Exp Mol Pathol
December 1988
The incubation of human erythrocytes with increasing levels of the antineoplastic drug Lonidamine clearly indicated a dose-dependent effect on the lipid composition of the plasma membranes. A selective transfer of phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol from membrane to incubation medium and the consequent enrichment in phosphatidylethanolamine of the membrane itself was observed. Moreover, the membranes were found to contain increasing levels of the drug which was incorporated at a constant membrane/medium partition ratio.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe histopathology of the acute and chronic kidney reaction to low-frequency nonionizing electromagnetic radiation was evaluated in New Zealand white rabbits treated with multiple exposure to 27.12-MHz radiofrequencies. At the end of treatment, the animals exhibited focal tubular necrosis and focal and segmental glomerular sclerosis which in a few months evolved into a membranous nephropathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLonidamine, a derivative of indazol carboxylic acid, has been found to exert a powerful inhibitory effect on oxygen consumption and aerobic glycolysis of neoplastic cells through mechanisms yet to be defined. Recent freeze-fracture studies have shown that Lonidamine alters the distribution of intramembranous particles in the plasma membrane, suggesting that the cell membranes, rather than the energy metabolism, are the drug's primary target. The present study was carried out to further evaluate the effects of Lonidamine on cell membranes, using normal human erythrocytes and T lymphocytes and Ehrlich ascites tumor cells as cell models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the course of a study of the early effects of Friend Leukemia Virus (FLV) infection in thymus structure and function, evidence of early localization of infectious FLV in the thymic type I and type II epithelio-reticular cells of susceptible mice was obtained. Such evidence was based upon bio-assay, ultrastructural and immunofluorescence observations. As for the latter, conventional monospecific sera against FLV p30 and gp70 antigens as well as two distinct monoclonal antibodies recognizing FLV gp70 epitopes were employed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe levels of serum thymic factor(s) (STF), of Thy-1.2 positivity of splenocytes [as measured by their azathioprine (AZ) sensitivity], and of Thy-1.2-positive "spontaneous" spleen rosette-forming cells (SSRFCs), as well as the presence of infectious virus in the thymus, were assessed as a function of time after virus inoculation in susceptible DBA/2, partially resistant BALB/c, and fully resistant C57BL/6 mice given the polycythemia- or anemia-inducing strain of Friend leukemia virus (FLV-P and FLV-A, respectively).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActin has been specifically detected in the intercellular matrix of mouse smooth muscle cells and along the vascular internal elastic membrane by means of immunoferritin-electron microscopy, employing human antibodies to smooth muscle actin. The presence of actin in the smooth muscle matrix suggests that this protein may have relevance in controlling cell-to-cell adhesion and the sliding of one smooth muscle cell over the other, both in contracted and expanded status. The association of actin with the elastic membrane may represent the anatomical basis of a functional link between elastic membrane, adjacent fibronectin and smooth muscle cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe occurrence of immune deposits in the ovaries of mice with lupus-like syndrome was studied by immunofluorescence, light microscopy, and electron microscopy. Granular deposits of mouse IgG and C3, and occasionally gp70 and denatured DNA, were found in the zona pellucida of mature and atretic follicles. Dense deposits of foreign material were seen by light and electron microscopy in areas of ZP corresponding to the immune deposits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: With aging, rabbit tendon tissue undergoes a series of morphological and biochemical changes which involve both the cells and the extrace-lular matrix. The extracellular matrix increases in volume, causing a relative decrease of the number of cells per unit of tissue surface. The tenoblasts become longer and more slender, while their cytoplasmic processes increase in number and become thinner and more elongated, forming a dense network.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pathogenesis of the degenerative vascular disease and myocardial infarction that develop in mice with lupus-like disease was studied by immunofluorescence, light microscopy, and electron microscopy. Medium and small coronary arteries and arterioles of both infarcted and noninfarcted hearts had focal degenerative lesions consisting of deposits of periodic-acid--Schiff (PAS)-positive or eosinophilic material in the intima and to a lesser extent in the media, degenerative changes in the media without accompanying cellular inflammation, and occasional proliferation or swelling of intimal cells. These lesions often narrowed and, together with platelet aggregation, occasionally occluded the vascular lumens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Tissue Res
