock, but the individual genes can modify their expression by tissue-specific and/or environmental factors.
3894381
The activity of a ribonucleoside reductase was estimated during the life cycle of Acetabularia. During the early generative phase the enzyme activity was dramatically increased. Regulation of the ribonucleoside reductase was observed even in the absence of the nucleus. The increase in activity was inhibited by chloramphenicol but not by cycloheximide. These results indicate that the enzyme is translated on 70 S ribosomes.
3894380
In vitro myogenesis involves a dramatic reorganization of the microtubular network, characterized principally by the relocalization of microtubule nucleating sites at the surface of the nuclei in myotubes, in marked contrast with the classical pericentriolar localization observed in myoblasts (Tassin, A. M., B. Maro, and M. Bornens, 1985, J. Cell Biol., 100:35-46). Since a spatial relationship between the Golgi apparatus and the centrosome is observed in most animal cells, we have decided to follow the fate of the Golgi apparatus during myogenesis by an immunocytochemical approach, using wheat germ agglutinin and an affinity-purified anti-galactosyltransferase. We show that Golgi apparatus in myotubes displays a perinuclear distribution which is strikingly different from the polarized juxtanuclear organization observed in myoblasts. As a result, the Golgi apparatus in myotubes is situated close to the microtubule organizing center (MTOC), the cis-side being situated at a fixed distance from the nuclear envelope, a situation which suggests the existence of a structural association between the Golgi apparatus and the nuclear periphery. This is supported by experiments of microtubule depolymerization by nocodazole, in which a minimal effect was observed on Golgi apparatus localization in myotubes in contrast with the dramatic scattering observed in myoblasts. In both cell types, electron microscopy reveals that microtubule disruption generates individual dictyosomes; this suggests that the connecting structures between dictyosomes are principally affected. This structural dependency of the Golgi apparatus upon microtubules is not apparently accompanied by a reverse dependency of MTOC structure or function upon Golgi apparatus activity. Golgi apparatus modification by monensin, as effective in myotubes as in myoblasts, is without apparent effect on MTOC localization or activity and on microtubule stability. The main result of our study is to show that in a cell type where the MTOC is dissociated from centrioles and where antero-posterior polarity has disappeared, the association between the Golgi apparatus and the MTOC is maintained. The significance of such a tight association is discussed.
3894382
A specific antiserum to pure human amniotic fluid metalloproteinase inhibitor (TIMP) was raised in a sheep. This antiserum was used to demonstrate: firstly, the immunological identity of the TIMP activities from amniotic fluid and culture medium of human foetal lung fibroblasts; and secondly, by indirect immunofluorescence, the secretion of TIMP by human foetal lung fibroblasts, chondrocytes, epithelial cells and smooth muscle cells. The phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, was used to stimulate secretion of TIMP by human foetal lung fibroblasts and the ionophore monensin was used to demonstrate intracellular accumulation of TIMP in the Golgi apparatus of these cells. These results are discussed in relation to other inhibitors of collagenase reported in the literature, which are probably identical to TIMP.
3894383
We utilized fluorescence microscopy and affinity-purified antibodies to probe the form and function of cytoplasmic actin in endothelial cells (EC) recovering from injury and grown on extracellular matrices in vitro. Bovine aortic EC were seeded onto glass microscope coverslips that had been coated with either BSA, fibronectin, type I and III (interstitial) collagens, type IV (basement membrane) collagen or gelatin. After EC that had been grown on glass, glass-BSA or extracellular matrix-coated coverslips reached confluence, a 300-400 micron zone of cells was mechanically removed to stimulate EC migration and proliferation. Post-injury EC movements were monitored with time-lapse, phase-contrast videomicrography before fixation for actin localization with fluorescence microscopy using affinity-purified antibodies. We found that the number of stress fibres within EC was inversely proportional to the rate of movement; and, the rates of movement for EC grown on glass or glass-BSA were approximately eight times faster than EC grown on gelatin or type IV collagen (X velocity = 0.5 micron/min versus 0.06 micron/min). EC movements on fibronectin and interstitial collagens were similar (X velocity = 0.2 micron/min). These results suggest that extracellular matrix molecules modulate EC stress fibre expression, thereby producing alterations in the cytoskeleton and the resultant EC movements that follow injury in vitro. Moreover, the induction of stress fibres in the presence of basement membrane (type IV) collagen may explain the failure of aortic EC to migrate and repopulate wounded regions of intima during atherogenesis in vivo.
3894384
This study was done to correlate mitochondrial behaviour with nuclear behaviour and cell division as well as with the germ tube formation in the dimorphic yeast Candida albicans. Three-dimensional reconstruction of electron micrographs of serially sectioned cells of the three strains was used to determined the morphological and quantitative relationships between the structures. The results suggested that at the time of entry into the bud a few mitochondria fused into a single giant one, which fragmented during mitosis and resumed a single giant form before cytokinesis, and was then partitioned into two parts. This tendency was also shown during germ tube formation. Quantitative analysis has established that growth of organelles such as the nucleus and mitochondria closely followed total cell growth, the ratio of organelle volume to total cell volume being held relatively constant.
