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Intrarenal infusion of somatostatin in anesthetized dogs produced a prompt increase in urine flow in association with a decrease in urinary osmolality and an increase in free water clearance. These changes occurred in the absence of changes in arterial pressure, renal plasma flow, osmolar clearance, electrolyte excretion or cyclic AMP excretion. The diuretic effect occurred primarily in the infused kidney indicating a direct intrarenal action rather than suppression of vasopressin secretion. This diuretic action of somatostatin may result from inhibition of the action of vasopressin on the renal medulla but other possible mechanisms cannot be excluded.
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The objective of this study was to investigate changes in the secretion of prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) occurring during a 24 h period in the mouse. Adult female mice of the C57BL/St strain and male mice of the C3H/St strain, maintained on a 14 h light and 10 h dark schedule, were used. Serum and pituitary concentrations of PRL and GH were measured by radioimmunoassay in samples collected by decapitation at hourly intervals through 24 h. Serum PRL concentrations in female mice averaged higher during the daylight hours and lower at night. However, the pattern was just the opposite in males: the values were lower during the day time and higher and variable during the night. Pituitary PRL levels dropped significantly after the onset of the dark phase in mice of both sexes. Serum GH concentrations of female mice did not fluctuate significantly with the time of the day, but those of male mice displayed a distinct flux: the levels were low from 0800 h until 1500 h, began to rise in the afternoon, and remained relatively high throughout the night. Pituitary levels of GH did not change with time in mice of either sex. The data suggest the existence of daily rhythms in the secretion of PRL and GH in mice, with marked differences related to sex. In general, the changes were most pronounced for serum PRL in females and for serum GH in males.
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Immunoelectrophoresis revealed in phenol extracts from S. faecalis and S. faecium a mixture of free and lipid-bound teichoic acids, both reactive with Group D antisera. In phenol extracts from S. suis only lipid-bound teichoic acid, also reactive with Group D antiserum, was seen. This difference probably accounts for the low yield of Group D antigen from S. suis as compared with S. faecalis and S. faecium when heating at pH 2 is used for extraction. When phenol is used good yields are obtained from S. suis as well as from S. faecalis and S. faecium. Lipoteichoic acids from S. faecalis and S. faecium have a backbone structure the same as or similar to that of Group A streptococcal teichoic acid. Lipoteichoic acid from S. suis has a structure differing from that of S. faecalis and S. faecium, e.g., possibly in the attachment of its glucosyl substituents. Precipitation reactions between S. suis lipoteichoic acid and Group D antisera were specifically inhibited by glucose. Reactions between S. bovis phenol extracts and some Group D antisera were also specifically inhibited by glucose, but extracts from S. faecalis and S. faecium were not. This may indicate a monosaccharide glucosyl substituent in teichoic acid from S. suis and S. bovis instead of the di- or trisaccharide previously postulated as the glucosyl substituent in the teichoic acid of S. faecalis.
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Graft-vs.-host (GVH) reactivity of parental lymph node (LN) cells was assayed by measurements of 3H-thymidine incorporation in vivo in spleens of irradiated F1 recipients. Preincubation of parental LN cells with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) for 2 h at 37 degrees C followed by washing resulted in an 85-90% reduction in splenic radioactivity, as did injection of VSV on days 0-2 after recipients received untreated parental LN cells. In contrast, 3H-thymidine incorporation in the spleens or irradiated F1 hosts was not affected by VSV when F1 bone marrow cells were incubated with the virus. In addition, preincubation of F1 B cells with VSV still allowed these syngeneic B cells to be recruited into proliferation by mitomycin-treated parental LN cells. The inhibitory effect of VSV, thus, seems to be specific for T-cell proliferation. These observations suggest that viral immunosuppression might be capable of being developed into a useful strategy for selective deletion of lymphocytes capable of reacting against histocompatibility antigens and initiating GVH reactions.
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Frequencies of different staphylococcal nasal carrier classes were studied in groups of students of nursing and of laboratory personnel in Cologne, West Germany, and in Krakow, Poland, by six consecutive samplings of their nasal vestibules. The general number of persistent carriers of S. aureus appeared to be lower than in previous studies, paralleling the diminished numbers of staphylococcal infections in populations. Differences in numbers of persistent carriers between the Cologne and Krakow groups were probably related to the incidence and types of S. aureus in the environment.
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A DNA replication mutant of yeast, cdc8, was found to decrease UV-induced reversion of lys2-1, arg4-17, tyr1 and ura1. This effect was observed with all three alleles of cdc8 tested. Survival curves obtained following UV irradiation in cdc8 rad double mutants show that cdc8 is epistatic to rad6, as well as to rad1; cdc8 rad51 double mutants seem to be more sensitive than the single mutants. Since UV-induced reversion in cdc8 rad1 and cdc8 rad51 double mutants is like that of the cdc8 single mutants, we conclude that CDC8 plays a direct role in error-prone repair. To test whether CDC8 codes for a DNA polymerase, we have purified both DNA polymerase I and DNA polymerase II from cdc8 and CDC+ cells. The purified DNA polymerases from cdc8 were no more heat labile than those from CDC+, suggesting that CDC8 is not a structural gene for either enzyme.
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Assuming that unrecognized or inadequately corrected hypovolemia results in higher mortality and morbidity rates, we developed a systematic approach to resuscitation that would: 1) identify criteria to aid in the recognition of hypovolemia and ensure the expeditious correction of this defect without interfering with diagnostic workup and management; 2) define criteria to prevent fluid overload which may jeopardize the patient's course, and 3) express these criteria in an explicit, systematic, patient care algorithm, ie, protocol, useful to both the resident and the practicing physician. We are now conducting prospective clinical trials with one service using the algorithm and the others acting as the control group. Preliminary results comparing patient outcomes suggest that the algorithm improves patient care by shortening resuscitation time and results in fewer hospital days, intensive care unit days, febrile days, and days on mechanical ventilation as well as reduced mortality. The algorithm provides a systematic plan to organize patient care so that the most urgently needed procedures are not delayed or overlooked.
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Variation in the assessment of basic clinical data gathered by emergency medical technicians and emergency department nurses was studied. Prior to testing, precise definitions, categories and procedures were developed and tolerance limits for the quantitative variables were created. Each participant evaluated four consecutive patients simultaneously with another evaluator setting the standard. The results indicate that the error rate is low to moderate for the different variables. For the quantitative variables, the error rate is over 20% and, when an error does occur, it is often very large. This indicates a need for ongoing emphasis on accurate measurement and, in cases where highly accurate data is essential, the use of multiple observers.
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There is a need at both the emergency department and national level for a systematic method to prioritize clinical and nonclinical areas for research and quality assessment. A method has been developed and applied that allows frequently presenting diagnoses and management issues to be rated in terms of morbidity generated, efficacy of (optimal) clinical intervention, discrepancy between optimal and current treatment, and the impact of an evaluative intervention study on improving care. Also, a summary research priority score was derived. When this method was used by physicians, nurses and administrators at the Johns Hopkins Hospital Adult Emergency Department, a reasonable level of agreement between the three responding groups emerged.
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A hypertonic albuminated fluid demand regimen (HALFD) for resuscitation has been used in burn patients since January 1, 1976. The effects of the HALFD method were compared with hypertonic fluid and Ringer's lactate resuscitation. Specific attention was directed to fluid, colloid, and volume changes. Resuscitation was guided by maintaining the mean arterial pressure between 60 to 110 torr, and urine volume at 30 to 50 ml/hr. Patients treated with the HALFD method fared significantly better clinically, needed less fluid, had less weight gain and plasma leak, and experienced slower plasma volume repletion than those treated more traditionally. We conclude that the HALFD method is a physically and physiologically appropriate paradigm for resuscitating the volume-depleted patient.
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A karyological analysis of the G-banded chromosomes of the serially transplantable GW-39 human colonic carcinoma was undertaken. GW-39 cells harvested from hamsters, nude (athymic) mice and cell cultures from 1972 to 1976 revealed a hypodiploid stemline of 45 human chromosomes, with a consistent loss of a 21-chromosome. No apparent alterations of the near-diploid stemline resulted during long-term xenogeneic propagation of this human cancer line.
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The postulated role of macrophages in the primary infection of human lymphocytes by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was examined. Macrophage removal had no effect on the blastogenic response but slightly reduced the percentage of EBNA-positive cells induced by the B 95-8 virus strain. Both the rate of DNA synthesis and the appearance of EBNA-positive cells could rather be related to the number of B cells in the infected populations. Macrophages are thus not required for the initiation of EBV-induced lymphocyte transformation.
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Protein modification with dimethylnitrosamine was studied in vitro in the presence of hamster liver microsomal fraction. Incorporation of radioactive methyl groups from dimethylnitrosamine into the exogenously added protein was dependent on the microsomal mixed function oxidase system. The methylation yielded chemically labile and stable products. The former was completely hydrolyzed by the mild alkaline treatment, pH 7.4, 100 degrees C, for 5 min and the hydrolytic product was identified as methanol indicating that the activated methyl groups from dimethylnitrosamine were incorporated into a protein as a carboxyl-methyl ester. Thus, it is suggested that methanol, recovered as one of the products during the biodegradation of dimethylnitrosamine [8], is derived, at least in part, from protein carboxyl-methyl ester which is unstable under physiological conditions.
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Phorbolol myristate acetate, a metabolite of the tumor promotor phorbol muristate acetate in mouse skin, has one-fiftieth the potency of the parent molecule for the induction of cell division in stationary cultures of BALB/c-3T3 mouse embryo cells. Similarly, in a mixed cell culture assay devised for detection of tumor-promoting agents, phorbolol myristate acetate exhibited only a small fraction of the activity of unmetabolized phorbol ester. The results indicate that the biological activity of phorbol esters either does not require metabolic conversion or is converted by the cells used in this system and that phorbolol myristate acetate would be a tumor promotor of low potency for mouse skin compared to phorbol myristate acetate.
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Binding capacities of membrane suspensions and dissolved compounds for mercurials were titrated by a new potentiometric method. Critical steps included a silver electrode of new design, the use of L-cysteine as a thiol buffer, a nitrogen atmosphere, and pretreatment of samples with equimolar mercurial and cysteine. Titrations had a sharp endpoint, accurate +/- 26 nmole methylmercury or +/- 8 nmole mercuric salt. Measurements of binding capacity of bovine serum albumin averaged 93% of the titer predicted for one SH group per molecule; those of human hemoglobin yielded 86-91% of the titer predicted for two SH groups per molecule. Yields dropped with exposure of protein solutions or membrane suspensions to atmospheric oxygen. Brain microsomes had significantly higher binding capacities (per milligram of protein) than red blood cell ghosts. The ratio of endpoint titers of CH3HgCl to HgCl2 averaged 2:1 in assays of cysteine, proteins, and membranes, showing that the assay was free of denaturation artifacts and protein-protein interference. Solutions of EDTA showed measurable binding of Hg2+ but not of CH3Hg+. Satisfactory titrations were also obtained with N-ethylmaleimide.
