We investigated the mechanism of cell growth inhibition caused by the deoxyribonucleosides thymidine (dThd), deoxyguanosine (dGuo), deoxyadenosine (dAdo), and deoxycytidine (dCyd). Growth of the cultured human leukemic cells HL-60 and K-562 was measured by cloning in soft agar. Of the deoxyribonucleosides, dGuo was the most potent cell growth inhibitor; however, the potency of added dAdo was probably attenuated by the presence of adenosine deaminase in the tissue culture growth medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunopharmacol
February 1981
The effect of pyran copolymer, injected into mice bearing the M109 Madison lung carcinoma, on serum concentrations of lysozyme, beta-glucuronidase, and N-acetyl-beta, D-glucosaminidase was studied and compared with that of other immunoadjuvants. Increases in lysozyme levels ranging from 50 to 100% were observed after injection of pyran, BCG and Bru-Pel; increases in the levels of the other enzymes were less consistent. Other immunoadjuvants were less effective in raising serum concentrations of lysosomal enzymes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith phenolphthalein beta-glucuronide as the substrate in the serum beta-glucuronidase assay, centrifugation at high speed after addition of alkali was required to minimize blanks. Optimal substrate concentration was 3--6 mM. Excess substrate was inhibitory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFresh blood serum from normal gibbon apes (Hylobates lar) contained heat-sensitive lytic activity for various mammalian oncornaviruses. Lytic activity quantitatively similar to that in gibbon serum was demonstrated in serum from three other primate species, including man; it was demonstrated to be low or absent in lower mammalian species with the exception of domestic cats, which had intermediate levels of serum lytic activity. Gibbons that acquired infectious gibbon ape leukemia virus, either naturally by exposure to a virus-shedding ape or experimentally by deliberate virus inoculation, had the same levels of serum lytic activity as did unexposed gibbons that had no detectable antibodies to gibbon ape leukemia virus.
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