3894385
Monoclonal antibodies against the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium yoelii, have been prepared and characterized by indirect immunofluorescence on acetone-fixed infected mouse erythrocytes. The antibody of clone K2 reacted strongly with late trophozoites and schizonts, whereas it did so weakly and diffusely with ring forms and early trophozoites. Strong fluorescence was confined to granular structures in schizonts and merozoites. Parasites that invaded erythrocytes in vitro lost the strong fluorescence. Instead, immunofluorescence appeared in the membranes of erythrocytes infected in vitro with merozoites. Erythrocytes infected with more than one merozoite had intensified immunofluorescence in their membranes. Staining of the invaded erythrocytes with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) hydrochloride demonstrated that membranes of all the invaded erythrocytes acquired the P. yoelii antigen. These results suggest that the P. yoelii antigen in merozoites is translocated into erythrocyte membranes upon entry into the host cell. Immunofluorescence continued to appear in membranes of infected erythrocytes throughout the intra-erythrocytic parasite growth. Staining of unfixed infected erythrocytes with the K2 antibody failed to detect the parasite antigen. In contrast, immunofluorescence was present in unfixed membranes of erythrocyte ghosts, which had been spontaneously formed after rupture of schizont-infected erythrocytes by merozoite release. No immunofluorescence appeared in either acetone-fixed or unfixed ghosts of normal erythrocytes. These results suggest the antigenic determinant of the P. yoelii antigen is exposed at the cytoplasmic surface of the infected erythrocyte membrane. Immunoprecipitation has revealed that the K2 antibody recognizes a 160 X 10(3) Mr P. yoelii antigen.
3894386
Established cell lines were stained by immunofluorescence with four monoclonal antibodies to study the phenomenon of antigenic heterogeneity and its possible relation to the cell cycle. Five cell lines thought to be of breast origin, MCF-7, ZR-75-1, T47D, MDA-MB-231 and HBL-100, were stained with three monoclonal antibodies (LICR-LON-M8, LICR-LON-M18, LICR-LON-M24) that each stain a distinct subset of normal breast epithelial cells, i.e. demonstrate antigenic heterogeneity in normal breast epithelial cells. Contrasting monoclonal antibodies LICR-LON-FIB75 and LICR-LON-FIB86 to homogeneously expressed antigens were also used. For the antibodies demonstrating heterogeneity distinct positive and negative fractions were not seen by flow cytometry; the intensity of fluorescence varied continuously from background to a hundred times stronger than background. Fluorescent DNA staining showed no obvious relation between antigen expression and the cell cycle. The essentially constant proportion of cells of a given antigenic phenotype in the various phases suggests that these antibodies do not distinguish a phenotype associated with a distinct proliferating population of cells.
3894387
Using indirect immunofluorescence we have localized an endogenous beta-galactoside-specific lectin in resin-embedded rabbit tissue sections. The pattern of lectin distribution correlates well with biochemical estimations of lectin levels, being abundant in intestine, lung and heart tissue and relatively less abundant in skeletal muscle, liver and kidney. In all tissues lectin is found in connective tissue associated with fibroblasts and the extracellular matrix, and at the periphery of morphologically recognizable smooth muscle cells. The lectin is abundant in skin, intestine and blood vessels, where connective tissue forms the tissue architecture. It is also abundant in heart, where it is particularly associated with the capillaries and lung, where it is also found in alveolar cells. Discrete localization of lectin occurs in areas of connective tissue where epithelial elements are differentiating, such as the crypts of Lieberkuhns in the small intestine and hair follicles in the skin. From these observations we suggest that in cells of mesenchymal origin these endogenous lectins may play a role in the elaboration or organization of the extracellular matrix that regulates tissue differentiation in a number of embryonic and adult tissues.
3894389
Macronuclei from Paramecium caudatum infected with Holospora obtusa may be isolated on sucrose step gradients. Macronuclei containing primarily infectious forms can be separated from those bearing predominantly reproductive forms. RNA polymerase activity in infected macronuclei is greater by a factor of 5 than that in uninfected macronuclei. Proteinase activity is also significantly higher.
3894388
We have previously shown that Swiss 3T3 cells located in the first part of G1 (post-mitotic G1 cells younger than 4.0 h or G1pm cells) were arrested after 9-10 h in the cell cycle by a short (1-8 h) exposure to serum-free medium or by a short (2-4 h) exposure to low doses of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CH). Kinetic data indicate that such G1pm cells rapidly return to G0 during this brief treatment and thereafter require a preparatory period of 8 h before continuing to G1. Cells older than 4 h, i.e. cells in mid or late G1 are already committed to DNA synthesis (presynthesis or G1ps cells). These cells as well as S and G2 cells were consequently unaffected by the brief serum starvation or the brief treatment with cycloheximide. In the present paper we show that the 10-h intermitotic delay that follows a 1-2 h exposure to serum-free medium can be completely counteracted by the presence of any one of the purified growth factors, epidermal growth factor (EGF), insulin or platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF). In contrast, the intermitotic delay following a longer exposure (8 h) to serum-free medium could no longer be counteracted by EGF or insulin. However, PDGF was still active in this respect. Most interestingly, the 12 h gross intermitotic delay induced by a 4h exposure to CH could be efficiently counteracted by EGF, PDGF or insulin. However, this effect on CH-treated cells could be counteracted by the growth factor only in the presence of 10% serum. This indicates the existence of a cooperative effect between PDGF, EGF or insulin and an unidentified serum factor. The effects on the cell cycle time of brief serum starvation and exposure to CH were compared with the effects on rate of protein synthesis and degradation. Although the effects of serum starvation on protein synthesis and degradation were found to be partially normalized by growth factors, we suggest that growth factors prevent cells from leaving the cell cycle by another mechanism and not merely by affecting the level of overall protein accumulation.
