Publications by authors named "Bardosi A"

Pancreatic carcinoma is one of the most malignant diseases and is associated with a poor survival rate. Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a neuropeptide that acts on three different G protein-coupled receptors: the specific PAC1 and the VPAC1/2 that also bind vasoactive intestinal peptide. PACAP is widely distributed in the body and has diverse physiological effects.

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Dysregulation of neuropeptides may play an important role in aging-induced impairments. In the long list of neuropeptides, pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) represents a highly effective cytoprotective peptide that provides an endogenous control against a variety of tissue-damaging stimuli. PACAP has neuro- and general cytoprotective effects due to anti-apoptotic, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant actions.

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Dysregulation of neuropeptides may play an important role in aging-induced impairments. Among them, pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a potent cytoprotective peptide that provides an endogenous control against a variety of tissue-damaging stimuli. We hypothesized that the progressive decline of PACAP throughout life and the well-known general cytoprotective effects of PACAP lead to age-related pathophysiological changes in PACAP deficiency, supported by the increased vulnerability to various stressors of animals partially or totally lacking PACAP.

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PACAP is a neuropeptide with diverse functions in various organs, including reproductive system. It is present in the testis in high concentrations, and in addition to the stage-specific expression within the seminiferous tubules, PACAP affects spermatogenesis and the functions of Leydig and Sertoli cells. Mice lacking endogenous PACAP show reduced fertility, but the possibility of abnormalities in spermatogenic signaling has not yet been investigated.

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Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) belongs to the vasoactive intestinal peptide-secretin-glucagon peptide family, isolated first from ovine hypothalamus. The diverse physiological effects of PACAP are known mainly from animal experiments, including several actions in endocrine glands. Alteration of PACAP expression has been shown in several tumors, but changes in expression of PACAP and its specific PAC1 receptor in human thyroid gland pathologies have not yet been investigated.

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Anaesthesia and surgery are known to depress granulocyte function in the early postoperative period, leading to deterioration of the immune defence against infection. Carbohydrate-lectin interactions may play an important role in the activities of phagocytic cells in that they facilitate initial host defence in the event of microbial antigenic challenge. A panel of biotinylated (neo)glycoproteins (chemically glycosilated carrier proteins) was used to detect endogenous carbohydrate-binding receptors /lectins/, on peripheral blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes of patients undergoing prolonged anaesthesia for replantation surgery.

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In order to study the distribution of endogenous sugar-binding proteins (lectins) in various areas of the adult bovine heart, we used a battery of biotinylated neoglycoproteins. These tools expose carrier-immobilized carbohydrate moieties as ligands for receptor detection. Characteristic staining patterns depending on the type of carbohydrate ligand were observed in all constituents examined.

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A new triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) variant is described in an 8-year-old Turkish girl suffering from chronic haemolytic anaemia, myopathy and developmental retardation since early infancy. The enzyme activity profile revealed a generalized deficiency in erythrocytes, granulocytes, mononuclear blood cells, skeletal muscle tissue and cerebrospinal fluid. The concentration of enzyme substrate dihydroxyacetone phosphate was distinctly elevated.

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Biotinylated heparin has been used to detect the presence of specific binding sites in sections of human placenta, which has prompted demonstration of expression of lectin activity for this proteoglycan. Purification of this lectin from full-term placenta facilitates the synthesis of its biotinylated derivative, using biotin-amidocaproyl hydrazide, without affecting its activity. It also enables immunization to obtain antibodies.

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A family is reported in which two members presented with proximal myopathy associated with high serum levels of angiotensin-converting enzyme (SACE), creatine kinase (CK), and lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme 5. Examination of three relatives revealed elevated SACE levels in all of them, but no myopathy. No evidence of sarcoidosis, the most common disease associated with high SACE levels, could be found.

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According to the "Population-based cancer register" of the Federal Republic of Germany only malignant neoplasms of the buccal cavity, the pharynx and larynx as well as cancers of the respiratory tract show an increasing rate of incidence and mortality. The molecular mechanisms and etiological factors causing this phenomenon are still little understood despite intensive research work. Recognition between receptors on a cellular level may be mediated by specific amino acid sequences on the level of protein-protein recognition.

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The carbohydrate part of cellular glycoconjugates - glycoproteins, glycoproteins, glycolipids and proteoglycans - and specific endogenous sugar receptors, i.e. lectins, can establish a system of biological recognition based on protein-sugar interactions on the cellular and subcellular levels.

