Publications by authors named "HUME R"

Addition of PGE2, but not PGF2 alpha, to fetal lung organ cultures accelerates the process of self-differentiation with increased dilatation of terminal airsacs and differentiation of the epithelial lining. Indomethacin reduces the endogenous production by organ cultures of PGE2, PGF2 alpha, 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGE2, and 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2 alpha and retards the process of self-differentiation. Prolonged exposure of cultures to indomethacin results in cell necrosis.

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Disruption of microsomal membranes after freezing liver samples can undermine the reliability of in vitro enzymatic diagnosis of the type 1 glycogen storage diseases. However, freezing of biopsy material is necessary if biopsy samples are to be safely transported to the place of assay. We have therefore examined several different methods (each of which could easily be carried out in routine hospital laboratories) of preparing and freezing liver tissue before analysis for glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.

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We have examined the physiological properties of transmission at newly formed synapses between sympathetic preganglionic neurons and sympathetic ganglion neurons in vitro. Chick neurons were labeled with fluorescent carbocyanine dyes before they were placed into culture (Honig and Hume, 1986), and were studied by making intracellular recordings during the first 2 weeks of coculture. Evoked monosynaptic excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) were not observed until 48 h of coculture.

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The developmental expression of the alpha-, mu- and pi-class glutathione S-transferases has been defined in human lung and kidney using radioimmunoassay, immunohistochemistry and column chromatography. Expression of alpha-class enzymes increased significantly after about 40 weeks gestation in kidney but not lung, while expression of mu isoenzymes was continuous throughout development in both tissues. Expression of the pi isoenzyme fell during in utero ontogeny in lung, the pattern of down-regulation being similar to that previously observed in liver.

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The influence of non-neuronal cells and interneurons on the morphological development of chick sympathetic preganglionic neurons (SPNs) and on the responsiveness of these neurons to the neurotransmitters GABA, glycine, and glutamate was studied. SPNs were retrogradely labeled with the fluorescent dyes dil and diO, then separated from spinal-cord non-neuronal cells and interneurons by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. SPNs were grown in culture, either alone or in coculture with non-neuronal cells alone, with interneurons alone, or with both of these cell types (control cultures).

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Abnormalities of respiratory regulation, such as apnea and abnormal hypoxic arousal during sleep, are mechanistic in the pathophysiology of SIDS. In utero cocaine exposure is associated with poor head growth, abnormal neurodevelopment, and an increased incidence of sudden, unexplained death, suggesting that in utero cocaine exposure disrupts the central regulation of breathing. It is likely that this disruption is due to altered CNS maturation.

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Neurons in the CNS generally receive inputs form multiple afferent sources. These afferent systems seldom all use the same neurotransmitter, so most central neurons are required to express multiple neurotransmitter receptors. This work addresses the issue of how multiple neurotransmitter receptors are regulated on the surface of individual neurons.

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The putative involvement of reactive oxygen species in the etiology of lung damage in infants receiving mechanical ventilation has been examined by comparing the levels of peroxidation and expression of the antioxidant enzymes, CuZn and Mn superoxide dismutase, in lungs from control and affected infants as well as from fetuses and infants who died postnatally after term delivery. Mean levels (+/- SD) of lung peroxidation, determined with a thiobarbituric acid method, were similar in affected and control premature neonates and in fetal subjects (1.87 +/- 1.

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1. In developing chick skeletal muscle, extracellular adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) elicits an early excitatory conductance increase followed by a late potassium conductance increase. Both of these responses desensitize profoundly.

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The ability of the growth cones of sympathetic preganglionic neurons to recognize the neurons they encounter during their outgrowth and to react to them in a cell-type-specific manner may play a role in guiding them to appropriate targets during development in vivo. In this study, we examined the in vitro growth of sympathetic preganglionic neurons as they interacted with motor neurons, dorsal root ganglion neurons, and sympathetic ganglion neurons. All of these cell types might potentially be encountered by a growing preganglionic axon.

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Predictive tests for the identification of women at high risk of the development of preeclampsia are critical to allow the most appropriate preventive measures. Preeclampsia is a vasospastic condition of pregnancy characterized by early and enhanced vascular reactivity to endogenous pressor agents. Exercise tolerance testing with cycle ergometry to induce hemodynamic response measured with duplex Doppler A/B ratio of the umbilical artery could unmask latent vascular pressor hypersensitivity.