3894390
The conjugation junction of Tetrahymena is the specialized site where plasma membrane fusion occurs between two cells of complementary mating types. The junction is constructed through a series of cooperative interactions and morphogenetic steps. A contact-mediated interaction between free-swimming, sexually mature and mating-competent cells of two complementary mating types induces a morphological transformation of the anterior tips. Cells then join in pairs aligned by the apposition of their modified tips. Thin sections show that the plasma membranes of the tips are separated by approximately 500 A of extracellular space, in which some strands of matrix material can be identified. The cytoplasmic face of the membrane is in contact with a junction-specific thick layer of electron-dense material. At hundreds of independent sites in this junction plasma membranes fuse in a limited manner, thereby establishing hundreds of separate membrane-ensheathed cytoplasmic channels that connect the two cells. At the same locations the thick submembrane layer is interrupted. Consequently, the junction appears to be a structure that is perforated with hundreds of pores. This study poses the question of whether the junction's submembrane layer is, or includes, a skeletal element. Cells were extracted with the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100 under conditions that yield cytoskeletal frameworks (CFs) that maintain the morphological integrity of the cells. The CFs include chromatin and also cortical structures such as microtubule bands, basal bodies, ciliary axonemes, kinetodesmal fibres and fibrillar epiplasm. CFs of conjugant pairs are also paired, indicating that the junction contains a skeletal element that is responsible for integrating the individual CFs into a higher-order complex. At the ultrastructural level the skeletal structure of the junction includes membrane lamina and a submembrane scaffold, residues of the plasma membrane and thick submembrane layer, respectively, both of which are interrupted at the pores. However, the two separate scaffolds are joined at the rims of the pores. This provides a means by which the separate CFs become integrated. On the basis of images of junctional CFs, which show interruptions of the scaffold without concomitant membrane fusion, but where laminae are pressed close together, a specific model of membrane fusion is proposed. According to this model, the submembrane skeletal scaffold regulates membrane fusion by limiting its occurrence, and the extent of its occurrence.
3894392
The authors report an analysis of 1000 hepatic biopsies performed with an original method with posterior extraperitoneal approach. This method let the biopsy execution also in the patients in which the hepatic biopsy with lateral approach was contraindicated (31%). An adequate sample for histologic examination was obtained in 98,3% of cases. An important element of safe is now considered the ultrasound guide. The incidence of greater complications has been modest (7 arterious-venous fistulas, 1 retroperitoneal hematoma, 1 cardiac arrest by probable vagal inhibitory reflex).
3894391
The occurrence of an enzyme that catalyses the conversion of cytidine into deoxycytidine was demonstrated in homogenates of Acetabularia. Cytidine was identified as the substrate by comparing cytidine, cytidine 5'-monophosphate, cytidine 5'-diphosphate and cytidine 5'-triphosphate as potential substrates. Experiments with ATP analogues whose inhibitory effect on kinase reactions is well established, supplied evidence that the nucleoside is reduced without a phosphorylation step before the reduction. Further evidence in this line came from incubations with cytidine in the presence of phosphatase and from trap-type experiments in which the effects of excess non-labelled cytidine 5'-phosphate and deoxycytidine, respectively, on the formation of deoxycytidine phosphates from cytidine were studied.
3894393
In 738 patients, the stapler-suturing methods were used in 2 main areas of concern: closure of the major hilar broncho-vascular structures (for smaller pulmonary vessels, we use absorbable ligating clips: Absolok from Ethicon and Polysurgiclip from USSC), suture of the lung parenchyma. Regarding pedicular sutures, our rate of bronchial fistula is 1,0% (or 4,4% if only pneumonectomies are taken into account: 1,4 on the left and 7,7 on the right). These rates are compared with those gathered from the literature, with emphasis on the right main bronchus. Regarding parenchymal sutures, we place TA and GIA on collapsed parenchyma for achieving a wide range of either intralobar or translobar procedures. We lay emphasis on: the conventional segmentectomies with stapling of the intersegmental surface, and the newer and more economical "non réglées" transsegmental resections in which the surgeon is anymore limited by segmental frontiers. The control of blood and air leakage from the cut surface is quite satisfactory, reducing significanthy the postoperative morbidity. For both major pedicular structures and fragile lung parenchyma, the stapler-suturing methods are very reliable and provide a quicker, simpler, safer, easier and more economical surgery in lung resections.