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Molecular recognition can be mediated by protein (lectin)-carbohydrate interaction, explaining the interest in this topic. Plant lectins and, more recently, chemically glycosylated neoglycoproteins principally allow to map the occurrence of components of this putative recognition system. Labelled endogenous lectins and the lectin-binding ligands can add to the panel of glycohistochemical tools.

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The etiology of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is yet unknown; this study aimed at further differentiation of the disease by means of enzyme histochemistry. Endomyocardial biopsies from the left ventricle of 40 DCM patients and 5 control specimens had enzymes examined histochemically and semiquantitatively and analyzed according to staining intensities of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide tetrazolium reductase (NADH-TR), succinate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase, lactate dehydrogenase and acid phosphatase (aPh). In DCM, the NADH-TR activity was elevated as compared to controls, indicating impaired mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.

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Protein-carbohydrate recognition may be involved in an array of molecular interactions on the cellular and subcellular levels. To gain insight into the role of proteins in this type of interaction, surgically removed specimens of human endomyocardial tissue were processed for histochemical and biochemical analysis. The inherent capacity of these sections to bind individual sugar moieties, which are constituents of the carbohydrate part of cellular glycoconjugates, was assessed using a panel of biotinylated neoglycoproteins according to a standardized procedure.

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Inhalation anaesthetic agents are known to depress phagocytic functions such as mobilization, attachment, chemotactic motility, engulfment and intracellular killing. Mannose-specific sugar receptors on the surface of leukocytes are involved in a series of phagocytosis-related activities. To investigate the effect of anaesthesia on the expression of this type of sugar receptor, mice were anaesthetized with halothane, enflurane and isoflurane.

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Different carrier-immobilized carbohydrate moieties were employed as tools to detect respective binding sites glycohistochemically and glycobiochemically. Besides ascertaining their presence the pattern of endogenous sugar receptors (lectins) in different regions of the human central nervous system was mapped to reveal any non-uniform expression. A strong and specific staining with biotinylated neoglycoproteins, exposing different sugar moieties as ligands, indicated the presence of sugar receptors in the nuclei, neuronal pathways and accessory structures such as ependyma cells, plexus chorioideus, intra- and extracerebral vessels and leptomeninges localized in the mesencephalon, in the pons, in the medulla oblongata and in the cerebellum.

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A morphologic and morphometric comparison between normal human and rat extraocular muscle nerves was performed using a computer-assisted method to obtain scatter diagrams of relative sheath thickness (g ratio = quotient axon diameter/fiber diameter). Human and rat extraocular muscle nerves (nervus abducens and ramus medialis n. oculomotorii) were excised immediately before the nerve branching at the entering point into the muscle.

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Morphological changes are shown in the muscle biopsy specimens of an 8-year-old girl who suffered from a triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) deficiency, resulting in a chronic, nonspherocytic, hemolytic anemia, mental retardation and neuromuscular impairment. The newly introduced enzyme histochemical reaction for TPI demonstrated a total lack of histochemically detectable enzyme activity, whereas biochemical analysis of muscle tissue revealed less than 10% of the normal enzyme activity. Electron microscopy showed a degenerative myopathy with an increase in the amount of intracellular glycogen.

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Ten different types of labelled neoglycoproteins, exposing glycohistochemically pivotal carbohydrate moieties that mostly are constituents of naturally occurring glycoconjugates with an aromatic spacer, were synthesized. The panel was applied to fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of different cortical regions and white matter, of hippocampal gyrus, basal ganglia, thalamus nuclei and adjacent areas of adult human brain to comprehensively map the presence of respective binding sites in these parts. Compliance with accepted criteria for specificity of binding was routinely ascertained.

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The pattern of capillary perfusion was studied in the brain of anesthetized rats. Two plasma labels were used to demonstrate the density of capillaries perfused during a 10-min period [fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) globulin], as well as during a 10-, 3-, or 1-s period [lissamine-rhodamine B 200 (RB200) globulin, infused into the left heart chamber], respectively. A special biopsy cutting-freezing system was used to withdraw brain tissue via a cranial window for histological analysis of dye distribution at the end of the infusion period.

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Sixteen patients suffering from hemicranial attacks are reported. After many years of unsuccessful conservative treatment (mean = 12.4 years), the patients were treated surgically with good results.

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