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The effect of semistarvation on small intestinal transport of D-glucose, L-valine, and NaCl was studied in an in vitro system of isolated rat brush border membrane vesicles. Whereas semistarvation enhanced the transport rate for L-valine by 19-29%, there was no change in D-glucose transport. When energy in the form of a NaSCN gradient was supplied to the membrane vesicles prepared from semistarved animals, L-valine was concentrated to a greater extent than those from well-fed animals. Strain differences were observed in the manner semistarvation affected NaCl transport across the brush border membrane. Semistarvation increased the NaCl transport rate by a factor of 3.5 in one rat strain and not at all in another. These results provide a partial explanation for the cellular basis of elevated neutral amino acid absorption by the small intestine in semistarvation.
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Amino acid transport systems for alanine and leucine have been reconstituted into artificial lipid vesicles. Purified plasma membrane vesicles from Ehrlich ascites cells were dissolved in 2% sodium cholate, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.5 mM EDTA, a mixture which solubilized approximately 50% of the membrane protein. This solubilized protein fraction was further purified by a combination of ammonium sulfate precipitations, gel filtration, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. A fraction containing approximately 15 Coomassie blue staining bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels was obtained. This material was reconstituted into liposomes, and preliminary results demonstrated transport of alanine and leucine dependent on a sodium gradient. In addition, an electrogenic gradient mediated by valinomycin-induced potassium diffusion seemed to stimulate alanine uptake further.
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A major glycoprotein fraction of the isolated adipocyte plasma membrane migrated in the 200,000-dalton region of dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels following solubilization in 2% dodecyl sulfate/4M urea at room temperature in the absence of reductant. Limited heat treatment allowed resolution of the glycoprotein into two distinct bands in the same high-molecular-weight region plus a new 94,000-dalton glycoprotein band. Prolonged incubation of solubilized plasma membranes at 100 degrees C for 15-30 min or incubation with reductant resulted in complete conversion of the high-molecular-weight bands to the 94,000-dalton region, indicating dissociation of dimers to the monomeric form. When the dimer bands on column gels were electrophoresed in the second dimension on slab gels in the presence of reductant, no low-molecular-weight bands were observed other than that in the 94,000-dalton region. The effects of limited heat treatment to permit resolution of the two dimers and the extended treatment to convert the dimers to the monomeric form were markedly inhibited by alkylation of the solubilized membrane protein with N-ethylmaleimide or oxidation with H2O2 or diamide. However, these latter treatments did not prevent complete dissociation of dimers due to addition of reductants. These results suggest that two glycoprotein fractions may exist as dimers in the native fat cell plasma membrane. The data are consistent with a model in which the glycoprotein subunits are linked by hydrophobic bonds that are sensitive to reduction of intramolecular disulfides but are stabilized by alkylation or oxidation of the glycoprotein sulfhydryls.
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A new economical and reproducible micromethod for the preparation of human macrophage cultures in wells of a microtiter plate is described. The technique has been employed for the study of events which occur in the interaction of lymphocytes with macrophages in PHA-stimulated immune interferon production and blastogenesis. By comparison with the current Leighton tube macroculture systems, the microculture technique yielded a 7-fold increase in the number of macrophage cultures and a 5-fold increase in the number of T lymphocyte macrophage cultures from a given volume of blood. The replicability from sample to sample with regard to 3H-thymidine incorporation and amount of interferon produced is better in the microculture system than in the Leighton tube system. Such a microculture technique will thus provide a system whereby ready analysis of monocyte-macrophage function and interaction with lymphocytes in numerous disease states can now be realized.
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The chronic administration of Tilorone [(2,7-bis(diethylamino)ethoxy]fluoren-9-one) with antigen seems to prevent the generation of DTH effector cells. The administration of Tilorone proximal to DTH challenge blocks the expression of DTH. By local transfer of DTH effector cells, this latter effect can be shown to be due to the lack of nonspecific inflammatory cells. By the use of both systemic and local transfer systems, it is also shown that specific DTH effector cells from animals treated with Tilorone are unable to circulate in the normal manner. Overall, these experiments suggest that Tilorone does not block the generation of DTH effector cells, but it does greatly alter the expression of DTH. The relation between these effects and the known interferon induction capacity on Tilorone remains unclear.
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Tilorone (2,7-bis[(diethylamino)ethoxy]fluoren-9-one) can enhance the humoral immune response of mice to SRBC although Tilorone has no effect on functional activity of splenic B cells in the absence of immunogen. Tilorone does not alter the effective level of T cell help but does seem to alter the level of effective suppression. Tilorone seems to be an adjuvant only in the sense of removing a normal homeostatic control mechanism, perhaps suppressor T cells.
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The effects of chemotactic factors on rabbit neutrophils were evaluated measuring cell migration in modified Boyden chambers and under agarose, in lysosomal enzyme release, leukocyte aggregation, and in vivo neutropenia. Chemotactins employed included the complement-derived C3 and C5 fragments, the bacterial chemotactic factor from culture supernatant fluids of Escherichia coli, and the synthetic chemotactic factors Met-Leu-Phe and formyl-Met-Leu-Phe. A consistent parallelism was found in all the leukocyte responses to a given chemotactic factor. In no instance, with any of the five chemotactic factor preparations, did cells responding in one assay system fail to respond in the four other assay systems, suggesting a common event in all of the cell responses. Boyden chamber chemotaxis was consistently the most sensitive assay; the agarose assay was, in general, less sensitive by a factor of 100 fold. Enzyme release approached, in cell sensitivity to chemotactic factors, that of the Boyden chamber assay. In general, in vitro leukocyte aggregation and in vivo neutropenia were considerably less sensitive assays. Chemotactic factor inactivator (CFI) purified from human serum destroyed in parallel all biological activities of C3 and C5 chemotactic factors but had no effect on the bacterial chemotactic factor and the activities of synthetic chemotactic peptides.
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Histamine or prostaglandin (PG) E1 or E2 administered to rabbits topically alone in high doses produced conjunctival vasodilation associated with little or no edema while their mixture at lower concentrations produced conjunctival vasodilation associated with profound edema. Sections of tissues treated with the mixture of histamine and PGE1 or PGE2 showed widespread epithelial and subepithelial inflammatory cellular infiltration. Conjunctival smears from eyes treated with the histamine/PG mixture contained small lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes, including eosinophilic and occasionally basophilic cells. Differential staining of the polymorphs demonstrated both eosinophils and pseudoeosinophils. Histological examination of the conjunctival smears and sections of the lids obtained from eyes treated with either histamine or PGE1 or PGE2 alone did not show any detectable increase of inflammatory cells when compared to normal controls. The clinical and histological results indicate that the synergistic effect of histamine with PGs of the E-type in the conjunctiva produces an inflammatory response similar to that seen in various clinical forms of human allergic conjunctivitis. Such a response could not be produced by histamine or PGE1 or PGE2 alone even at much higher doses than in the mixture. The data indicate that an interplay of several different mediators may be crucial in the conjunctival response in allergy.
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The accumulation of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) in guinea-pig macrophages exposed to the adenylate cyclase (AC) stimulators prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and isoproterenol (IP), was markedly enhanced by pretreatment of the cells with colchicine, vinblastine, and podophyllotoxin--agents which prevent microtubule assembly. The same agents did not augment basal cAMP levels. The facilitating effect of the drugs on the response to PGE1 and IP developed both in the absence and presence of a phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor. The same drugs also enhanced the accumulation of cAMP induced by cholera toxin (CT) but the presence of a PDE inhibitor was required for such enhancement to become evident. Pretreatment of macrophages with cytochalasin B, an agent interfering with microfilament function, had no effect on the responsiveness of the cells to AC stimulators. The microtubule stabilizer, deuterium oxide (D2O) partially reversed the colchicine effect. Microtubule disrupting drugs did not block the release of cAMP from the cells into the surrounding medium. Macrophages incubated as monolayers or in suspension showed the same degree of increased responsiveness to stimulators after preexposure to colchicine. Preincubation with the ionophore A23187, which elevates the intracellular concentration of Ca2+, also enhanced the stimulation of AC by PGE1 and IP. Microtubule disrupting agents did not potentiate AC activity in broken cell preparations, whether added to the intact cells before disruption or directly to the enzyme assay mixture, nor did they affect PDE activity of macrophage sonicates. Moderate enhancement of PGE1-induced cAMP formation was also seen in colchicine- and vinblastine-treated lymphocytes. It was concluded that microtubules control the activity of AC by restricting the mobility of membrane receptors. Disruption of microtubules by drugs results in the removal of such restraints and an augmented chance of productive interactions between receptors and catalytic units of AC.
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Mouse amniotic fluid was shown to contain a noncytotoxic inhibitor of primary gammaM and secondary gammaM, gammaG subclass splenic plaque forming cells in vitro to SRBC. The suppressive effect was not abolished by exhaustive dialysis or by absorption of mouse amniotic fluid (MAF) with SRBC. Polyacrylamide gel analysis showed that dialyzed MAF was composed of three major protein components, transferrin, albumin, and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). The selective removal of each of these patients from MAF by affinity chromatography suggested that AFP was the immunosuppressive substance in MAF. This conclusion was verified by the demonstration that pure AFP suppressed in vitro antibody synthesis in microgram quantities whereas equivalent amounts of normal mouse serum, transferrin, or albumin did not. Dose-response studies showed that the effect of AFP in the isolated form was equivalent to the suppressive effect of comparable amounts of AFP in MAF. gammaA and gammaG plaque-forming cell (PFC) responses were suppressed by a significantly lower concentration of AFP than was the gammaM PFC response. The degree of suppression watration of AFP than was the gammaM PFC response. The degree of suppression was dependent on the time at which AFP was added to the cultures; MAF added to antigen-stimulated cultures up to 24 h after initiation of cultures was immunosuppressive whereas similar additions of MAF at 48 h after initiation or later did not suppress. The duration of exposure of spleen cells to MAF in cultures without antigen necessary to achieve suppression of a subsequent primary immune response was determine-d to be approximately 8 h. The results suggest that AFP may have an immunoregulatry function. This has potentially important implications in the maternal-fetal relationship, the immune capabilities of the fetus and newborn, and in certain malignant and nonmalignant diseases in which AFP is elevated.
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A two-phase model of allograft immunity was studied. In the first phase, specific immune T-cells were generated by incubation of responder cells with mitomycin-C treated allogeneic stimulator cells of the same H-2 type as mouse mastocytoma tumor cells. In the second step, the ability of the sensitized cells to kill Cr51-labelled P-815 mastocytoma cells was assayed. Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) was shown to inhibit the generation of immune cytotoxic T-cells at low concentrations (1-100 ng/ml) when added at the beginning of the first phase. When added at the end of the first phase or in the second (killing) phase, AFP was found to have no significant effect on cytotoxicity, indicating that it did not inhibit the killer T-cell once it was generated.