3894394
Twenty years of Home Office research into delinquency prevention support Jack Tizard's belief that greater improvements in performance and behaviour are likely to attend efforts to change environments rather than inner dispositions. Situational measures which reduce opportunities for crime seem more effective than attempts to reform delinquents. Moreover, given that most delinquents desist from crime in early adulthood, minimal interference in their lives may be the best policy. For those requiring institutional placement, humane care rather than reform should be the goal.
3894395
This paper presents some hypotheses regarding the motivation of pathological unsocialized physical aggression in children and also reviews behavioral treatment. Tentative leads were offered as to extrinsic and intrinsic determinants. Among the most promising of these were parent-child interactive and attributive factors, and deficits in information processing in social situations. It was hypothesized that some of these factors might not be specific to pathological unsocialized physical aggression but are characteristic of children with behavior problems. Under this hypothesis, few studies were found which employed appropriate control groups. It was also hypothesized that the study of extrinsic and intrinsic factors for pathological unsocialized physical aggression may improve the design of treatment programs.
3894396
A double-blind trial using trimeprazine tartrate was carried out in 22 children with severe waking problems. On parental verbal reports sleep was significantly improved on the drug compared with the original baseline and the placebo, but diaries kept by the parents showed that this improvement was clinically only moderate, with many wakeful nights still occurring. Taking the drug produced no permanent effect on sleep patterns and a follow-up of 14 children 6 months later showed persisting sleep problems in the majority.
3894398
A high-performance liquid chromatographic method has been developed which enables sensitive determination of captopril and its mixed disulphides in plasma and urine after oral administration of a new antihypertensive agent, 1-(D-3-acetylthio-2-methylpropanoyl)-L-prolyl-L-phenylalanine (DU-1219, I). Captopril is derivatized with a new reagent, N-(4-benzoylphenyl)maleimide and the derivative is extracted with chloroform and assayed using a liquid chromatograph equipped with an ultraviolet detector at 254 nm. Mixed disulphides of captopril with thiol compounds such as cysteine, glutathione and plasma proteins are reduced with tributylphosphine to form captopril, followed by derivatization with N-(4-benzoylphenyl)maleimide. Accurate determinations are possible over a concentration range of 10-500 ng/ml captopril in plasma, and 100-2500 ng/ml captopril in urine. The coefficients of variation of captopril in plasma (200 ng/ml) and urine (500 ng/ml) are 3.7% and 2.6%, respectively, and those of mixed disulphides of captopril are similar to those of captopril. Plasma levels and urinary excretion of captopril and its mixed disulphides in healthy volunteers following single oral administration of I (50 mg) have also been determined.
3894399
Barbiturates and other traditional non-barbiturate sedative hypnotics are still extensively prescribed for the treatment of insomnia. There are a number of situations where identification or quantitative determination of these agents in biological fluids is required. Gas-chromatography offers highly sensitive and specific procedures for the determination of these compounds. The use of a nitrogen-specific detector allows a relatively simple sample preparation for sensitive detection and the use of capillary columns with bonded liquid phase allows separation of barbiturates without derivatization. In recent years liquid chromatography has also been extensively applied to the determination of these compounds. Sensitivity and selectivity of detection of barbiturates have been improved with the use of an alkaline mobile phase. Immunoassays for the determination of therapeutic concentrations of phenobarbital are very popular as the assays can be rapidly performed automatically. Use of these techniques has been extended for emergency detection of barbiturate overdose and for monitoring high-dose pentobarbital therapy.
3894400
A review of methods for the determination of tricyclic antidepressants in plasma or serum, based on the application of chromatographic techniques, is presented. A general discussion of the techniques in terms of their precision, accuracy, sensitivity and selectivity, with respect to parent drug and metabolites, is used to facilitate a comparison of methods. No one technique can be claimed as the method of choice for these drugs, although gas-liquid chromatography with nitrogen selective detection has some strong claims, viz. generally good sensitivity and reproducibility of assays and ready availability of equipment in most laboratories. The ultimate choice of a method for determining tricyclics will be determined more by the clinical application (routine monitoring versus pharmacokinetics) than by other factors.
3894401
Therapeutic drug monitoring can involve quantitation in either microgram, nanogram or picogram concentrations present in a complex biological matrix (whole blood, urine or tissue). The chemical structure of a compound influences not only the analytical method best suited to its quantitation, but also its acid/base character (pKa) and its extractability. The dose administered, the bioavailability of the dosage form, and the pharmacokinetic profile of the drug govern the circulating concentrations of either the parent drug and/or its metabolites present in vivo, and dictate the ultimate sensitivity and specificity required of the analytical method. The degree of sample preparation required is dependent on the analytical method used (gas--liquid chromatography, thin-layer chromatography, high-performance liquid chromatography) and on the tolerance of the specific type of detection system to contamination. Factors leading to compound losses during sample preparation (adsorption, stability) are critical at low concentrations and can adversely affect the reliability of an assay, therefore maximizing the overall recovery of the assay is essential not only for high sensitivity but also for good precision and accuracy. Therefore, the criteria to be used in sample preparation should aim to optimize all of the above factors in the overall development of a reliable and validated method for the compound suitable for use in clinical therapeutic monitoring.
