Background: Calcific aortic stenosis (AS) is an active process sharing similarities with atherosclerosis and chronic inflammation. The pathophysiology of AS is notable for three cardinal components: inflammation, fibrosis and calcification. Monocytes play a role in each of these processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: This research was suggested after crystals that we observed in herpesvirus-infected cell cultures were identified as cholesterol. Other reports and the development of defined reagents led us to select the use of Marek's disease herpesvirus (MDV) infection of chickens to demonstrate a potential role of herpesviruses in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Available for our use were a clone-purified strain of MDV of known virulence, genetically selected, specific pathogen-free chickens, and appropriate isolation facilities to design controlled experiments to fulfill Koch's postulates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn alternative solid support for oligonucleotide synthesis was developed by coupling a polymer colloid to a modified polyethylene filter disc. The functions on the polymer colloid not used for attachment to the surface were derivatized with a Jeffamine diamine and loaded with appropriate deoxynucleoside succinates. The performance of this support system was evaluated and compared to existing resins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Environ Contam Toxicol
January 1995
Three virus isolates (ECV-1, -2, and -3) recovered from cloacae of chickens in flocks that experienced drops in egg production were identified as infectious bronchitis virus (IBV), based on characteristic embryo lesions, chloroform sensitivity, coronavirus morphology, and serology. Because these isolates were recovered from the cloacae of the hens, their tissue tropism was compared with the prototype strain of IBV, Massachusetts-41 (M-41), in experimentally inoculated chickens. During the 39-day period postinoculation (PI), virus isolation was attempted from digestive and respiratory tracts, kidney, and cloacal swabs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAJNR Am J Neuroradiol
January 1989
Twenty patients with supratentorial arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) were evaluated with angiography, conventional CT, and stable xenon CT to determine cerebral blood flow. Contralateral and ipsilateral regions of interest relative to the AVM were evaluated from cerebral blood flow maps and correlated with angiography. A significant decrease in cerebral blood flow was observed in the ipsilateral cortical gray matter adjacent to the AVM relative to the corresponding contralateral cortex (mean difference = 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHair samples from 11 different coat color phenotypes of the fox (Vulpes vulpes) were examined microscopically to determine the effects of several mutations on melanin granule color and distribution. Standard silver (b/b) causes the production of eumelanin rather than the phaeomelanin produced in wild-type red fox. Fromm brown (bf/bf) and Collicott brown (cb/cb) change the shape of the granules and convert eumelanin to brown and dark brown, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of infection by various strains of Marek's disease virus (MDV) on the immune function of 3-week-old chickens was examined. MDV strains of low (CU-2, RB-7) and high (RB-3, MD-5, and MD-11) pathogenicity were compared with prototype JM-10 strain of moderate pathogenicity. Mortality, whole body weight, relative weights of lymphoid organs, histopathology, humoral antibody responses to thymus-dependent and -independent antigens, and in vitro lymphocyte responses to mitogen stimulation were investigated at 1, 2, and 3 weeks postinfection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Neurophysiol
June 1988
Stereotactic irradiation appears to be effective in causing partial or complete thrombosis of AVM that are not surgically resectable. Use of heavy particles generated in a cyclotron allows better spatial definition and dose distribution than do other methods, allowing larger AVM to be treated. From these preliminary results, it is evident that heavy-particle irradiation therapy, like proton beam therapy, does not offer protection from recurrent hemorrhage for at least 12 months, nor is it devoid of major complications; it does offer a noninvasive mode of therapy for AVM that are difficult to treat surgically, however.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfection of normocholesterolemic, specific-pathogen-free chickens with Marek's disease herpesvirus (MDV) has been shown histologically to lead to chronic atherosclerosis like that in humans. The development of herpesvirus-induced atherosclerosis in vivo and the presence of specific Marek's antigen within aortic cells suggested that MDV infection may modify lipid metabolism and lead to significant lipid accumulation. Experiments reported herein were designed to determine the types and quantity of lipid present in aortas from MDV-infected and uninfected chickens between 2 and 8 months of age following infection and assess one possible mechanism of lipid accumulation by evaluating the effect of MDV infection on aortic cholesterol and cholesteryl ester (CE) metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe term dominant lethal may be defined as death of the heterozygote arising through multiple chromosomal breaks. The assay is generally conducted by treating male animals, usually mice or rats, acutely (1 dose), subacutely (5 doses), or over the entire period of spermatogenesis. Animals treated acutely or subacutely are