Publications by authors named "Annie Reber"

In the most common primary brain tumors, malignant glioma cells invade the extracellular matrix (ECM) and proliferate rapidly in the cerebral tissue, which is mainly composed of hyaluronan (HA) along with the elastin present in the basement membrane of blood vessels. To determine the role of ECM components in the invasive capacity of glioma cell lines, we developed a 3-D cell-culture system, based on a hydrogel in which HA can be coreticulated with kappa-elastin (HA-kappaE). Using this system, the invasiveness of cells from four glioma cell lines was dramatically increased by the presence of kappaE and a related, specific peptide (VGVAPG)(3).

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The effects of 375 mgm(-3) (100 ppm) toluene in air inhalation were evaluated on pigmented rats during either repeated exposures over five consecutive days 3h a day or during a single 4-h exposure. At the end of the inhalation period, the animals were returned to fresh air to evaluate their ability to recover optokinetic performance. The optokinetic responses were analyzed using a magnetic search coil technique previously described.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of the vestibular system in cardiovascular control in a varying gravito-inertial field induced by parabolic flight. We measured variations in arterial pressure and heart rate in eight awake rats, four of which had undergone bilateral labyrinthectomy 3 months previously. While the control rats showed heart rate and mean arterial pressure modulations depending on gravity level, no such variation was observed in the lesioned rats.

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To determine whether the vestibular system could influence bone remodeling in rats, we measured bone mineral density with dual energy X-rays absorptiometry before and 30 days after bilateral labyrinthectomy. Comparatively to intact control rats, labyrinthectomized animals showed a reduced bone mineral density in distal femoral metaphysis (p = 0.007): the variations between D0 and D30 were +3.

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The purpose of this study was to determine whether the absence of gravitational cues during weightlessness could alter the posture and static eye deviation of Earth compensated rats with peripheral vestibular lesions. The responses of bilaterally (BL) and unilaterally (UL) labyrinthectomized rats at a compensated stage (40-43 days after lesion) during parabolic flight were compared with those at an acute stage (2-7 h after lesion) on Earth. When free-floating in 0 g, UL animals showed the same postural pattern as during water immersion just after surgery.

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