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Surface-bound alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) was demonstrated by immunofluorescence on approximately 1/3 of splenic lymphocytes in chronic murine graft vs. host (GVH) reactions. Splenic lymphocytes were also shown to have a suppressed phytohemagglutinin (PHA) response compared to controls while lymph node cells from the same GVH animals revealed no surface AFP and had normal PHA responses. Splenic lymphocytes showed marked synthesis of AFP in the GVH and mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) reactions by [14C]leucine incorporation and by radioimmunoassay in MLC supernates. Lymph node cells, however, demonstrated less synthetic activity and 14C counts in their membrane fractions were not markedly elevated.
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AFP is one of several oncofetal proteins synthesized in large amounts by the fetus. Although synthesis drops markedly shortly after birth, small amounts of AFP continue to be produced in the adult. The function of AFP is unknown, but recent studies suggest the possibility that it may have immunoregulatory properties and/or may influence cell proliferation and growth. The high affinity of AFP for estrogen could have important biological functions, although the significance of this binding has not yet been clearly defined. Elevated levels of AFP are seen in a variety of clinical situations, including pregnancy; hepatic disorders, especially chronic hepatitis; and various malignancies, particularly hepatomas, teratomas, and those of primitive gut origin. It is also produced in murine GVH reactions and in lymphomas, both in mice and humans. In human and murine lymphomas, and murine GVH reactions, the presence of AFP-positive cells and immune suppression are highly correlated, but the role of these in the pathogenesis of the diseases is as yet unclear. It appears, however, that AFP may be produced locally in lymphoid tissues involved in GVH and lymphomatous disease without elevations in serum AFP levels. It is speculated that the local production of AFP in these situations may result from blastogenesis of lymphoid cells directed against foreign tumor or viral antigens. AFP could promote the development of tumors either by suppressing immune surveillance and/or immunity to oncogenic viruses, although this is speculative. Finally, the AFP elevations in maternal serum and amniotic fluid are valuable diagnostically in the detection of fetal abnormalities, particularly neural-tube defects.
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Chlorinated hydrocarbons, such as the pesticide lindane (gamma-hexachlorocyclohexane), quench the fluorescence of carbazole. The observed quenching is a result of the molecular contacts which occur upon diffusional collisions. Because the amount of quenching depends upon the collisional frequency between carbazole and pesticide, this phenomenon provides a measure of both the diffusional rate of lindane and its local concentration. The carbazole fluorophore is localized within phosphatidylcholine bilayers by cosonicating the lipid with a newly synthesized phospholipid, beta-(11-(9-carbazole)-undecanoyl)-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine. Using this probe in dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and the above mentioned quenching phenomena, we determined the lindane diffusion rate within the bilayer to be 5.7.10-7 cm2/s at 37 degrees C. Measurement of the apparent quenching constant at various dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine concentrations yielded a lipid-water partition coefficient for lindane of 9500, which is in agreement with the value of 8980 obtained by our equilibrium dialysis experiments. Vesicles of dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine become saturated with lindane at a pesticide to lipid molar ratio of approx. 0.28. These results demonstrate the possibility of using the quenching of carbazole fluorescence to investigate the transport and partitioning of pesticides within biological membranes. This ability should prove useful in studies of the interactions of chlorinated hydrocarbons with cell membranes.
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Phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) soluble extracts of human epidermis and dermis from secretor donors contain products with blood group antigenic activity. The predominant blood group in a sample was the same as the red cell phenotype of the donor. H substance activity was present in all PBS-soluble products (from A, B and O donors). By gel filtration chromatography on a Bio-Gel A-1.5 m column; the epidermal and dermal PBS-soluble blood group substances fractionate in the void volume.
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The relation of the hippocampal EEG to behavior and to the neocortical EEG is being studied in psychomotor epileptics. Hippocampal recordings displaying only rare epileptiform spikes and slow waves are found to follow grossly the simultaneously recorded neocortical EEG, becoming desynchronized during wakefulness and paradoxical sleep (PS), and displaying large irregular slow waves during slow-wave sleep. In the one patient reported in this clinical note, strong rhythmic 5--6 c/sec waves dominated the neocortical and hippocampal EEG during quiet wakefulness. These slow waves were replaced by desynchronized activity during PS and during difficult tasks, suggesting a further desynchronizing influence. The findings in all patients suggest that the rhythmic slow activity ('theta') found in rats and cats during specific behaviors is not observed in the human hippocampal formation during the homologous behaviors.
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Single and multiple unit recordings were made from fine wires stereotaxically implanted in the hippocampus (HC), hippocampal gyrus (HCG), and amygdala (Am) of psychomotor epileptics. During a series of memory and control tests presented on slides, 21 of 155 HCG units, 15 of 59 HC units, and 2 of 54 Am units showed what appeared to be simple phasic or tonic visual responses. Twenty-seven other units, found only in the HCG, changed firing only during slides requiring a choice ('choice units'). A given choice unit responded during choices indicated verbally or manually, and during tasks requiring recall of Recent Memory, various visual discriminations, and expressions of preference. Choice units were not affected by sensory stimulation or motor activity in contexts not requiring choice. Phasically inhibited choice units had higher firing rates and lower signal-to-noise ratios than tonically excited units. Whether an electrode recorded a choice unit was unrelated to if it recorded a response to hyperventilation, or was in an area of epileptic pathology. Recordings were also made during an interview lasting several hours and eliciting a wide range of behaviors. Five of the 131 HCG units fired in repeated extended bursts, at least 50 times background during recall of word pairs or of the patient's hospital room. The unit response did not occur during numerous control tasks possessing similar overt sensory, motor, and social concomitants, but not requiring Recent Memory.
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Excessive daytime sleepiness is a complaint characterizing many disorders of the wakefulness--sleep cycle. This paper addresses the complaint of sleepiness objectively by an attempt to differentiate a group of control subjects from a group of patients with unambiguous narcolepsy. Fourteen control and 27 narcoleptic subjects were evaluated by one of three protocols involving nocturnal recordings, detailed interviews, and 5 or more 20-min opportunities to sleep offered at 2-h intervals beginning at 10.00 o'clock, +/- 30 min. Each 20-min opportunity to sleep was given to subjects lying in a darkened quiet room and asked to try to fall asleep. Polysomnographic variables were monitored and sleep was scored in 30-sec epochs by standard criteria. The interval from the start of each test to the first epoch of NREM (including stage 1 sleep) or REM sleep was called sleep latency. In two of the protocols, the subjects were awakened immediately after sleep onset. In the third protocol, the subjects were awakened after 10 min of sleep. Narcoleptics consistently fell asleep much more readily than did control subjects. We conclude that the Multiple Sleep latency test, in addition to providing opportunities to clinically document sleep onset REM sleep periods, can demonstrate pathological sleepiness. Based on these data, we suggest that an average sleep latency less than 5 min be set as the minimum cutoff point for pathological sleepiness.
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Indirect immunofluorescence (IF) studies were performed on skin from a variety of vertebrate specimens and IgG fractions from pemphigoid and pemphigus sera. Pemphigoid antigen was present in fish, amphibian, reptilian, avian and mammalian skin, whereas pemphigus antigen was observed in avian and mammalian skin only.
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Extracts from dog livers which had been regenerating for 24, 48, and 72 h after hepatectomy were infused for 6 h into the left portal vein of animals which had fresh portacaval shunts (Eck fistula) and which were killed 2 and 3 days later. The brief exposure to the 48-h and especially the 72-h regenerating liver extracts induced a delayed proliferative response predominantly in the left liver lobes, with a slight spillover effect to the right liver lobes but none to the kidney. The response reached its peak 3 days later. In the left but not the right liver lobes, both the 48-h and the 72-h regenerating liver extract reversed the atrophy ordinarily caused by Eck fistula in 3 days and partly prevented the ultrastructural hepatocyte deterioration characteristic of Eck fistula. The active liver extracts apparently contained a growth-control factor or factors which is (are) not insulin or glucagon.
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Forty narcoleptic patients were given the Multiple Sleep Latency Test, consisting of 20 min opportunities to sleep offered at 10.00, 12.00, 14.00, 16.00 and 18.00 o'clock. Eleven patients had 2 episodes of REM sleep, 5 had 3, 11 had 4, and 13 had 5 before they were awakened. Fourteen control subjects given similar opportunities to sleep (reported in a companion article (Richardson et al. 1978)) had no REM sleep episodes. For the 10.00-18.00 o'clock opportunities respectively, there were 32, 29, 30, 28 and 27 REM sleep episodes. We conclude that this procedure can provide physicians with data useful in the diagnosis of narcolepsy.
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Quantitative differences in the magnitude of antigen-induced proliferative responses of sensitized lymph node cells between low (C3H/Anf or C3H/Cr) and high (C3H/Hej or CBA/j) responder H-2k mice have been observed 1 to 2 weeks after in vivo sensitization with antigen (OVA, PPD, and GAT). We have shown that antigen presentation is less effective in the sensitized lymph node cell populations from low responder mice compared with those from high responder mice, suggesting that the number and/or functional status of antigen-presenting cells in the regional lymph nodes may be a key factor in determining the magnitude of antigen-induced proliferative responses. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that cell traffic after sensitization plays an important role in determining the immune responsiveness of lymph nodes.
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Murine amniotic fluid (MAF), alpha-foeto-protein (AFP) and MAF depleted of AFP by affinity chromatography (MAF-AFP) inhibited the T-cell dependent in vitro proliferative responses of lymph node cells sensitized to a variety of soluble antigens. Variable degrees of inhibition were observed with the different antigens used in the assay. In general, the higher the proliferative response induced by a particular antigen, the less it was inhibited by the three inhibitors. Enhancement of proliferation was not infrequently observed at lower concentrations followed by a dose-dependent inhibition as the concentration of the inhibitor was increased. Usually the order of inhibition was MAF greater than MAF-AFP greater than or equal to AFP although variations in inhibitory potency were noted between different preparations of AFP and MAF-AFP. The existence of inhibitors in preparations of MAF depleted of AFP raised the question as to whether MAF contains single or multiple inhibitory factors. The most facile explanation is that two inhbitors exist; AFP and the as yet uncharacterized non-AFP suppressor present in MAF-AFP.
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The ability of mouse amniotic fluid (MAF), alpha-foetoprotein (AFP) and MAF depleted of AFP (MAF - AFP) to suppress primary one-way MLR's was investigated. It was found that MAF, AFP and MAF - AFP were all suppressive of MLR's specific for MHC, K, D or I + S determinants. Suppression was observed when either lymph node or spleen cells were used as the responder cells. Nylon wool column passage of these cells did not significantly affect the immunosuppressive action of these substances. In contrast, MLR's specific for non-MHC/M-locus determinants demonstrated either diminished suppression or augmentation of the response, compared with the MHC stimulated MLR's. Our results show a differential effect of whole MAF and its fractions on the proliferative responses induced by various allogeneic stimuli and suggest that suppression is not due to a non-specific effect on proliferation regardless of the stimulus or cell type involved.
