Spine (Phila Pa 1976)
December 2001
Study Design: The ingrowth of nerves, blood vessels, and Schwann cells into human intervertebral discs was examined using immunohistochemistry for cell-type-specific markers.
Objectives: To determine whether Schwann cells may contribute to disc innervation, and to assess the relation between disc innervation and vascularization.
Summary Of Background Data: Intervertebral disc degeneration was associated previously with ingrowth of blood vessels and nerves.
Radioactive iodine (131I) plays a major role in the diagnosis and management of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC); however, data on the use of the 123I isotope in DTC are limited. We compared 238 diagnostic whole body scans performed 24 h after oral ingestion of 185-555 MBq 123I with their corresponding 131I posttherapy whole body scans obtained 4-5 d after 131I therapy. We studied scans in 3 clinical situations: with the first 131I therapy, with the second 131I therapy, and in cases of elevated Tg and negative diagnostic scan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLong-term in vivo studies have highlighted smoking as a risk factor in postmenopausal osteoporosis, bone fracture incidence, and increased nonunion rates. In contrast, there are few data postulating the effects of smoking at the cellular level in human skeletal tissue. In this study, we present novel evidence demonstrating that the nicotinic receptor alpha4 subunit is present in human primary bone cells by using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
March 2001
Voltage operated calcium channels (VOCCs) are important in stimulus-response coupling in osteoblasts. We have investigated the expression of VOCCs in the mouse osteocyte cell line, MLO-Y4. Using the whole-cell patch clamp technique we were unable to detect any VOCC currents (n = 436) even in the presence of the L-type VOCC agonist Bay K 8644 (n = 350).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
March 2001
Temperature influences the specific dynamic action (SDA), or rise in oxygen uptake rate after feeding, in eurythermal and stenothermal crustaceans by changing the timing and the magnitude of the response. Intra-specific studies on the eurythermal crab, Carcinus maenas, show that a reduction in acclimation temperature is associated with a decrease in SDA magnitude, resulting from an increase in SDA duration but a decrease in peak factorial scope (the factorial rise in peak SDA over prefeeding values). Inter-specific feeding studies on stenothermal polar isopods revealed marked differences in SDA response between the Antarctic species, Glyptonotus antarcticus and the Arctic species, Saduria entomon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOsteocytes play an important role in signaling within bone. Communication of osteocytes with each other and with bone lining cells may have a function in mineral homeostasis and mechanotransduction. However, very little is known of the expression of ion channels in these cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe regulatory pathways involved in the rapid response of the AP-1 transcription factor, c-fos, to mechanical load in human primary osteoblast-like (HOB) cells and the human MG-63 bone cell line were investigated using a four-point bending model. HOB and MG-63 cells showed upregulation of c-fos expression on fibronectin and collagen type I substrates; however, MG-63 cells did not respond on laminin YIGSR substrates. Addition of cytochalasin D and Arg-Gly-Asp peptides during loading did not inhibit the response, whereas addition of beta(1)-integrin antibodies inhibited the load response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemur-derived osteoblasts cultured from rat femora were loaded with Fluo-3 using the AM ester. A quantifiable stretch was applied and [Ca(2+)]i levels monitored by analysis of fluorescent images obtained using an inverted microscope and laser scanning confocal imaging system. Application of a single pulse of tensile strain via an expandable membrane resulted in immediate increase in [Ca(2+)]i in a proportion of the cells, followed by a slow and steady decrease to prestimulation levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of hormonal modulators of osteoblast function, parathyroid hormone, 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) and prostaglandins on [Ca(2+)](i) in periosteal-derived osteoblasts from rat femurs have been investigated. Our results show that application of parathyroid hormone PTH (10(-5) M) and prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) (4 microM) result in a rapid heterogeneous elevation in [Ca(2+)](i) that, in the case of PTH, is dependent on both extracellular and intracellular sources of calcium. Variable responses to treatments have been found within populations of cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVoltage operated calcium channels (VOCCs) are implicated in osteoblastic mechano- and hormonal transduction. Very little, however, is known about the expression of VOCCs in osteoblasts of load-bearing bones. Here we describe two types of whole-cell calcium current in rat femoral explant-derived osteoblasts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe single beam optical gradient trap (optical tweezers) uses a single beam of laser light to non-invasively manipulate microscopic particles. Optical tweezers exerting a force of approximately 7 pN were applied to single bone and cartilage derived cells in culture and changes in intracellular calcium levels were observed using Fluo-3 labelling. Human derived osteoblasts responded to optical tweezers with an immediate increase in [Ca2+]i that was inhibited by the addition of a calcium channel blocker nifedipine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChanges in strain distribution across the vertebrate skeleton induce modelling and remodelling of bone structure. This relationship, like many in biomedical science, has been recognised since the 1800s, but it is only the recent development of in vivo and in vitro models that is allowing detailed investigation of the cellular mechanisms involved. A number of secondary messenger pathways have been implicated in load transduction by bone cells, and many of these pathways are similar to those proposed for other load-responsive cell types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of the locomotory muscles and associated skeletal structures of goslings and adults from a captive population of barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) was compared with that from a wild migratory population. There was no significant