December 1978
The regenerated tissue which fills the gap between the stumps of sectioned and unsutured rabbit calcaneal tendon was studied by immunofluorescence, light and electron microscopy from 2 days to 30 weeks after surgery. In the early stages, the newly formed tissue consisted of few connective tissue cells of variable shape dispersed in an abundant intercellular matrix. At 7 days after tenotomy most of the cells were spindle shaped and arranged along the major tendon axis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe possible role of circulating immune complexes (IC) in the production gastrointestinal lesions was studied in rabbits with chronic serum sickness (CSS) induced by multiple daily injections of bovine serum albumin (BSA). All rabbits generating a marked antibody response developed IC glomerulonephritis. In approximately 50% of these rabbits granular deposits of BSA, rabbit IgG, and C3 were also found in the gastrointestinal tract.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Exp Immunol
April 1978
Fluoresceinated human native and desialylated thyroglobulin were incubated with peripheral blood lymphocytes. 1% of the lymphocytes, in twenty samples from normal human blood donors, showed a bright granular fluorescence where neither the number nor pattern of fluorescence differed from lymphocytes from the blood of thyroiditis patients. Fluoresceinated albumin and gamma-globulin did not bind to the lymphocytes, and a 500-fold excess of native non-fluoresceinated thyroglobulin inhibited the binding and pre-incubation with anti-IgM serum abolished it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn extensive cytoplasmic fibrillar system has been observed in fibroblast-like cell of regenerating tendon. It consists of bundles of actin filaments, which often show a cross-striated appearance due to electron dense bodies occurring throughout their length. The functional role of this contractile apparatus seems to be related to the process of movement and orientation of the newly formed cells and to the retraction of the regenerating tendon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Orthop Relat Res
March 1978
Evidence obtained by means of ultrastructural and immunological methods, reveals actin filaments within the cytoplasm of tenocytes. Actin filaments suggest that the tendon cells have contractile activity, and may play an important part in the physiology of muscle tendon fiber interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActin and/or actin-like protein have been localized in the cellular and acellular components of the glomerular walls of mouse kidney by means of immunoelectron microscopy, employing human antibodies to smooth muscle (SMA). Contractile antigens have been confirmed to be present in the cytoplasm of podocytes and mesangial cells in association with fine filaments which are considered of importance in the control of blood flow, intravascular pressure, and filtration rate within the glomerulus. The extracellular presence of contractile proteins in the mesangial matrix and glomerular basement membrane can be related to cell movement in a frictional environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-six specimens obtained from twenty human orthotopic liver allografts 10–968 days after transplantation were studied by light microscopy, electron microscopy, and immunofluorescence. The main lesions consisted of mononuclear-cell infiltration around the portal tracts, centrilobular cholestasis, liver-cell atrophy and reticulin collapse, obliterative intimal thickening of hepatic arteries, and fibrosis. Moderate amounts of IgG and/or IgM and complement (β1C/β1A globulin or C'lq) were observed in four of the liver samples and smaller deposits were present in another five.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRenal tissues from two groups of patients were studied with fluorescein-labeled (Fl-) antibodies (Abs) to immunoglobulins, complement, and antibodies prepared in rabbits against BSA conjugate of 5-methyluridine (T) and cytidine (C), the latter two of which react specifically with denatured DNA. The first group consisted of 13 SLE patients, and the second consisted of 53 patients with non-SLE nephropathies. The data obtained from the two groups of patients were used for comparison, and they showed the following:(a) Fl-Abs to immunoglobulins and complement were bound in the glomeruli of tissues from all patients with active SLE glomerulonephritis characterized by deposits of foreign material in glomerular capillary walls (GCW).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTissues obtained from 34 human renal allografts by biopsy, 1 to 31 months after transplantation, were studied by histologic, immunofluorescence, and immunoferritin techniques. Our purpose was to gain more precise information concerning the localization of immunoglobulins and complement in glomeruli and to describe the associated tubular and vascular changes. 1.
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