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We have studied 250 human liver biopsy samples to determine the ontogeny of the microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.

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The glutathione S-transferases are a complex group of multifunctional enzymes which may detoxify a wide range of toxic substances including drugs and carcinogens. Different isoenzymes vary in substrate specificity, tissue distribution and level of expression during development. Following reports of cell-specific and age-dependent expression in rat brain we have studied, immunohistochemically, expression of the Pi and Alpha class isoenzymes in 10 adult and 21 human fetal brains.

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Membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase IV (CAIV) expression has been evaluated in a range of fetal and adult human tissues and in cell culture. All tissues tested showed expression of CAIV, assessed by Western blotting, with a single immunodetected band at 55 kDa. The levels varied in fetal lung and liver during development and in various zones of the fetal brain.

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This study tests the hypothesis that increasing the calcium and phosphorus content of formulas for very low birth weight (VLBW) infants to the level required to decrease the incidence of rickets has a negative impact on magnesium balance. Using formulas variously supplemented with these minerals, we measured absorption and retention in two groups of preterm infants: (1) VLBW infants, less than 1500 gm and at less than 32 weeks of gestational age, with 3-day mineral balances begun at days 10, 20, 30, and 40; and (2) low birth weight infants appropriately grown and at 32 to 34 weeks of gestational age, with a single 3-day balance begun at day 10. Magnesium did not affect calcium balance in VLBW or low birth weight infants but promoted phosphorus retention in VLBW infants from day 20 onward.

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Nineteen human fetal brains ranging from 9-23 weeks of gestation were examined immunocytochemically for evidence of glial and neuronal differentiation. Radial glia were positive for vimentin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) throughout the age range. S100-positive cells which were presumed to be astrocytes were present from 9 weeks; they were always more widespread in the cerebrum and the brainstem than GFAP-positive mature astrocytes, which could be detected with certainty only at 14 weeks.

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Micromolar concentrations of extracellular adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) elicit a rapid excitatory response in developing chick skeletal muscle. Excitation is the result of a simultaneous increase in membrane permeability to sodium, potassium, and chloride ions. In the present study we quantify the selectivity of the ATP response, and provide evidence that a single class of ATP-activated ion channels conducts both cations and anions.

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Polyclonal antisera to the alpha and pi isoenzymes of glutathione S-transferase have been used in immunohistochemical studies of developing human lung. In utero expression of the pi set was down-regulated in distal airway cells and the first appearance of pi-negative cells coincided with phenotypic differentiation. In contrast, in the early phase of fetal lung organ culture pi isoenzyme was detected in all differentiated epithelial cells and only as culture progressed did focal negativity develop.

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The developmental expression of the alpha, mu and pi class glutathione S-transferases has been defined in human liver using radioimmunoassay and immunohistochemistry. Expression of alpha and mu class isoenzymes increased significantly at birth, while that of the pi isoenzyme declined during the first trimester. Mu-class isoenzymes (GST1 1, GST1 2, GST1 2-1) were expressed in hepatocytes but not in other liver cell types.

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The formation of morphine glucuronides is enantio- and regioselective in rats and humans. In rat liver microsomes, natural (-)-morphine formed only the 3-O-glucuronide, whereas the unnatural (+)-morphine formed glucuronides at both the 3-OH and 6-OH positions, with the 6-O-glucuronide being the principal product. In human liver microsomes, both the 3-OH-and 6-OH positions were glucuronidated with each of the enantiomers, with the 3-O-glucuronide being the major product with (-)-morphine, and the 6-OH position preferred with the (+)-enantiomer.

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1. Depolarization of embryonic chick myotubes from negative potentials elicits a rapid spike followed by a long-duration after-potential. The ionic basis of the long-duration after-potential was examined by making intracellular recordings from cultured myotubes, and by making whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from myoblasts and myoballs.

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Components of fetal behavioral state organization reflect the successful integration of the central nervous system, have a specific developmental timetable, and can be studied with fetal ultrasonographic techniques. To test the hypothesis that evaluation of state organization is a marker of abnormal central nervous system maturation and a predictor of risk, we studied 20 fetuses and newborns exposed to cocaine in utero. Fetal assessments were accomplished by serial ultrasonographic examination, videotaped, and scored by a scheme developed by the authors to assess organization and regulation of behavioral states.

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