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Electrophoretic light scattering (laser Doppler electrophoresis) has been employed to study the effects of guinea pig IgG immune complexes on the electrophoretic mobility distributions of guinea pig resident peritoneal cells. The resident population of cells is composed of macrophages (approximately 75%) and eosinophils (approximately 25%). These cells were separated according to the well-established method of Boyum. Populations of resident macrophages, eosinophils, and the unfractionated samples were incubated with soluble immune complexes, antigen alone, or antibody alone. The mean mobility of the resident macrophages decreased approximately 60% when incubated in the presence of immune complexes, although no effect could be discerned in the presence of antigen or antibody alone. The width of the resulting macrophage mobility distribution was larger than that of the control distributions, with a broad shoulder on the high-mobility side, indicating a heterogeneous response of the macrophages to the immune complexes. Eosinophils react in two distinct fashions. One population of eosinophils is present near the control experiments. The second population reacts in a manner very similar to that of macrophages. This suggests that at least two populations of eosinophils are present in the unstimulated guinea pig peritoneal cavity. Results that are intermediate between these two cases are found when unfractionated samples are studied.
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Cytologic preparations made from the tracheobronchial tree taken by the Schreiber catheter have been scanned by three color microphotometry. The digitized cell images were processed by the analytical cytodiagnostic programs of the TICAS system. Cells were sorted into two control groups and five groups of increasing atypia ranging from normal epithelium to invasive squamous cell carcinoma. Standard statistical tests, including Wilk's Lambda, Rao's V, and the Kruskal-Wallis tests are performed on these subsets of cell image features. This study demonstrates that discriminant analyses permit differentiation between normal cells and those from marked atypia or carcinoma and that the classification achieves a high degree of agreement with visual assignment.
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When lymphocytes from a majority of patients with cancer are incubated with encephalitogenic factor, a lymphocyte product is released that reduces the anodic electrophoretic mobilities of guinea pig macrophages and fixed, tanned sheep erythrocytes. Although these reactions are not specific for cancer, it is distinctly possible that in patients with cancer, products from stimulated lymphocytes are capable of altering the surfaces of the patients' own macrophages, thereby modifying the course of their disease. In this paper, we attempt to elucidate some mechanisms for the binding of lymphocyte products to macrophages, such as occurs in the macrophage electrophoretic mobility (MEM) test, since this may be of general interest. Binding of lymphocyte product to macrophages has been monitored by measurements of their electrophoretic mobilities and by electron microscopic determination of the density of binding of electron-dense, cationic colloidal iron hydroxide particles to their surfaces. The results show that the lymphocyte products reduce the net surface negativity of the macrophages by (coulombic) binding of this net positively charged material to sialic acids at the macrophage surface. Product-binding can be prevented by prior treatment of the macrophages with neuraminidase. It appears that only a minority of sialic acids are involved in the binding process, which occurs without demonstrable blocking of adjacent sialic acids or redistribution of such sites over the macrophage surface. Parallel experiments with fixed tanned erythrocytes also suggest that binding of lymphocyte product is not solely determined by surface sialic acids, although it cannot occur without them.
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Adhesion of leukocytes and platelets to solid substrates of different surface tensions and hence different wettability is studied from a thermodynamic point of view. A simple thermodynamic model predicts that a cellular adhesion should increase with increasing surface tension of the solid substrate if the surface tension of the medium in which the cells are suspended is lower than the surface tension of the cells. If the surface tension of the suspending medium is higher than that of the cells, the opposite behavior is predicted. These predictions are borne out completely by neutrophil adhesion tests, where the surface tension of the aqueous suspending medium is varied by addition of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Platelet adhesion experiments also confirm these predictions, the only difference being that surface tensions of the suspending medium above that of the platelets cannot be realized, owing to exudation of surface active solutes from the platelets. Utilization of the thermodynamic prediction that cellular adhesion should become independent of the surface tension of the substrate when the surface tensions of the cells and that of the suspending medium are equal leads to a value of the surface tension of neutrophils of 69.0 erg/cm(2), in excellent agreement with the value obtained from contact angles measured on layers of cells.
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T and B mouse spleen lymphocytes were separated by density gradient electrophoresis on the basis of their surface charge. In all strains examined, the T lymphocytes were found in the high mobility fractions and the B in the low. The T and B cells were separated completely in most fractions, with some overlapping in the middle. Significant differences were found in the electrophoretic distribution profiles between the strains: C57BL/6j, C57BL/10j, (BALB/cXC57BL/6j)F1, and all the following: B6.C-H-2d/cBy (congenic to C57BL/6j), BALB/c, CBA/H/T6j, C57BL/10Sn, and C3H. The C57BL/6j and the (BALB/cXC57BL/6j)F1 cells appear more heterogeneous as far as electrophoretic mobility is concerned. Almost all the other strains give two major peaks. Moreover, the high mobility areas are less populated in the C57BL/6j and the (BALB/cXC57BL/6j)F1 animals than in all the others. The above differences were found consistently when cells prepared by different methods were electrophoresed. It is concluded that the surface charge of lymphocytes may be genetically determined. Possible dependency on the H-2 complex or non-H-2 areas is discussed.
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Lindahl first described the separation of cells by velocity sedimentation utilizing a special technique (counterstreaming centrifugation) that was later modified slightly and renamed centrifugal elutriation. Centrifugal elutriation has been applied, with variable degrees of success, to the separation of hemopoietic cells, mouse tumor cells, testicular cells, and a variety of other specialized cells as well as cells in particular phases of the cell cycle. The capacity of the elutriator to separate large numbers of cells is its chief advantage. The purities of the separated cells have not been compared with the purities of cells separated by other methods in most cases; such comparisons would permit more sophisticated comparison of elutriation with other techniques for velocity sedimentation.
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In the influencent-flow cytophotometric measurement of cellular DNA content the DNA distributions usually have two peaks. The second peak, which corresponds to the 4C DNA content of G2 and M cells, is often positioned at lower values of DNA content than twice that of the 2C DNA peak which contains G1 cells. Computerized numerical analyses were performed on artificial DNA distributions in which the proportion of S-phase cells was varied. It was demonstrated that the contribution of late S-phase cells to the 4C DNA peak in the histogram shifts the second peak to a position below twice the 2C DNA value. Also, increasing the coefficient of variation of the DNA measurement shifts the second peak position to lower values. A group of 33 DNA distribution histograms we found to have an average G2/G1 peak position ratio of 1.90, in keeping with typical values obtained from the numerical analysis of the artificial populations.
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Splenocytes and column-separated T cells are differentiated into subpopulations of T and B cells on the basis of computer-assisted morphometric analysis of Feulgen-positive nuclear DNA. Differentiation is based upon the analysis of computable image information related to DNA distribution patterns. The technique at the present time does not allow immunofluorescent and morphometric measurements to be made on a given cell. However, the differentiation obtained by using descriptors proven capable of detecting pure populations of T and B cells shows excellent agreement with the differentiation obtained by immunofluorescence analysis. The descriptors and decision rules used the discrimination among splenocytes are reproducible from one experiment to another and remain valid for the differentiation of lymphocytes from animals of different sex and strain.
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Splenocytes separated by physical means and classified as T cells bay immunologic tests and computerized microphotometric analysis are differentiated into subgroups by analysis of the distribution patterns of Feulgen-positive nuclear DNA. In like fashion T cells obtained as purified preparations after separation on a nylon column, and accepted as T cells by micromorphometric analysis were subjected to further computerized morphometric analysis of nuclear DNA to form subgroups of cells. In each case, the number and composition of the detected subgroups were consistent. The classification does not appear to reflect any obvious phases of the cell cycle and is not dependent upon the sex and strain of mice from which the cells were obtained.
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Synchronized tranformed and reverse-transformed (by 10(-3) M B2cAMP) CHO-K1 cells, growing adherent to plastic, are characterized by means of geometric and densitometric parameters at the level of both the entire cell and of the nuclei at various time intervals after selective miotic detachment. Transformed and reverse-transformed cells triple-stained with Feulgen, Napthol Yellow S, and periodic acid-Schiff appeared very similar in terms of integrated optical density (IOD), related to either polysaccharides, protein, or DNA amount. On the other hand, a shift from a polygonal to a spindle-shaped morphology is a accompanied by a significant decrease in both form factor and average optical density (AOD) of intact cell and nuclei, which are the most conspicuous measured changes caused by B2cAMP, in addition to a lengthening of the cell cycle duration. In both control and treated cells, important and parallel cell-cycle-dependent modulations of geometric and densitometric parameters are also observed, for both the cytoplasmic (i.e., cell morphometry) and DNA space (i e., nuclear morphometry). Specifically, the modulation in nulear morphometry during G1, S, G2, and M phases confirms previous findings on synchronized HeLa cells. The optical density threshold-dependence of geometric parameters shows that, while becoming fusiform, the cytoplasm of reverse-transformed cells had a particularly low optical density precisely in the polar area. Utilization of such an approach in the development of an objective morphological classification of all cell lines grown as monolayers "in vitro" is also discussed.
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Blue dextran has been adsorbed to millipore filter discs in a linkage stable under a variety of conditions. These discs have been to bind lactic dehydrogenase, which may then be specifically eluted with NADH, one of its substrates. In contrast, another enzyme, alkaline phosphatase, not expected to bind to blue dextran, was indeed completely recovered in the filtrate.
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Four distinct alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) species were separated by ion-exchange chromatography of the approximately 70 000 dalton fraction of an extract of late-gestation fetal mice. Although chromatographicaly heterogeneous, antigenic differences among the AFP species resolved were not detected using classical double-diffusion methods. Analysis of the AFP contribution to total body saline-extractable protein of fetal and neonatal mice revealed an abrupt decrease in the fetal AFP contribution to total body saline-extractable protein commencing after the 18th day of gestation.
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Eleven patients with short P-R intervals and narrow QRS complexes had ventricular tachycardia due to organic heart disease: mitral valve prolapse with mitral insufficiency (2 patients); alcoholic (?) cardiomyopathy (2 patients); and coronary artery disease (7 patients). Intracardiac studies showed short A-H intervals during sinus rhythm in all cases. The onset of ventricular fibrillation (which, to our knowledge, has not been observed in patients having short P-R and A-H intervals coexisting with narrow QRS complexes) was documented in 4 cases. Only 1 patient (with quinidine syncope) had been premedicated. In the 3 other patients the episodes of ventricular fibrillation appeared during bouts of atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular rates which could have been an exprerssion of the "enhanced A-V conduction" that had been manifested in sinus beats by short P-R and A-H intervals. In clinical settings and physiological conditions proven to be hemodynamically unstable (such as transient ischemia or acute myocardial infarction) these rapid ventricular rates could have led to ventricular fibrillation; directly because of the R-on-T phenomenon, and/or indirectly due to decreased coronary perfusion. Ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation due to organic heart disease probably occur more often than suggested by the few reported cases in the literature. Its significance, however, has to be clarified by further prospective studies.