mated at weekly intervals to females for a sufficient number of weeks to cover the period of spermatogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe herein the effects of Marek's disease herpesvirus (MDV) on cholesterol and cholesteryl ester metabolism in cultured chicken arterial smooth muscle cells. Infection of arterial smooth muscle cells from specific pathogen-free chickens with MDV, but not a virus control, herpesvirus of turkeys led to a 7-10-fold increase in the accumulation of free and esterified cholesterol and a 2-fold increase in phospholipids. The cellular lipid changes observed in the MDV-infected arterial smooth muscle cells resulted, in part, from the following: decreased low-density lipoprotein-cholesteryl ester hydrolysis due to decreased lysosomal (acid) cholesteryl ester hydrolytic activity; increased de novo synthesis of cholesterol; decreased excretion of free cholesterol; and, both increased cholesteryl ester synthetic activity and decreased cytoplasmic (neutral) cholesteryl ester hydrolytic activity which resulted in increased incorporation of oleic acid into cholesteryl ester.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, attenuated Marek's disease virus (MDV) became of renewed interest as a component in bi- or polyvalent vaccines. The effect of attenuation on the pathogenesis of infection was investigated. Cloned preparations of the JM-16, BC-1A and RB-1B strains of MDV were attenuated by serial passage in chick kidney cells or chicken embryo fibroblasts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReproductive and hormonal changes associated with CBA mice which were orthotopically transplanted with ovaries from young or aged CBA mice were studied. Reproductive decline was defined by the number of mice mating and the number of implantation sites and resorptions in pregnant mice. A high percentage of resorptions was observed in aged mice receiving ovaries from young mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhite leghorn chickens on five farms were given a bivalent Marek's disease (MD) vaccine consisting of turkey herpesvirus (HVT) and SB-1 (a nononcogenic MD virus); other chickens received only HVT. The farms had histories of "vaccination failures," presumably owing to an exceptionally virulent challenge MD virus. The bivalent vaccine uniformly protected chickens better than HVT alone between 12 and 16-20 weeks of age, when serious MD losses occurred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRepeated experiments have established that infection with Marek's disease herpesvirus (MDV) leads to atherosclerosis in specific pathogen free (SPF) normocholesterolemic chickens. Neither normocholesterolemic nor hypercholesterolemic uninfected SPF chickens develop this disease. The MDV-induced arterial disease is remarkably similar to chronic human atherosclerosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransmission of the effects of paternal pre-fertilization exposure to a genotoxic drug being manifested in the F1 progeny is well established using the traditional rodent dominant lethal protocol [7]. More recently, the induction of genotoxic effects in the F1 progeny following chronic paternal exposure prior to fertilization has been described in rats using behavioral testing as an endpoint [1]. In our initial study, male F344 adult rats were treated chronically with 10 mg/kg cyclophosphamide (CP) or saline for 5 weeks (5 days of daily treatment and 2 days of rest).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobehav Toxicol Teratol
February 1983
The acquisition and extinction of a one-way active avoidance task was studied in 30 day old F1 progeny of male rats previously exposed to either acute or chronic treatment with cyclophosphamide (CP) prior to breeding with normal females. Chronic treatment (10 mg/kg/day x 5 days x 5 weeks) was given to adult F344 males followed by subsequent breeding with normal females (CP-S). Separate groups of males were given a single CP injection (10 mg/kg) and breeding with normal females was done at 7-9, 14-16 and 28-30 days following the CP treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe number of plaque-forming units (PFU) of turkey herpesvirus (HVT) isolated per 10(6) latently infected splenic lymphocytes was determined by co-cultivation on permissive monolayer cultures in 35-mm-diameter Petri dishes. Doses of 1 x 10(6) spleen cells or less per culture gave uniform dose-related titers, whereas doses of 8 x 10(6) cells often yielded less than 1-2% of the expected number of PFU. Intermediate doses gave proportionally reduced virus yields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe early responses of chickens and turkeys to infection with two strains of turkey herpesvirus (FC 126 and a recent field isolate, T-5A) were compared. All birds had similar virus rescue patterns from the spleen, regardless of virus strain used for infection. Productive-restrictive infections as indicated by the presence of viral antigens were found only in the spleens of infected turkeys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAvian Pathol
September 2008
The RB-1B and ALA-8 strains of Marek's disease (MD) virus, which were isolated from chickens with MD and which had been vaccinated with the herpesvirus of turkeys (HVT), were evaluated for their oncogenic potential in genetically susceptible (P-line) and resistant (N-line, PDRC) chickens. RB-1B and ALA-8 were both highly oncogenic, causing a high incidence of MD in both susceptible and resistant birds. Vaccination of P-line birds with SB-1 or HVT did not protect satisfactorily against RB-1B.
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