3894402
Analytical procedures recently described for the quantitative determination of antibiotics in body fluids are reviewed. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and immunoassays appear as an alternative to current microbiological assays. HPLC has been applied to most antibiotics in clinical use and a major part of the review deals with this technique. Attention is given to sample pretreatment, characteristics of chromatography and detection, and limit of sensitivity. Non-isotopic immunoassays have been essentially applied to aminoglycosides and vancomycin and are also reviewed. Advantages and drawbacks of HPLC and immunoassays are presented.
3894403
A reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic assay for the simultaneous determination of cefotaxime and its metabolite desacetylcefotaxime in plasma and urine was developed. Plasma was deproteinized with small amounts of acetonitrile. After separation of the proteins the supernatant was extracted with a mixture of chloroform and 1-butanol. A phase separation was obtained leaving the cephalosporin and its metabolite in the aqueous part and extracting most of the interfering endogenous material. The aqueous phase was injected directly into the chromatograph. As part of the plasma water was dissolved in the acetonitrile--1-butanol--chloroform layer, the concentration of the cephalosporin in the aqueous phase was significantly higher than in the original plasma sample. Therefore, the usual diluting effect of the deproteinization could be avoided. In a similar way the assay was applicable to measure cefotaxime and its metabolite in urine. Calibration curves were set up and were linear up to 25 micrograms/ml for desacetylcefotaxime and 250 micrograms/ml for cefotaxime. The assay was applied to study the pharmacokinetics of cefotaxime and its metabolite in a healthy volunteer. In a similar way this deproteinization and extraction method was also applied to assay for ceftazidime, cephalexin, cephazolin and cefoxitin.
3894404
A new solid phase enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for detection of rubella-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody was developed. The test uses polystyrene microtiter strips coated with rabbit anti-human IgG immunoglobulins as the solid phase and an enzyme-labelled semipurified rubella antigen as indicator. The direct EIA was compared with hemagglutination inhibition (HI), single radial hemolysis (SRH), radioimmunoassay (RIA) and time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay (TR-FIA) using 52 serum specimens from patients with remote rubella infection. The overall agreement of direct EIA with HI was 96.1%, with SRH and RIA 98.1% and with TR-FIA 100%. The linear regression coefficient varied from 0.77 to 0.91, the best being obtained with direct EIA and SRH. The direct EIA was also suitable for diagnosis of acute infections, as a significant increase in antibody levels was detected in all paired specimens tested from patients with acute rubella infection. The sensitivity and were comparable to those of the assays employed. An advantage of the present assay is that the same method and same labelled antigen can be used to test for different classes of antibody using simply a solid phase with capture antibodies of different chain specificity.
3894406
The ratio (B/I) of bioactive to immunoreactive LH in plasma varies during pubertal maturation. To elucidate the basis for these changes, we compared the dose-response characteristics of LH standards to those of plasma LH before and after GnRH infusion in normal males at various pubertal stages and girls with Turner's syndrome. We used a human LH (hLH) RIA modified to optimize specificity for LH bioactivity by employing a hLH tracer maximally bioactive in the rat interstitial cell testosterone production (RICT) bioassay. The pituitary hLH standards LER-907, NHPP I-1, and NHPP I-2 were not parallel to one another in the RIA, but were parallel in the RICT. Their relative slopes in the RIA were 1:1.35:1.49, respectively. The B/I for immunoreactive LH in these standards were 1 (LER-907):3 (I-1):5 (I-2). Dose-response characteristics varied greatly by patient category in the RIA. In contrast to the RICT, in which plasma from all subject groups, except the prepubertal basal group, gave parallel dose-response slopes, the groups differed in the steepness of their plasma LH RIA dose-response curves in the following order: adult post-GnRH congruent to adult basal congruent to pubertal post-GnRH greater than pubertal basal congruent to prepubertal post-GnRH congruent to prepubertal basal greater than Turner's syndrome. Prepubertal basal samples most closely resembled LER-907 in dose-response characteristics, while adult samples were most similar to NHPP I-1 and I-2. These characteristics were not related to the absolute LH concentration. Although the RIA dose-response characteristics of plasma LH changed during puberty, the B/I of basal LH did not increase through puberty using the modified hLH RIA, although B/I still rose in GnRH-stimulated samples during puberty. Our data demonstrate that the principal cause of variability in B/I is the changing dose-response characteristics of plasma LH in the RIA. We suggest that the source of this variability is a change in the molecular characteristics of LH in different states of pubertal maturation and gonadal function. The results imply that better ways of assaying LH are needed.