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An objective antiglobulin radioimmunoassay for the analysis of anti-spermatozoa antisera has been used to characterize more than 30 alloantisera. Each of these antisera was raised against spermatozoa from mice carrying T/t regin mutations. Whilst all of the antisera had considerable activity for mouse spermatozoa, none of them was found to contain antibodies specific for T/t region gene products. A detailed analysis of a single serum revealed that its activity is for antigens which are non-polymorphic, sperm-specific and species-specific. The failure in this study to detect antibodies specific for T/t region gene products is discussed.
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Patient reports are presented to indicate the application of standard implanted programmable pacemakers with endocardial electrodes for long-term overdrive suppression of recurrent ventricular tachycardia, and their adaptability to non-invasively induced burts of rapid ventricular pacing to cardiovert that arrhythmia. In carefully preselected patients with bradycardia-tachycardia syndrome, this type of programmable pacemaker may also be used to convert paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia by short bursts of rapid ventricular pacing. In addition, the advantage of non-invasively instituting overdrive suppression with programmable pacemakers to control recurrent ventricular tachycardia appearing in patients being chronically paced for complete heart block is illustrated.
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Loss of normal pacemaker stimulation and/or sensing functions requires prompt detection, automatic correction, and automatic and continuous "marking" of the intermittent failure. The autodiagnostic pacemaker (ADP) detects "failure to capture" (FC) by distinguishing, at its single stimulating and sensing electrode, between the normal biphasic cardiac response evoked by an adequate stimulus (corresponding to the QRS and T waves on the surface cardiogram) and the monophasic pseudo-response generated by electrotonic spread of a subthreshold stimulating current. Detection of "failure to sense" (FS) spontaneous cardiac activity requires two amplifiers: a "timing control" amplifier of standard fidelity and standard (approximately 250 ms) refractory period, and a second amplifier which has negligible refractoriness and provides high fidelity amplification of all evoked and spontaneous activity. Failure to sense (FS) is defined as a specified number of consecutive failures to recycle correctly the pacemaker's timing circuits. Similarly, a specified number of consecutive failures of the stimulus to evoke an active cardiac response is defined as a failure to capture (FC). When FC is detected, the ADP doubles the applied stimulus voltage and generates marker pulses which follow every subsequent stimulus by 40 ms. The marker pulses appear on the surface electrocardiogram, serving as an externally detectable "memory" of the earlier, possible corrected, failure. When FS is detected, non-stimulating marker pulses, of a different time relation (80 ms delay) to each stimulus, are generated continually and can also be detected externally. The ADP has been tested in 14 anesthetized, open-chest dogs. Unipolar rather than bipolar electrodes were used as they rpovided more reliable stimulation and more satisfactory electrograms for detection.
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The polarization characteristics of Pt-Ir and Elgiloy small-surface-area (10-12.5 mm2) pacemaker electrodes were studied at AC linear (sensing) and DC non-linear (pacing) conditions. The electrodes' AC polarization impedance was approximately equal to the demand pacemaker's input impedance, which causes waveform distortions ofthe sensed R-wave potentials. The pacemaker's coupling capacitor adds to the distortion's effect. As a result of amplitude attenuation (up to approximately 50%) and slew rate changes, the pacemaker may fail to recognize the ventricular complexes, reverting to hazardous competitive pacing. The impact of the DC polarization elements and of the coupling capacitor on the effectiveness of pacing was examined. The deficiency of small area electrodes was pointed out, this being counter-balanced to some extent by their lower pacing thresholds. The necessity to ensure a sufficient safety margin between the pacing pulse and the stimulation threshold, to avoid possible reasons for creation of exit blocks, was stressed. In reducing the electrode surface, it is advisable not to step down below a 15-20 mm2 effective area for Pt-Ir, and a 40-50 mm2 area for Elgiloy.
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The frequency of lead failure requiring invasive correction in a total of 276 implants of four different transvenous leads (6907, continuous lead, IE-65-I, and MIP 2000) was observed during a one-and-one-half year period with a minimum of two months follow-up post-implant. Implants were on a successive sequential basis, randomly distributed between the two surgeons normally performing implants, and unselected for presumed ease or difficulty of the procedure. Failure rates with the 6907 and continuous leads were 7 of 76, or 9.2%; with the IE-65-I, 2 of 76, or 2.6%; and with the MIP 2000, 8 of 45, or 17.8%. The difference between the IE-65-I and the two conventional leads was significant at the 5% level, and between the IE-65-I and the group of the other three at the 1.6% level. The MIP 2000 was significantly different from the other three leads at the 2.7% level. Previous clinical experience with 849 implants with continuous and 6807 leads indicated that the overall data was similar to that obtained in the present evaluation. No significant differences in failure rates between surgeons and no measurable "practice effect" could be detected. It was concluded that the design of the lead is a major factor in the differing need for early secondary intervention.
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A high incidence of sudden death due to ventricular fibrillation (VF) has been observed in dogs under chronic treatment with probucol, a new hypocholesterolemic agent. The present study describes the cardiac electrophysiologic properties of probucol-treated dogs and characterizes the electrophysiological response of these animals to manipulation of the autonomic nervous system. There was no significant difference in the spontaneous sinus cycle length, the QT interval, refractory period of the atrium, ventricle or A-V junction between normal and probucol-treated dogs. Epinephrine produced VF with few and sometimes no preceding premature ventricular extrasystoles. Electrical stimulation of the stellate ganglion induced VF in 16/19 dogs whereas stimulation of the right stellate ganglion induced VF in 1/19 dogs. Phenylephrine induced VF in 0/19 dogs, isoproterenol in 5/19 dogs, but phenylephrine + isoproterenol induced VF in 9/11 dogs in which isoproterenol did not produce VF. alpha (phentolamine) or beta (propranolol) blockade prevented initiation of VF by epinephrine, phenylephrine + is isoproterenol, and left stellate stimulation but alpha blockade did not prevent induction of VF by isoproterenol when isoproterenol alone produced VF. In this nonischemic model, we conclude that left stellate stimulation is a far more potent initiator of VF than right stellate stimulation and that induction of VF appears to require both alpha and beta adrenergic receptor stimulation.
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A semipurified liquid diet was used to develop a chronic rat model of the fetal alcohol syndrome. Control female rats gained weight normally, reproduced normally, and gave birth to normal litters on this diet. Increased neonatal mortality, decreased neonatal weights, and altered sex ratios were observed in offspring of experimental alcoholic animals. Preliminary histological results include a mild delay in cell lamination patterns in the cerebral cortex at 4 days postnatal in alcoholic offspring as well as decreased formation of dendritic spines at 7 days postnatal.
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Partial acid hydrolysis and methanolysis released disaccharides and disaccharide methylglycosides from the glycoproteins, ovomucoid and porcine gastric mucin in amounts of 0.5--7 microgram disaccharide per mg of glycoprotein. These disaccharides were fractionated by gas chromatography as the trimethylsilyl (Me3Si) derivatives. The composition of recovered disaccharides has been determined by hydrolysis and rechromatography of the Me3Si monosaccharides. The intersaccharide linkages of the disaccharides have been determined by electron impact mass spectrometry. This simple and rapid method can give structural information on small glycoprotein samples.
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Hearing impairment and related cochlear histopathologic changes were evaluated in experimental animals after treatment with aminoglycoside antibiotics or exposure to intense sound. In the course of treatment with kanamycin, neomycin, or dihydrostreptomycin, permanent hearing loss in monkeys and guinea pigs occurred first at the high frequencies and progressed toward the lows. Exposure to different octave bands of noise at 120 dB SPL in monkeys and chinchillas produced permanent hearing loss at frequencies related to the spectral characteristics of the octave band. In most instances loss of outer hair cells was substantially greater than that of inner hair cells. In fact, the pattern and location of missing outer hair cells on the basilar membrane were most often correlated with threshold shifts of 50 dB or less. Generally inner hair cell loss was observed when the threshold shift was greater than 50 dB. Our data support the place principle and the inference that the outer hair cells are essential for hearing from threshold to about 50 dB SL. The inner hair cells, if functioning normally, apparently take over above that level. Although there is little doubt that such a generalization will, in the long term, be found to have been greatly oversimplified, there is every reason to believe that a combination of behavioral and morphologic procedures, as used in this study, will play an important part in elucidating the differences in functional significance of the two types of hair cells.
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Electronic parameters related to the cytochrome P450-catalyzed reactions of eight polycyclic aromatic amines have been calculated using all valence electron semiempirical molecular orbital methods. The reactions considered lead to the presumably carcinogenic arylnitrenium ions and to the competing hydroxylation and epoxidation products. The stabilities of the arylnitrenium ions relative to the N-hydroxylamines and their sulfate esters were also calculated, together with electrophilic reactivity parameters of the ions. The resulting parameters were used to predict major metabolites of the parent compounds and also to correlate with observed mutagenic activities of the four pairs of polycyclic aromatic amines studied. The major factor in determining mutagenic potencies of parent compounds appears to be the extent of N-hydroxylation and competing ring oxidations, as well as the electrophilic properties of the arylnitrenium ions.
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Staining polarization optical techniques showed differences in the structural organization of DNA of chromatin in interphase nuclei and in mitotic chromosomes. The DNA was non-birefringent in intact interphase cell nuclei, but birefringent in chromosomes and in isolated nuclei incubated in a physiological electrolyte solution. The birefringence of DNA appears to be related to an unfolding of DNA filaments induced by free cations and to the oriented binding of dye molecules to DNA phosphates. We propose that the actual concentration of free cations inside the living cell nuclei is regulated by a dynamic interaction between nuclear proteins and ions.
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Proliferative neovascular retinopathies may be caused by the release of a hypothetical vasoproliferative factor, but mechanical factors seem to self-perpetuate the disease as well. Contraction of proliferative tissue causes vitreous detachment and traction on the retina. Congestion of vascular fronds by traction further stimulates vascularization. Traction on vessels results in hemorrhages. Surgical removal of all intravitreal scaffolds by vitrectomy seems to eliminate the development of this vicious cycle. Results of vitreous surgery seem to indicate that the hypothesis of scaffold removal is valid.
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Dihalomethanes are metabolized to carbon monoxide both in vivo and in vitro. The reaction is catalyzed by a hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 dependent mixed function oxidase system. Bioorganic mechanism studies suggest an initial oxygen insertion reaction followed by rearrangement to a formyl halide intermediate which in turn decomposes to yield carbon monoxide. In vitro studies show that 14C-dichloromethane becomes covalently bound to both microsomal protein and lipid. The similar characteristics of metabolism to carbon monoxide and covalent binding suggests that a common intermediate, perhaps the formyl halide, may be involved. Dihalomethanes are also metabolized to formaldehyde, formic acid, and inorganic halide. A glutathione transferase, located in hepatic cytosol fractions, appears to be involved. Reaction mechanism studies suggest that a S-hydroxymethyl glutathione intermediate may yield formaldehyde or be diverted via formaldehyde dehydrogenase/S-formyl glutathione hydrolase to yield formic acid. Haloforms are also metabolized in vitro to carbon monoxide by a hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 dependent mixed function oxidase system. This reaction is a markedly stimulated by sulfhydryl compounds.