difference between flight-muscle development of wild and captive goslings up to 7 wk of age, when the birds are first able to fly. In contrast, mass-specific citrate-synthase activity in the semimembranosus leg muscle of the captive goslings was significantly lower than that of wild goslings by 5 wk of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of ecdysteroids in modulating exoskeletal growth during the moult cycle of Crustacea has been well described. However, little is known about the action of ecdysteroids at the level of gene transcription and regulation in Crustacea. This paper reports the cloning of an ecdysteroid responsive gene, HHR3, a potential Manduca sexta MHR3 homologue in the American lobster, Homarus americanus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo examine the presence of metabolic cold adaptation in Antarctic isopods, whole animal rates of oxygen uptake (MVo2) and protein synthesis were measured in Glyptonotus antarcticus at 0 degree C and compared with the temperature isopod Idotea rescata at 4 and 14 degrees C. The specific relationship between rates of metabolism and protein synthesis was investigated by injecting animals with cycloheximide, a protein synthesis inhibitor. In G.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe expression of voltage-operated Ca2+ currents (VOCCs) in bone marrow stromal cells cultured for 3-30 days has been studied by the use of the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. Both low-voltage-activated (LVA) and high-voltage-activated (HVA) VOCCs were recorded. LVA currents were first detectable after 6-7 days in culture and reached a peak of expression at 8 days, after which both the amplitude and frequency of expression of the current fell rapidly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanical load-related effects on bone marrow stromal cells in vitro have been investigated. A dose response of a cyclical load of 1 Hz between 350 ustrain and 2500 ustrain applied to 10-day-old cultures resulted in elevated alkaline phosphatase levels and the number of cells expressing this protein after 2 days. No significant changes in the number of cells expressing or the production of collagen type 1 was observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSimultaneous measurements of in vivo rates of protein synthesis (Ks) in claw, leg and abdominal muscles were made in the American lobster Homarus americanus at three stages of the moult cycle. Ks values are significantly elevated during the premoult (stage D2-D3) and fall during the intermoult (stage C4) periods in all three muscles. Postmoult (stage A/B) levels are not significantly elevated above intermoult levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF1. The whole-cell patch-clamp technique was used to study Ca2+ channel currents in stromal cells of 7-10 day dexamethasone-treated and control rat bone marrow cultures. In saline containing either 108 mM Ba2+ or a 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreflight development of the goslings was typified by rapid increases in the mitochondrial enzymes of the semimembranosus and heart ventricular muscles resulting in near-adult values by 3 wk of age. In contrast, aerobic capacity of the pectoralis muscle initially developed slowly but showed a rapid increase between 5 and 7 wk of age, in preparation for becoming airborne. Activities of glycolytic enzymes in the pectoralis muscle showed similar patterns of development as those found for the aerobic enzymes, except for hexokinase, which was low at all ages, indicating an adaptation for catabolism of both intracellular glycogen and plasma fatty acids in preference to plasma glucose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA simple culture procedure and assay conditions are described which have permitted us to quantify the synthesis of proteins which are associated with an osteoblastic phenotype, by rat calvarial periosteal cells grown on particulate materials. The main feature of the method is the use of an adhesive which does not permit cells to attach to itself but allows attachment and growth of cells on material particles embedded in it on glass coverslips. Cells were cultured for 27 d on hydroxyapatite particle-coated coverslips.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Mar Biol Biotechnol
February 1994
An actin cDNA clone from the European lobster, Homarus gamarus, has been generated by RT-PCR and used as a probe to quantify the relative abundance of actin mRNA in lobster leg muscles following imposition of passive stretch by leg flexion. The sarcomere lengths of a population of fibers in the same muscles were measured to provide an indirect marker of myofibrillar growth. Stretch resulted in a 70% increase in actin mRNA levels compared with unstretched controls animals between weeks 1 and 2 after flexion of the legs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe production of biochemical markers associated with the osteoblastic phenotype, and accompanying changes in the expression of voltage-operated Ca2+ channels, have been examined in rat bone marrow stromal cell cultures treated with dexamethasone (10(-8) M). Whole cell clamp analysis of voltage-operated Ca2+ channels in control cultures (using Ba2+ as the charge carrier) revealed primarily a high voltage-activated (HVA), slowly inactivating current, which was enhanced two- to threefold by treatment of the cells with Bay K 8644 (300 nM) and inhibited by nifedipine (4 microM). In dexamethasone-treated cultures, the I-V relationship for inward current was shifted to more positive potentials in comparison with control cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Miner Res
December 1992
Periosteal cells grown in macroporous microcarrier bead columns were cyclically loaded with compressive force using a newly developed model. In response to 1/2 h of cyclic compression, RNA synthesis increased significantly by twofold, from 113.4 +/- 19.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSymp Soc Exp Biol
December 1993
Muscle growth in Crustacea may occur during specific stages of the moult cycle, focused around ecdysis when the old cuticle is shed and the new cuticle expands. In order to determine the moult stages in which sarcomeric proteins are synthesized and the regulatory factors involved, actin mRNA levels have been measured in the muscles of two crustaceans. These levels have been followed throughout the moult cycle and in response to passive stretch of walking leg muscle in vivo and to exogenous ecydsteroids applied to muscle preparations in vitro.
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