3894407
Recurrent episodes of spontaneous hypoglycemia developed in a 30-yr-old woman who had received a brief course of insulin therapy 10 yr previously. She denied surreptitious insulin administration, and the autoimmune hypoglycemia syndrome was considered. Her insulin levels could not be reliably measured because of the presence of circulating antiinsulin antibodies, which interfere with standard RIA techniques. Reverse phase high performance liquid chromatographic analysis of serum obtained during a hypoglycemic episode revealed a mixture of beef and pork insulins but no human insulin, firmly establishing the diagnosis of factitious hypoglycemia. This case illustrates the value of reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography in characterizing patients in whom the autoimmune hypoglycemia syndrome is suspected.
3894411
Three strains of Legionella feeleii from patients with pneumonia (425-MI-H, 691-WI-H, and 693-WI-H) and one environmental strain (713-MI-E) received at the Centers for Disease Control for reference diagnostic testing were compared with the type strain WO-44C-C3 (ATCC 35072) by DNA hybridization, chemical analysis of cellular fatty acids and ubiquinones, biochemical tests, and serological characteristics. All four isolates were assigned to the L. feeleii species on the basis of DNA hybridization results. However, strains 691-WI-H and 693-WI-H were serologically distinct from strain WO-44C-C3, as shown by their minimal reactivity (1 to 2+) with a direct immunofluorescence conjugate prepared against L. feeleii serogroup 1 (strain WO-44C-C3). Therefore, strains 691-WI-H and 693-WI-H were placed in a new L. feeleii serogroup (serogroup 2). The reference strain of L. feeleii serogroup 2 is 691-WI-H (ATCC 35849).
3894412
Two rapid systems for the identification of anaerobes were compared to a conventional growth system aided by a computer. The rapid systems (AN-Ident and RapID-ANA) are non-growth-dependent micromethods that identify anaerobes in 4 h by the action of various constitutive enzymes on chromogenic substrates. The organisms tested were 98 anaerobes, most of which were clinical isolates. The AN-Ident system identified 76 of these to species level and 86 to genus level; the RapID-ANA system correctly identified 74 of the organisms to species level and identified 93 to genus level. The PRAS II system correctly identified 77 to species level and 96 to genus level. In most instances, adequate identification could be obtained with either of the two rapid systems, but the conventional PRAS II system remains the most accurate.
3894413
Immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies directed against IgG antibodies (rheumatoid factor [RF]) are known to occur often in patients with syphilis and to interfere with serological tests measuring specific antibodies of the IgM class. In this study we examined the occurrence and specificity of the RF and demonstrated a simple method to detect and eliminate the RF for a specific Treponema pallidum IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. We measured the occurrence of the RF with a sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and found that it increased with the duration of syphilitic disease: 1 of 13 primary syphilis serum specimens, 3 of 13 secondary syphilis serum specimens, and 10 of 27 latent syphilis serum specimens were reactive in this RF test. Those sera containing IgM RF were immunoprecipitated with anti-human gamma chain antibodies and 2% polyethylene glycol until the RF was removed. One serum specimen from a patient in the secondary stage of syphilis and eight serum specimens from patients with latent disease still presented the RF after immunoprecipitation. Removal of the IgG antibodies also improved the sensitivity of the treponemal IgM test, indicating competition of these antibodies for binding sites of the antigen. The enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for detection of RF and antitreponemal IgM antibodies are performed on the same plate. Theoretically, only sera positive for both tests have to be immunoprecipitated. But our findings indicated an increase in sensitivity of the IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay after removal of IgG antibodies responsible for competition at the binding sites.
3894414
We analyzed the subcellular distribution of La antigen in brain tissue using 5 La antisera regarded as monospecific on the basis of immunofluorescence, counterimmunoelectrophoresis and Western blot studies. Staining patterns of these sera on human, rat and guinea pig brain were assessed by indirect immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase methods. There was an intense staining of the nucleolus in most neurons exposed to the La antisera in guinea pig brain. Human cerebral cortical neurons as well as a subset of neurons of rat brain also showed nucleolar staining with the La antisera. This staining could be inhibited by preincubation of La antisera with immunopurified La protein. One- and two-dimensional analysis of the La antigen from soluble and nuclear extracts suggested that the soluble and nucleolar La antigens are the same protein. The concentration of La in the nucleolus may be related to the proposed processing activity of this protein for the RNA polymerase III transcript, 5S RNA.