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Anti-suppressor factor antisera, prepared either in rabbits (R alpha SF) or in syngeneic (CBA) mice (M alpha SF) by repeated immunisation with antigen purified CBA antigen specific suppressor factor reactive to KLH was shown to abolish the suppression caused by suppressor factors (SF) in vitro. R alpha SF inhibited the function of all SF regardless of their strain of origin or their antigen specificity suggesting that it recognized 'constant region'-like determinants in SF molecules. It did not have any effect on antigen-specific helper factors. Syngeneic M alpha SF only abolished the function of suppressor (or helper) factors which were KLH-specific, and only provided they were derived from the appropriate strains of mice; thus resembling the effects of anti-idiotype antibody. No linkage to MHC could be demonstrated but there was some evidence of possible association with allotype. A schematic structure of the SF molecule is suggessted on the basis of these findings with antisera to SF.
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We have surveyed the clastogenic potential of 12 different groups of stains and dyes totalling 48 compounds. We observed that 18 compounds induced significant increase in chromosome damage. Most of them were also found to be mutagenic, carcinogenic, or toxic in other reported studies. However, no significant studies were reported on six of them. It is concluded that these agents are potentially harzardous and should be studied further in detail.
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Keratinocytes and melanocytes cultured from guinea-pig epidermis were studied with scanning, transmission and high voltage electron microscopy to characterize the surface and internal morphology. Keratinocytes exhibited contact-inhibition and a range of surface structures consistent with cell-cycle dependent changes. Stereoscopic analysis of high voltage electron micrographs indicated regular oval nuclei with nucleoli at different depths, while thin sections revealed local channels in the nuclei. Secondary cultures differed from primary cultures in the disorder of the microfilaments, in the failure to form desmosomes, and in the failure of melanocytes to persist in culture. The beaded surface of melanocytes was indicative of underlying melanosomes that were seen in high voltage micrographs. Melanocytes were rounded with moderate ruffles or were dendritic with ruffles on the termini. These findings are discussed in relation to the observational techniques and in relation to modes of locomotion of and pigment transfer to epidermal cells.
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Reactivation of fetal hemoglobin gene expressions was studied in new-world monkeys (marmosets). After a series of intraperitoneal injections of D-thyroxine, fetal hemoglobin production was increased in three experimental animals. Control animals were unaffected by the injection of the solvent. Because the percentage of cells containing fetal hemoglobin exceeded the total percentage of fetal hemoglobin, it was concluded that thyroid hormone influenced the synthesis of fetal hemoglobin rather than the development of a population of fetal cells.
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Four eyes were divided into portions which were prepared by various techniques for immunofluorescence microscopy. One portion was frozen and processed by cryostat cutting, a second was fixed in alcohol-acetic acid and embedded in paraffin, and a third was soaked in saline for 2 days to elute IgG and was then processed by the alcohol-acetic acid technique. All tissues received stain for IgG by either the direct (one-layer) or indirect (two-layer) technique. In all instances IgG was demonstrated in the same areas of the cornea. We conclude that the presence of IgG in human cornea is not dependent on the method used for fixation or processing of the tissue.
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Nondividing human diploid fibroblasts maintained in medium containing 0.5% calf serum do not survive when exposed to low doses of UV (254 nm). The extent of killing is dose and strain dependent. DNA excision repair-proficient cells are more resistant than excision repair-deficient cells. Results of measurements of the effect of UV on RNA and protein synthesis in repair-proficient and -deficient (XP12BE) cells are reported. UV causes an immediate and equal depression of the RNA synthesis rate in both kinds of cells. A recovery to control rates was observed only at low (5 J/m2) doses in repair-deficient cells and at higher doses (20 J/m2) in repair-proficient cells. No recovery was observed at doses that cause substantial reductions in survival (greater than 5 J/m2 for XP12BE; greater than 40 J/m2 for repair-proficient populations). No initial effect on rate of protein synthesis was detected at doses less than 20 J/m2. However, in XP12BE populations, a decreased rate first evident at 15-30 h post-UV and before any cell degeneration and loss was observed for doses as low at 7 J/m2. This delayed effect was not observed in repair-proficient populations. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the lethal action of UV in nondividing cells is one on DNA that leads to an inhibition of required protein synthesis by preventing RNA transcription.
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In this paper we show, based on symmetry considerations, that structural information cannot be obtained from the linear infrared dichroism of the dioxy vibrations of the phosphate group of nucleic acids. Consequently, the discrepancies between the results of x-ray structure measurements and linear dichroism measurements are not meaningful. The linear dichroism measurements are instead important for a calculation of transition dipole moments that involve both the vibrations of all the atoms of the nucleotide and their charges. Independent information on either the atomic displacements contributing to a given vibration or the atomic charges permits a refinement of the unknown quantities. Based on the molecular dynamics calculations of Prohofsky et al., atomic charges of DNA are calculated to reproduce the observed linear dichroism results. Some of the resulting charges are unexpected and may reflect the inadequacy of the molecular dynamic calculation.
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Agents that elevate intracellular concentrations of cAMP in cultured spleen cells can augment the in vitro 19s humoral immune response to SRBC. DBcAMP and 8BrcAMP were more effective than MIX, CT, PGE1, or ISO in producing the enhanced PFC response, when they were present only during an early stage of immune induction. The thesis is presented that the differential ability of these agents to augment humoral immunity results from their relative ability to maintain elevated concentrations of intracellular cAMP. Studies on the cellular mechanism by which cAMP elevation produces immune enhancement reveal that DBcAMP effects are on a T-cell-deficient population of murine spleen cells (predominantly B cells and macrophages). In addition, we showed that DBcAMP cannot replace the need for helper T cells in the induction of the PFC response to SRBC. Taken collectively, these results suggest that cAMP may be an important immunoregulatory signal, and that a variety of pharmacologic agents that modulate the induction of the humoral immune response may operate via this as a final common biochemical pathway.
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The potency of the calcium ionophore A23187 in inducing three activities of human leukocytes (histamine secretion from basophils, enzyme secretion from PMNs, and proliferation of lymphocytes) was markedly dependent on the solvent (DMSO versus ethanol versus aqueous buffer) used for its initial sonication. While 0.1 micrograms/ml of DMSO- and ethanol-solubilized A23187 induced maximal histamine release from basophils and histaminase release from PMNs, concentrations of aqueous buffer-sonicated ionophore of greater than or equal to 1 microgram/ml were required for an equivalent response. Ionophore sonicated in organic solvents caused a maximum release of 40% of PMN beta-glucuronidase, at an optimal concentration tenfold higher than that required for maximal histaminase release; ionophore sonicated in aqueous buffers, even at high concentrations, effected a release of less than 5% of cellular beta-glucuronidase. A23187 also induced lymphocyte proliferation over a narrow concentration range; 0.05 micrograms/l of DMSO-sonicated ionophore induced optimal proliferation and concentrations greater than or equal to 0.2 micrograms/ml were toxic. Twofold higher concentrations of ethanol-sonicated ionophore and fourfold higher concentrations of aqueous-sonicated ionophore were necessary for maximal proliferation, and the magnitude of the maximal response with aqueous-sonicated A23187 was only one-half that of DMSO-solubilized agent. Ionophore-induced release of histamine from basophils and enzymes from PMNs was not cytotoxic, since ionophore induced neither LDH nor histamine release from heat-treated (47 degrees C) cells. These results explain several previous, discordant reports on the presence or absence of an effect of A23187 on cellular secretory events, on differing dose-response relationships, and on cytotoxic versus noncytotoxic mechanisms of action.
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The influence(s) of chronic injections of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), derived from murine amniotic fluid, on the natural history of immunopathology and autoantibody production in New Zealand mice was studied and compared to analagous treatment with albumin, transferrin, or phosphate-buffered saline. Treatment of young New Zealand Black (NZB) mice with AFP, at sera levels of 60-210 micrograms/ml, significantly reduces the titer of IgG1, IgG2, and IgA antierythrocyte antibodies. Similarly, such treated mice have relatively normal levels of splenic Thy-1.2-bearing cells and sera immunoglobulins, at older ages, compared to control groups. In contrast, AFP has no apparent effect on the appearance of either naturally occurring thymocytotoxic antibodies (NTa) or lymphoma. Moreover, the positive features of AFP on disease were only noted for mice treated early in life; AFP had no effect when injected into older animals. Similar, but not as dramatic, changes were observed in NZB x NZW F1 hybrids. It is concluded that in pharmacologic doses, mouse aminotic fluid enriched with AFP may alter the appearance of thymic-dependent autoantibodies.
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The epidemiology of inguinal hernia was investigated in a community survey in a neighbourhood of western Jerusalem in 1969-71. The current prevalence rate, excluding operated hernias, was 18 per 100 men aged 25 and over, and the lifetime prevalence, including operated hernias, was 24 per 100. Prevalence rose markedly with age; the lifetime prevalence rate reached 40 per 100 men at the ages of 65-74 and 47 per 100 at 75 and over. The prevalence of hernia was significantly higher in the presence of varicose veins, in men who reported symptoms of prostatic hypertrophy, and, among lean men only, in the presence of haemorrhoids. These associations may reflect the role of increased abdominal pressure. The prevalence of hernia was low in the presence of overweight or adiposity, suggesting that obesity is a protective factor. No significant age-independent associations were found with chronic cough, constipation, physical activity at work, or a number of other variables. Two-thirds of the hernias had not been operated upon. The prevalence of unrepaired hernias rose with age; 13% of all men aged 65-74 and 23% of those aged 75 and over had unoperated groin swellings. One in every five operated hernias showed evidence of recurrence. No significant age-independent associations were found between evidence of occurrence and other characteristics. A comparison of interview responses and examination findings showed that interview data on the presence of hernias were of low validity, mainly because of under-reporting.
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Fetal erythropoiesis occurs during chronic bone marrow failure, or during recovery from marrow suppression. Fetal erythrocytes have HB F, with more G gamma than A gamma chains, "i" antigen, large MCV, characteristic enzyme levels, low carbonic anhydrase, low HB A2, and short life span. Many of these fetal characteristics are present in the red cells of patients with temporary or chronic hematopoietic stress. In those in whom normal hematopoiesis ensues, the fetal erythrocytes disappear. The fetal phase of recovery may be with homologous stem cells after bone marrow engraftment, or with autologous cells. Chronic fetal erythropoiesis is seen in patients with constitutional aplastic anemia, such as Fanconi's anemia or Diamond-Blackfan anemia. In one patient with the latter disorder, fetal erythropoiesis accompanied chronic anemia, and actually decreased slightly during the acute phase of clinical improvement. Culture of late erythroid precursor cells (CFU-Es) from a patient with transient erythroblastopenia of childhood led to in vitro development of colonies with HB F, an event not seen in normal marrow cultures. Thus fetal erythropoiesis occurs during hematopoietic stress, whether chronic or transient, if there is some marrow activity, and may be due to expansion of fetal clones.
