Publications by authors named "Haferkamp O"

We studied the point processes of intramembranous particles of mitochondrial membranes from HeLa cells using the freeze fracture technique. Three groups - under normal conditions, after exposition with rotenone, and after exposition with sodium acid - were compared. First, we used several summary statistics in order to study the two-dimensional point patterns of intramembranous particles within each group.

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Microscopic methods (light and electron microscopy, histochemistry, immunohistochemistry) have been used to assess previously unknown pulmonary inflammatory responses of specific pathogen-free (SPF) mice secondary to infection via the nares by group A, type 50, streptococci suspended in saline ("strep group mice"). As controls for the strep group mice, the animals were either injected with saline alone via nares (no lesions were seen), or with Staphylococcus aureus in saline ("staph group mice") or with E. coli ("E.

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In this study we present 2 postmenopausal women who showed clinical symptoms that resembled those of a rather well-defined group of vascular dementia disorders, termed subcortical dementia (Binswanger disease, CADASIL). Patient 1 exhibited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variants in the ND5 gene at position 13,708 and the Cytb gene at position 15,257. These DNA variants have been described in a number of neurologic disorders, but their pathogenetic potential is unclear.

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300 patients suffering from neurodegenerative diseases distinct from Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) were screened for the presence of mitochondrial DNA mutations. We report on nine patients, eight female and one male, who all harboured mutations at positions 13,708 and 15,257 of the mitochondrial DNA. Both mutations have previously been claimed to be associated with LHON.

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This article deals with the characterization of biological tissues and their pathological alterations. For this purpose, diffusion is measured by NMR in the fringe field of a large superconductor with a field gradient of 50 T/m, which is rather homogenous and stable. It is due to the unprecedented properties of the gradient that we are able not only to determine the usual diffusion coefficient, but also to observe the pronounced Non-Debye feature of the relaxation function due to cellular structure.

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We report the case of a 57-year-old woman suffering from xanthogranulomatous bursitis, necrotizing myopathy, and poikiloderma atrophicans vasculare, which are associated with marked accumulation of neutral-lipid storage phagocytes. The observed lipid storage was restricted to activated phagocytes independent of the presence of tissue necrosis and was not seen either in circulating blood leukocytes or in muscle fibers. The patient's daughter disclosed xanthomatous inflammatory reaction with profound delay of wound healing secondary to pelviscopy.

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We report the effect of pulmonary passage on random migration and chemokinesis of neutrophils through capillarylike pores under the in vitro condition of Boyden's test. Neutrophils were isolated either from the left ventricle or from the pulmonary artery of patients who underwent coronary angiography due to suspected angina pectoris or valvular heart disease. In all 14 cases left ventricle neutrophils showed significantly enhanced chemotactic-activated migration compared with pulmonary artery neutrophils.

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Amplification of the mip sequence with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) proved to be specific for Legionella pneumophila. With nested PCR, the sensitivity of the test was markedly increased. The lower limit of detection for nested PCR in the aqueous medium for live and heat-inactivated dead L.

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The effect of in situ autolysis on cerebral mitochondrial structure and function has been investigated. Mice (n = 9) were sacrificed and stored for up to 24 h under unfavorable post-mortem conditions at 25 degrees C. At different time intervals groups of three animals were submitted to post-mortem dissection and tissue from different regions of the brain was used for the preparation of "free" and synaptosomal mitochondria.

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HeLa cells, cultured over a long period in a medium containing low doses of ethidiumbromide, were used as a model system for flow-cytometric detection of human cells with impaired mitochondrial respiratory function. Based on laserscan and flowcytometric analysis after rhodamine 123 staining, the mitochondrial membrane potential of respiratory deficient cells seems unchanged as compared to control cells. Maintenance of this membrane potential in respiration-impaired cells requires glycolytic ATP generation, as transient inhibition of glycolysis by sodium fluoride affects rhodamine 123 accumulation in ethidiumbromide-treated cells, but not in control cells.

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Fluconazole is a triazole compound with a coefficient of distribution P at pH 7.4 of 1.6 (log P = 0.

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We report a functional and molecular analysis of nine oncocytic tumors of the human thyroid. In all the abundance of mitochondria observed ultrastructurally was accompanied by an increase in enzymatic activities of respiratory complexes 1 (NADH dehydrogenase), 11 (succinate dehydrogenase) IV (cytochrome c oxidase), and V (ATPase). Western blot analysis failed to detect uncoupling protein in the tumors.

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The cationic lipophilic dye Rhodamine 123 (Rh123) is selectively enriched in mitochondria in a membrane potential-dependent manner. Application of drugs which interfere with the electron flow of the respiratory chain lead to a severe reduction of mitochondrial dye uptake. In this communication we show that the same effect is observed after Rh123-staining of respiratory-deficient yeast mutants.

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3H-labelled fluconazole (CAS 86386-73-4) very rapidly penetrated into polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNLs) and macrophages (monocytes) isolated from volunteers. The concentration of the antimycotic in the PMNLs was about 28% and in the macrophages even 63% above that in the extracellular medium. At the concentrations examined (5, 10 and 20 micrograms/ml) fluconazole damaged cells of Candida albicans which had been phagocytized by PMNLs or macrophages.

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A combined analysis using digital image processing and quantitative evaluation of computed radial distribution of freeze fracture P face particles irradiated and nonirradiated has been carried out. Important quantitative features of the arrangement of particles can be described by computing a statistical measure, the radial distribution function g(r), commonly used to study the structure of liquids. The coordinates for calculating g(r) for each sample were measured automatically by a digital image processing system.

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14C-labeled azithromycin, a new macrolide antibiotic, was accumulated by various phagocytic cells isolated from volunteers or patients. The concentration of the antibiotic in monocytes, polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNLs), and alveolar macrophages was greater than that in the surrounding medium by a factor of between 200 and 668. Azithromycin penetrated somewhat more rapidly into PMNLs and monocytes than into alveolar macrophages.

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[14C]-labeled josamycin (Wilprafen) readily enters several types of human phagocytic cells-polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNLs), adherent monocytes and alveolar macrophages - and is accumulated by these cells to a concentration about 20 times that in the extracellular medium. Similar studies using [14C]-benzyl penicillin revealed that the beta-lactam antibiotic penetrated these cells very poorly. Low concentrations of josamycin and the various phagocytes acted synergistically to inhibit the intracellular proliferation of L.

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The homeostasis of cholesterol was studied in lymphocytes freshly isolated from the blood and cultured with or without low-density lipoprotein (LDL). The content of cholesterol decreased in the lymphocytes cultured without LDL, whereas LDL substituted for cellular cholesterol losses, in spite of almost suppressed LDL-receptor and lymphocyte cholesterol synthesis. Free cholesterol was taken up from LDL mainly via cholesterol exchange and, in contrast to esterified cellular cholesterol, rapidly excreted into the medium.

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Different strains of Bacteroides fragilis exhibit great differences in sensitivity towards serum from healthy volunteers. In the presence of 10% autologous serum, neutrophilic granulocytes and monocytes (macrophages) caused significant killing of B. fragilis.

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Surgical specimens from 58 invasive carcinomas of the papilla of Vater were studied histomorphologically. Tubular or villous adenomas, adenomatous residues, and microadenomas were found in the vicinity of the carcinomas in 91.4 per cent of the cases; moderate or severe epithelial dysplasia in adenomatous structures or in surface and ductal epithelium was present in 81 per cent of the cases.

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