3894416
This study was undertaken to examine whether there were sex-associated differences in the action of insulin on glucose metabolism in adipocytes. Insulin binding and the dose-response curves for glucose transport (assessed by measuring the cell-associated radioactivity after 15-s incubation with 50 microM [6-14C]glucose) and [U-14C]glucose (5 mM) metabolism into CO2 and lipids were compared in retroperitoneal adipocytes from age-matched (84 d) male and female rats. In addition, the activity of fatty acid synthetase, one of the key lipogenic enzymes, was determined. Fat cell size was not significantly larger in females than in males (0.238 vs. 0.209 microgram lipid per cell). At insulin concentrations less than or equal to 1.6 nM, adipocytes from females bound significantly more insulin than did adipocytes from males, due to an increased apparent affinity of the receptors for insulin. Accordingly, the sensitivity of glucose transport to insulin was greater in females than in males: insulin concentration eliciting half-maximal stimulation (ED50) = 0.19 nM vs. 0.41 nM. At maximal insulin stimulation the rates of glucose transport (12 times the basal values) were similar in the two sexes. In contrast, the maximal effect of insulin on glucose conversion to CO2 plus lipids was much greater in the adipocytes from females than males (increment over basal: 472 vs. 249 nmol/10(6) cells per 2 h). Fatty acid synthesis contributed approximately 40% of the incremental difference between the two types of adipocytes, while glyceride-glycerol synthesis contributed less than 10%. The insulin dose-response curves for adipocytes from females were shifted to the left for all the metabolic pathways investigated. The mean ED50 for total glucose metabolism in females was 50% of that in males (0.07 nM vs. 0.15 nM). Marked sex-associated differences in the action of insulin on glucose metabolism were also observed in subcutaneous inguinal adipocytes (increment over basal: 137 and 56 nmol/10(6) cells per 2 h, ED50 = 0.13 nM and 0.30 nM in females and males, respectively). The intracellular capacity to metabolize glucose through the fatty acid synthesis pathway, as assessed by FAS activity, was higher in adipocytes from females than in those from males and was greater in retroperitoneal than in inguinal adipocytes. Furthermore, by plotting the individual data, a highly significant correlation (r = 0.92, P less than 0.001) was found between the absolute effect of insulin on glucose metabolism at maximal stimulation and the fatty acid synthetase activity of the cells. These results indicate that the response of glucose metabolism to insulin in adipocytes from female as compared with male rats is characterized by two main features: (a) an increased sensitivity primarily due to an increase in insulin binding, and (b) an increased responsiveness closely associated with a postreceptor increase in the lipogenic capacity of the cell. These findings might be relevant to the differential disposition of male and female rats to develop fatness.
3894417
A large proportion of the cells of the human atherosclerotic plaque is assumed to be derived from medial smooth muscle cells. In contrast to these, the cells of the plaque have the capacity to accumulate lipid, and they also proliferate at a higher rate than medial cells. It has therefore been suggested that smooth muscle cells undergo a change of phenotype during atherogenesis, but there has been no evidence for such a change on the molecular level. We have now analyzed carotid artery plaques using a battery of antibodies against cell surface and cytoskeletal antigens, and found that most of the cells express the class II transplantation antigen (Ia antigen) HLA-DR. Also, the beta chain of HLA-DR was detected by immunoblotting of plaque extracts with the OKIa1 monoclonal antibody. HLA-DR is normally present on cells of the immune system, but only 60% of the DR-positive cells of the plaque reacted with monoclonal antibodies specific for macrophages and lymphocytes. Many of the remaining DR-positive cells contained the muscle-specific intermediate filament protein, desmin. This indicates that smooth muscle cells of atherosclerotic plaques express DR antigen. In contrast, very few DR-positive cells were found in normal human arteries. This suggests that expression of class II antigen is part of a phenotypic change in smooth muscle cells in atherosclerosis.
3894418
The mechanism(s) and site(s) of the insulin resistance were examined in nine normal-weight noninsulin-dependent diabetic (NIDD) subjects. The euglycemic insulin clamp technique (insulin concentration approximately 100 microU/ml) was employed in combination with hepatic and femoral venous catheterization and measurement of endogenous glucose production using infusion of tritiated glucose. Total body glucose metabolism in the NIDD subjects (4.37 +/- 0.45 mg/kg per min) was 38% (P less than 0.01) lower than in controls (7.04 +/- 0.63 mg/kg per min). Quantitatively, the most important site of the insulin resistance was found to be in peripheral tissues. Leg glucose uptake in the diabetic group was reduced by 45% as compared with that in controls (6.0 +/- 0.2 vs. 11.0 +/- 0.1 mg/kg leg wt per min; P less than 0.01). A strong positive correlation was observed between leg and total body glucose uptake (r = 0.70, P less than 0.001). Assuming that muscle is the primary leg tissue responsible for glucose uptake, it could be estimated that 90 and 87% of the infused glucose was disposed of by peripheral tissues in the control and NIDD subjects, respectively. Net splanchnic glucose balance during insulin stimulation was slightly more positive in the control than in the diabetic subjects (0.31 +/- 0.10 vs. 0.05 +/- 0.19 mg/kg per min; P less than 0.07). The difference (0.26 mg/kg per min) in net splanchnic glucose balance in NIDD represented only 10% of the reduction (2.67 mg/kg per min) in total body glucose uptake in the NIDD group and thus contributed very little to the insulin resistance. The results emphasize the importance of the peripheral tissues in the disposal of infused glucose and indicate that muscle is the most important site of the insulin resistance in NIDD.
3894415
The distribution of pressure points in 16 patients with paraplegia, nine with ulcers, and six who were ulcer free were compared with the distribution in 15 normal individuals using an instrument capable of simultaneously measuring multiple pressure points under the buttocks and thighs. The nine patients with ischial and sacral decubiti showed redistribution of their sitting pressures posteriorly, asymmetrical loading of the ischiae, and higher than normal pressures under the sacrococcygeum. These abnormal pressures were associated with unbalanced scoliosis, pelvic obliquity, and the loss of physiological lordosis following a spinal fusion. We defined four criteria of risk for decubitus ulceration.