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The beta subunit of TSH (TSH-beta) usually cannot be detected (less than 0.2 ng/ml) in the serum of normal individuals, whereas patients with primary hypothyroidism exhibit elevated TSH-beta levels (0.2-9.3 ng/ml), which increase further after the administration of TRH. Two patients were found to have large TSH-beta as the only form of serum TSH-beta immunoactivity. Patient A was a euthyroid woman with a goiter; TSH and alpha subunit levels were normal (1 microU/ml and 0.6 ng/ml, respectively); TSH-beta was elevated (8-24 ng/ml). Patient B was a woman with borderline hypothyroidism, an elevated serum TSH level (19 microunits/ml), a normal serum alpha level (2.4 ng/ml), and an elevated serum TSH-beta level (1.8-3.6 ng/ml). Dilutions of both patients' sera demonstrated nonparallelism of their serum TSH-beta to standard TSH-beta. The elevated serum TSH-beta levels did not increase after TRH, although TSH and alpha subunit increased appropriately. After the administration of dexamethasone or T4 to patient B, serum TSH-beta did not decrease, although TSH and alpha decreased. Gel chromatography and rechromatography of the patients' sera on a Sephadex G-100 column showed elution of all TSH-beta immunoactivity in or near the void volume (Vo; greater than 150,000 mol wt), whereas sera of hypothyroid patients demonstrated less than 7% of TSH-beta immunoactivity in the Vo. By chromatography on a Sephadex G-200 column, the TSH-beta immunoactivity had a 160,000 mol wt in patient A and 200,000 mol wt in patient B. Incubation of labeled or unlabeled TSH-beta with serum or gamma-globulin fractions from both patients resulted in no significant increase in the binding of TSH-beta to serum components, as determined by both gel chromatography and precipitation with antihuman gamma-globulin. Large TSH-beta was stable after incubation with 6 M guanidine. Ribonuclease failed to affect the large TSH-beta. Inter-chain disulfide bonding was not demonstrated in large TSH-beta after treatment with three different reducing agents (mercaptoethanol, sodium sulfite, and dithioerythritol). Treatment with trypsin did not convert the large TSH-beta immunoactivity to standard TSH-beta. These experiments demonstrated that the large TSH-beta immunoactivity was not caused by binding of TSH-beta to an immunoglobulin or other serum protein or by aggregation of TSH-beta molecules. The significance of these apparently covalently bonded large forms of TSH-beta immunoactivity is not yet known; the presence of small amounts of a large molecular weight form in the serum of hypothyroid patients and normal pituitary extracts raises the possibility that they may be components of normal TSH biosynthesis or represent posttranslational modifications.
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Immunoglobulin G purified from the serum of patients with Graves' disease, stimulated the thyroid of man, calf, and guinea pig (cAMP accumulation as the end-point) in vitro, and the thyroid of the mouse in vivo (LATS bioassay). The stimulatory effect on the thyroids of all four species was removed by adsorption of the immunoglobulin G to human thyroid membranes and was diminished to a proportionately similar degree by adsorption with bovine thyroid membranes. All activity, as assessed by stimulation of the human thyroid in vitro. was recovered from both human and bovine membranes by elution with 2 M NaSCN solution. The data support the concept that the thyroid-stimulating antibody of Graves' disease is homologous to a human thyroid antigen and, in some instances, cross-reacts with a similar antigen in the thyroid of a distant species and so stimulates the heterologous gland.
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We investigated the role of 3 alpha-androstanediol (3 alpha-diol) in the development of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and the apparent equilibrium of enzymes which metabolize it in normal and hyperplastic prostatic tissue of humans. We determined the endogenous concentrations of 3 alpha-diol, androsterone, its 3 alpha-17-keto metabolite or precursor, and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT), its 3-keto,17 beta-hydroxy product of precursor, by RIA after extraction and paper chromatography of the androgens from normal and hyperplastic prostate glands. The mean concentrations of 3 alpha-diol and androsterone were about one-third of normal in BPH. The mean ratio of the concentration of DHT to 3 alpha-diol was significantly higher (P less than 0.005) than normal in BPH, whereas no statistical difference was observed for the mean ratio of the tissue levels of 3 alpha-diol to androsterone in the two groups. Our data do not support the postulate that 3 alpha-diol is causally related to the development of BPH. However, they indicate that the apparent equilibrium of the 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase favors the formation of the 3-keto-oxidized product, DHT, which may have relevance to the occurrence of the renewed growth of the prostate of aging men.
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The nature of localized atrial activation during atrial fibrillation was characterized in 34 patients following open heart surgery. Bipolar atrial electrograms (AEG) recorded in each patient with atrial fibrillation exhibited a myriad of sizes, shapes, polarities, amplitudes, and beat-to-beat intervals. On the basis of the AEG morphology and the nature of its baseline, we have classified the recordings into four Types. Type I was characterized by discrete AEG complexes separated by an isoelectric baseline free of perturbation, Type II by discrete AEG complexes but with perturbations of the baseline between complexes, Type III by AEGs which failed to demonstrate either discrete complexes or isoelectric intervals, and Type IV in which AEGs of Type III alternated with periods characteristic of Type I and/or Type II. In 22 patients, the AEGs were recorded a second time, and in 11 of these patients the type of atrial fibrillation changed between the first and second recording period. An atrial flutter-fibrillation pattern in the ECG was associated with a relatively ordered atrial activation pattern and a relatively slow atrial rate. Human atrial fibrillation is not an electrophysiologically homogeneous process when compared among different patients or ad seriatim in the same patient.
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Clinical observations and immunological evidence are presented to support a diagnosis of late onset asthma due to exposure to Aspergillus niger in a 70-year-old man. Asthma occurred on only three occasions, each time approximately 6 hr after exposure to an area containing Aspergillus niger. His sputum culture contained the same organism. Immunological correlates using the Aspergillus niger extract included positive immediate and late skin tests, histamine release from leukocytes, and serum precipitins.
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In vivo and in vitro experiments were performed to determine how phenethyl alcohol (PEA) inhibits phospholipid synthesis in Escherichia coli. This drug drastically reduced the rate of incorporation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate into the phospholipids of an sn-glycerol 3-phosphate auxotroph. PEA also reduced the rate of fatty acid incorporation into the phospholipids of a fatty acid auxotroph. The kinetics of PEA inhibition of the rate of incorporation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate were almost identical to those of PEA inhibition of the rate of fatty acid incorporation into phospholipids. The in vivo experiments suggested that the rate-limiting step(s) in phospholipid biosynthesis inhibited by PEA is at the level of the acylation of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate or beyond this step. PEA inhibited the sn-glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase with either palmitoyl coenzyme A or palmitoyl-acyl carrier protein as the acyl donor. This drug, however, had no effect on the cytidine 5'-diphosphate-diglyceride:glycerol 3-phosphate phosphatidyl transferase, cytidine 5'-diphosphate-diglyceride:L-serine phosphatidyl transferase, and acyl coenzyme A:lysophatidic acid acyltransferase. The in vitro findings suggested that PEA inhibits phospholipid synthesis primarily at the level of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase.
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A series of structurally related ansamycins have been analyzed, in a new immobilized template assay, to determine the mechanism by which they inhibit a ribonucleic acid-directed deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase from Moloney murine leukemia virus. By this assay, we can better correlate specific structures of these drugs with inhibitory mechanisms. Using an immobilized template, we were also able to observe drug effects on the stability of complexes formed between the polymerase, a template (polyadenylic acid-agarose), and a primer, as well as to monitor the synthesis of DNA in the presence of drug. For each drug, we determined the complex (intermediate in DNA synthesis) which was primarily affected and whether the effect was due to a destabilization process. Although the activity and specificity of the unsubstituted ansamycins (streptovaricins and rifamycin SV) were modulated by conformation of the molecule and electron density of the aromatic ring, the principal mode of inhibition is, apparently, drug binding to a polymerase-template complex; the drug binds in a manner which prevents subsequent formation of a polymerase-template-primer complex. However, some derivatives of rifamycin SV, when substituted at carbon-3 with bulky or hydrophobic side chains, displayed markedly different modes of action. For example, demethyl dimethyl rifampin prevented the formation of polymerase-template complexes, whereas rifazacyclo 16 acted by promoting the dissociation of polymerase-template-primer complexes.
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The rate of appearance, in a population of mouse-human heterokaryons, of cells with intermixed mouse and human surface antigens may be used to estimate the rate of lateral diffusion of the antigens in a single cell. Most heterokaryons appear to restrict diffusion of their surface antigens. These restrictions are altered by exposing either heterokaryons or their parent cells to conditions that change cell surface membrane potential. Media containing unphysiological concentrations of potassium ion, drugs, affecting the Na+,K+ ATPase, or a channel-forming antibiotic, gramicidin, all affect lateral mobility of cell surface antigens in a manner consistent with a common effect on membrane potential.
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Normal rat liver cells (BRL-1) that respond to isoproterenol (beta+2), prostaglandin E1 (PGE+1) and adenosine (Ado+) with a rise in adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP) content have been hybridized with rat hepatoma cells (H35) which do not respond to any of these agonists (beta-2, PGE-1 and Ado-). Both the initial hybrid line (BF5) and a subclone (BF5-1-1) expressed a beta+2, PGE+1, Ado- phenotype. However, full expression of the responsive phenotype in the BF5 line was apparent only if phosphodiesterase activity was blocked, for example, by methylisobutylxanthine (MIX). Direct measurements showed the rate of degradation of cAMP to be 7 times greater in intact BF5 cells than in the BRL-1 parent. In contrast to BF5 cells, the BF5-1-1 cells did not express maximal responsiveness to any of the agonists even in the presence of MIX. The differential accumulation of intracellular cAMP observed with BRL-1, BF5 and BF5-1-1 cells in response to isoproterenol was shown not to be as a result of differential rates of excretion of cAMP. Furthermore, no differences in the apparent affinities of the beta 2-catecholamine receptors for isoproterenol were observed. It is suggested that the increased degradative capacity of BF5 cells accounts for the difference in cAMP accumulation in these cells compared with the BRL-1 parent. The reduced responsiveness of BF5-1-1 cells, however, does not appear to be solely due to increased phosphodiesterase activity. It appears that the beta 2- phenotype may not always be dominant in hybrid crosses of this type as has been reported previously.
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1. The total testicular content of RNA, DNA and protein was found to decrease sharply in hamsters with shortened photoperiod and in ground squirrels during the spring breeding season. 2. RNA and DNA per g testes were found to increase in both animals, while protein per g testes remained fairly stable. 3. Cell-free protein synthesis by testicular PMS during testicular regression remained constant when expressed per mg of testicular RNA, but decreased 75% when expressed per testes. 4. These findings suggest that decreases in testicular protein synthesis are due to a decrease in RNA content and not to alteration of the translational activity of the RNA.