3894419
Effective killing of bacteria by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) is generally assumed to require intracellular sequestration and, depending on the bacterial species, can be both O2-dependent or O2-independent. Killing of several strains of Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli by rabbit PMN does not require O2 and is apparently due to a granule-associated bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein (BPI) present in rabbit and human PMN. In this study we examined the O2 dependence of the killing of E. coli (S15) by human PMN. Ingested and noningested E. coli were separated by centrifugation after incubation with PMN in room air or under N2. In the presence of heat-treated serum approximately 50% of E. coli (10 bacteria/PMN) were taken up by PMN and rapidly (5-15 min) killed both in room air and under N2. The remaining extracellular bacteria (approximately 50%) were killed during 30-60 min of incubation in room air but not under N2. When uptake of E. coli by PMN was increased to approximately 80% by the use of C6-depleted serum (retaining heat-labile opsonins), bacterial survival under N2 was reduced from 54 +/- 7.6% to 13 +/- 5.5%. PMN from a patient with chronic granulomatous disease killed PMN-associated but not extracellular E. coli. BPI was detected, by indirect immunofluorescence, on the surface of PMN-associated E. coli within 5 min of incubation of E. coli with PMN both in room air and under N2. In contrast, at no time was BPI detected on the surface of extracellular E. coli, indicating that the non-PMN-associated E. coli had not been previously ingested. Thus, killing of ingested E. coli S15 by human as well as rabbit PMN does not require O2 and appears to be BPI-mediated. However, when ingestion is limited, extracellular bacteria can also be killed but principally by O2-dependent mechanisms.
3894421
Understanding the influence of insulin on glucose turnover is the key to interpreting a great number of metabolic situations. Little is known, however, about insulin's effect on the distribution and exchange of glucose in body pools. We developed a physiological compartmental model to describe the kinetics of plasma glucose in normal man in the basal state and under steady-state conditions of euglycemic hyperinsulinemia. A bolus of [3-3H]glucose was rapidly injected into a peripheral vein in six healthy volunteers, and the time-course of plasma radioactivity was monitored at very short time intervals for 150 min. A 1-mU/min kg insulin clamp was then started, thereby raising plasma insulin levels to a high physiological plateau (approximately 100 microU/ml). After 90 min of stable euglycemic hyperinsulinemia, a second bolus of [3-3H]glucose was given, and plasma radioactivity was again sampled frequently for 90 min more while the clamp was continued. Three exponential components were clearly identified in the plasma disappearance curves of tracer glucose of each subject studied, both before and after insulin. Based on stringent statistical criteria, the data in the basal state were fitted to a three-compartment model. The compartment of initial distribution was identical to the plasma pool (40 +/- 3 mg/kg); the other two compartments had similar size (91 +/- 12 and 96 +/- 9 mg/kg), but the former was in rapid exchange with plasma (at an average rate of 1.09 +/- 0.15 min-1), whereas the latter exchanged 10 times more slowly (0.12 +/- 0.01 min-1). The basal rate of glucose turnover averaged 2.15 +/- 0.12 mg/min kg, and the total distribution volume of glucose in the postabsorptive state was 26 +/- 1% of body weight. In view of current physiological information, it was assumed that the more rapidly exchanging pool represented the insulin-independent tissues of the body, while the slowly exchanging pool was assimilated to the insulin-dependent tissues. Insulin-independent glucose uptake was estimated (from published data) at 75% of basal glucose uptake, and was constrained not to change with euglycemic hyperinsulinemia. When the kinetic data obtained during insulin administration were fitted to this model, neither the size nor the exchange rates of the plasma or the rapid pool were appreciably changed. In contrast, the slow pool was markedly expanded (from 96 +/- 9 to 190 +/- 30 mg/kg, P less than 0.02) at the same time as total glucose disposal rose fourfold above basal (to 7.96 +/- 0.85 mg/min kg, P less than 0.001). Furthermore, a significant direct correlation was found to exist between the change in size of the slow pool and the insulin-stimulated rate of total glucose turnover (r=0.92, P<0.01). We conclude that hyperinsulinemia, independent of hyperglycemia, markedly increases the exchangeable mass of glucose in the body, presumably reflecting the accumulation of free, intracellular glucose in insulin-dependent tissues.
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Dataset Summary

A daily-updated dataset of PubMed abstracts, collected via PubMed’s API and published on Hugging Face Datasets.
Each snapshot is versioned by date (e.g., 2025-03-28) so users can track historical changes or use a consistent snapshot for reproducibility.

  • Updated daily
  • Each version tagged by date
  • Abstract-only dataset (no full text)

Dataset Structure

Column Type Description
pmid string Unique PubMed identifier
abstract string Abstract text

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from datasets import load_dataset

ds = load_dataset("uiyunkim-hub/pubmed-abstract")

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