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1. The effect of molt cycle stage and beta-ecdysone on protein synthesis in the horsehoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, was examined. 2. A pronounced decline in protein specific radioactivity after incubation with 14C-leucine was noted in muscle, midgut gland and operculum from postmolt to intermolt to premolt and in gut and gill tissue from intermolt to premolt. 3. beta-Ecdysone injections produced an early stimulation of protein synthesis in the midgut gland followed by strong inhibition within 48 hr. 4. Results are compared with those obtained in mandibulate arthropods.
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1. The activities of lysozyme, acid and alkaline phosphatases, beta-glucuronidase, amylase, lipase, glutamate-oxalacetate transaminase, and glutamate-pyruvate transaminase in the whole hemolymph and 4000 g pellets and supernatants of Mya arenaria were determined. 2. All of these enzymes, except for amylase, occurred in whole hemolymph as well as in the 4000 g pellet and supernatant. 3. Based on earlier observations, these enzymes are believed to be of cellular origin within hemolymph cells. 4. In the case of amylase, it only occurred in the whole hemolymph and/or serum and is believed to have originated from the crystalline style.
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Neurotensin (NT), substance P (SP) and morphine sulfate (MS) elevate plasma prolactin and growth hormone levels in both normal or estrogen-progesterone pretreated male rats. By contrast, steroid priming is required for TRF to exhibit PRL-releasing activity. Naloxone, an opiate receptor blocker, reverses the stimulatory effect of MS only. Diphenhydramine, a histamine antagonist, inhibits the response to NT, SP and MS without affecting the response to TRF. These results suggest the involvement of a histaminic step in the action of NT, SP and MS. TRF, NT and SP do not appear to stimulate PRL and GH through activation of an opiate receptor.
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Stimulation of dopamine receptors by apomorphine inhibits episodic LH release in ovariectomized rats. The present study was designed to examine further the role of dopamine in this process. Unrestrained, unanesthetized rats with indwelling right atrial cannulae were bled continuously (30 or 50 microliters of whole blood/5 min for 3-6 h) and whole blood samples analyzed for LH by radioimmunoassay. Animals were treated with various compounds reported to stimulate or block dopamine receptors. ET 495, a long acting dopamine receptor stimulating agent, caused a marked inhibition of episodic LH release (2 1/2-4 h). Control injections of distilled water had no effect. d-Butaclamol, a blocker of dopamine receptors, did not itself alter episodic LH release but prevented the inhibitory effects seen following apomorphine or ET 495. I-butaclamol, a biologically inactive form of butaclamol, had no effect. Measurement of plasma corticosterone levels in these same animals indicated increased values following apomorphine or ET 495 alone (when LH release was inhibited), as well as after apomorphine or ET 495 administration to d-butaclamol-pretreated rats (when LH levels did not change). These data support our previous hypothesis that in ovariectomized adult rats, activation of dopamine receptors is capable of inhibiting episodic LH release, but that dopamine may not play an inhibitory role under normal physiological conditions in the modulation of LH secretion. In addition, the inhibitory action of apomorphine and ET 495 does not appear to be exerted via a stress-induced release of adrenal corticosterone.
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Sera from a number of rhesus monkeys showed low or undetectable levels of LH according to radioimmunoassays which employ radioiodinated rhesus LH and antisera against rhesus LH or hCG. These same sera, when assayed by a system utilizing radioiodinated ovine LH and a unique anti-ovine LH serum which cross-reacts with LH from a variety of species, appeared to contain large and variable quantities of LH. The chromatographic behavior on Sephadex G-100 of the LH-like material in these sera was indistinguishable from that of authentic rhesus LH. Chromatographic fractions containing this LH-like material, as well as the sera from which they were derived, generated dose-response curves in the ovine:anti-ovine radioimmunoassay with steeper slopes than those produced by rhesus LH. These same chromatographic fractions had negligible activity in an alpha subunit radioimmunoassay which detects not only free rhesus alpha subunit but also the alpha component of undissociated rhesus glycoprotein hormones including LH. Treatment of these fractions with 4M guanidine-HCl produced a substance of smaller molecular size which, like rhLH beta, was active in the ovine:anti-ovine assay. A substance closely resembling the serum LH-like material but having a somewhat greater molecular size is also present in the rhesus adenohypophysis, but its relationship to the serum substance remains uncertain.
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The spatial response of the magnetoencephalogram (MEG) to sources in the brain's cortex is compared with that of the electroencephalogram (EEG). This is done using computer modeling of the head which is approximated by 4 concentric spherical regions that represent the brain and surrounding bone and tissue. Lead fields are calculated at points on the cortex for unipolar, bipolar and quadrupolar MEG and EEG measurements. Since lead fields are patterns of the sensitivity of these measurements to a source at various locations and orientations, they provide a convenient means for comparison. It is found that a unipolar MEG has a very different lead field than a unipolar EEG. Hence, this type of MEG detects sources at different locations and orientations than this EEG. Although bipolar MEG and EEG lead fields are found to have similar patterns, the MEG lead field is narrower than that of the EEG and hence 'sees' a smaller area on the cortex than the EEG. This is because the potentials measured by the EEG are 'smeared' by the low-conductivity skull; the magnetic fields measured by the MEG are not smeared. Quadrupolar MEG and EEG lead fields are found to be about the same. The responses of bipolar MEGs and EEGs to distributed sources, which are composed of aligned and randomly oriented dipoles, are compared. It is found that for both types of sources, the MEG 'sees' an area on the cortex which is approximately 0.3 times that for the EEG. Hence, the MEG appears to be useful for detecting a more restricted group of sources than the EEG.
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First-degree relatives of lung-cancer patients and of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease had significantly higher age-sex-race-smoking-adjusted rates of impaired forced expiration than first-degree relatives of patients with non-pulmonary disease or community-derived comparison series (neighbourhood controls and teachers). Subclassification of the data and multiple adjustment for smoking, race, sex, and other confounding factors emphasised the consistency of the pattern. These findings strongly suggest that lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease share a common familial component other than smoking. The clinical manifestation may depend on the presence of one or more other cofactors as yet undefined.
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Thirty-two eyes in 28 patients with anterior chamber angle neovascularization were prospectively treated with panretinal photocoagulation. Of 17 eyes that had less than 270 degrees angle closure, with an intraocular pressure of less than 40 mm Hg prior to treatment, 16 showed complete disappearance of the angle neovascularization and stabilization of the peripheral anterior synechiae after treatment. None of the 15 patients who had angle closure of 270 degrees or greater, or an intraocular pressure of above 40 mm Hg, showed any significant improvement after treatment. These results suggest that panretinal photocoagulation offers a highly effective means of dealing with early and moderately advanced cases of angle neovascularization.
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Neonatal splenic B cells which are responsive to thymus-dependent antigens (TD) are exquisitely susceptible to induction of tolerance (1,2). This state of tolerance is not mediated by suppressor T cells and is not a result of suboptimal macrophage function (1 and footnote one). In adult mice, induction of B-cell tolerance is not achieved with doses of antigen 1,000-fold higher (1) than those required to produce the same degree of unresponsiveness in neonates. In contrast to these results, studies with T-independent (TI) antigens indicate that neonatal and adult splenic B cells are equally susceptible to tolerance induction (3,4). However, such studies have not ascertained whether the neonate is more resistant to tolerance induction or the adult is hypersusceptible, i.e., does the induction of tolerance in cells responsive to TI antigens resemble that of adult or neonatal cells responsive to TD antigens? The answer is pertinent to determining the relative maturity of the B cells which can be tolerized or respond to TI or TD antigens. We report here the direct comparison of tolerogen sensitivity of adult and neonatal TD and TI responses by inducing tolerance in vitro with trinitophenyl human gamma globulin (TNP(17)HgG) and assaying unresponsiveness with TD and TI forms of the TNP determinant.
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Specific antibody producing human cell lines were established by preselecting antigen binding B-lymphocytes and subsequently transforming ("immortalizing") them with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). NNP-binding B-cells were isolated from the blood of three donors with high anti-NNP titers. EBV-transformation led to polyclonal cell lines that had 15-18% NNP receptor positive cells. A similar fraction of the cells produced NNP-specific plaques in the Cunningham-Szenberg assay. Unconcentrated culture media agglutinated NNP-coupled erythrocytes in up to an 1/2,048 dilution and inactivated NNP-coupled T4 bacteriophage in up to an 1/10,000 dilution. EBV-transformed but not similarly NNP-preselected lines of the same donors were completely negative in the rosette, plaque and antibody secretion tests. Supernatants of the antibody producing lines gave no reaction with the non-coupled erythrocytes or with a number of other hapten coupled controls. Anti-NNP antibodies secreted by all three preselected lines were of the IgM kappa type, which was in contrast to the sera of the donors that contained both IgM and IgG antibodies, with both light chain types. Cloning of one NNP-antibody producing line yielded 9 antibody producers out of 30. The positive clones formed NNP rosettes and plaques with 31-86% of the cells and produced anti-NNP of class IgM, Kappa. The cell culture contained 5-16 micrograms IgM/ml cell culture.
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This communication describes a method to obtain enriched populations of T-cells, B-cells and macrophages. Spleen cells were initially fractionated on nylon wool columns. The nylon wool adherent fraction was removed by mechanical agitation and further separated on the basis of adherence to a coated-plastic surface in the presence of autologous serum. The tissue flask adherent population was removed with the aid of a rubber policeman. The nylon wool non-adherent and the tissue flask non-adherent and adherent fractions were characterized for the presence of cell surface markers, size, and functional activity and were identified as T-cells, B-cells and macrophages, respectively. The two-stage adherence procedure is simple to perform and does not require sophisticated equipment or expensive reagents.
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A 61-year-old man developed clinical lupus syndrome with positive antinuclear antibody, positive lupus erythematosus (LE) cell preparation, and diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis following 26 months of procainamide therapy. He was treated sequentially with prednisone and azathioprine (2 weeks), decreasing doses of prednisone alone (21 months), and no immunosuppressive drugs (10 months). Coincidental with this treatment, the immunopathology of the glomerulonephritis improved dramatically, dramatically, renal function returned almost to normal, and both antinuclear antibody and LE cell preparation became negative. The course of this patient's renal disease contrasts sharply with diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis of idiopathic systemic lupus, and suggests that this rare complication of procainamide therapy may have a favorable course.
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More than 80% of the hexachlorophene added to a Bacillus subtilis culture binds to the cells. Complete growth inhibition requires 6 x 10(5) molecules bound per cell. In contrast, more than 99% decanoate remains in solution and 3.8 x 10(7) molecules bound per cell are needed to inhibit growth. Centrifugation and resuspension of cells in growth medium removes only decanoate, whereas the addition of 1% bovine serum albumin to the growth medium removes both inhibitors from their binding sites on the cells. The addition of untreated cells to a hexachlorophene-treated culture enables the hexachlorophene molecules to redistribute among all the cells with the result that the inhibited cells can resume growth.
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