Publications by authors named "Hancock W"

Activation of mononuclear phagocytes causes changes in plasma membrane composition that include the expression of surface antigens and receptors. Monoclonal antibody technology has made it possible to identify and characterize newly expressed surface antigens. Among these "activation antigens" is a glycoprotein, Mo3, which (among hematopoietic cells) is selectively expressed by human mononuclear phagocytes that have been exposed to inflammatory factors in vitro and in vivo.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Escherichia coli cells transformed with plasmids engineered for the expression of recombinant human growth hormone as a secreted product also produced a proteolytically cleaved form of rhGH. This variant is isolated at a high resolution anion exchange chromatography stage during the manufacturing process. The higher isoelectric point of this form is demonstrated by isoelectric focusing and chromatofocusing and the two-chain nature by tryptic mapping, N- and C-terminal sequence analyses, and sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ART-18, a mouse IgG1 mAb recognizing the IL-2 binding domain of the rat p55 subunit IL-2R molecule, prevents graft rejection in various experimental models, although its mechanism of action in vivo, like that of anti-IL-2R mAb generally, remains elusive. These studies were designed to define whether IL-2R+ T effector cells were actually eliminated or their function merely inhibited by comparing directly the in vitro and in vivo efficacy of intact ART-18 and its F(ab)/F(ab')2 fragments. Addition of each mAb preparation profoundly suppressed MLR set up between naive LEW responders and x-radiated BN stimulators, suggesting that mAb fragments retained Ag binding functions in vitro.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Production of proteins by recombinant DNA technology for use as pharmaceuticals requires the use of the most powerful tools of analytical protein chemistry in order to confirm purity and identity of the product and reliability of the process. Capillary electrophoresis is an emerging technology that shows high sensitivity and selectivity and may have promise in this application. The technique combines the instrumental control and quantification features of high-performance liquid chromatography with the separating power of electrophoresis, and thereby has attracted broad interest.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ultrastructural pathology of cats suffering from familial lipoprotein lipase deficiency is described. There were large numbers of lipid vacuoles within hepatocytes, epithelial cells of the proximal convoluted tubule of kidney and macrophages of the liver, spleen and lymph node. The older cats tended to have larger quantities of ceroid within hepatocytes and macrophages, and all stages of development of ceroid were observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In vitro aging at pH 7.4, 37 degrees C causes natural sequence recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH), methionyl rhGH, and human pituitary growth hormone to become substrates for bovine brain protein carboxyl methyltransferase, an enzyme that modifies the "side chain" alpha-carboxyl group present at atypical isoaspartyl linkages. The substrate capacity of rhGH increased at a rate of 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Studies in large animals are needed to overcome technical complications, allograft rejection, and graft-vs-host disease, which are major problems that prevent clinical application of small-bowel transplantation. The small bowel was allografted heterotopically or orthotopically into 30 pigs with the use of cyclosporine, prednisone, and azathioprine. When cyclosporine was given orally to heterotopically transplantation recipients, rejection was frequent, and graft-vs-host disease caused one death.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two high-resolution tryptic maps have been developed for recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) that separate the expected 51 tryptic peptides. The trypsin digestion was performed after reduction and S-carboxymethylation of the protein. The high-performance liquid chromatographic separation of the tryptic peptides used a Nova-Pak C18 (5 microns) column with a mobile phase that contained 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A computer-aided methodology for integrating the budgeting, staffing, and labor productivity systems of Ancillary Services using Respiratory Therapy as an example is presented. The data needed, staffing computations and schedules, and productivity analysis are presented and discussed. A summary of the predicted savings and other benefits for the application hospital are presented with comparisons to present productivity systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have identified the presence of anti-idiotypic activity against IgMRF in the sera of RA patients. Only patients seropositive for IgMRF had significant levels of anti-idiotypic activity, while seronegative patients and normal volunteers did not. When this anti-idiotypic activity was affinity-purified from a single RA patient, two separate binding activities were identified.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We describe the elaboration by endothelial cells of activity that stimulates fibroblast PGE2 production. Culture supernates of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (ECSN) at concentrations of 2.5 to 25% stimulated human foreskin fibroblast PGE2 production 6 to 180-fold.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A methodology to determine and maintain the schedule times used in a computer-based OR Scheduling System is presented. State-of-the-art equations to be used for different scheduling situations are presented and discussed with the attendant data base reduction methodology to provide the scheduling parameters. An example is given of the data reduction methodology as well as suggestions for maintenance of the data base.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have shown that the requirements for the production of IL-4 and IL-5 by normal L3T4+T cells from murine spleen are very different from those for the production of IL-2. Secretion of detectable quantities of IL-4 and IL-5 and induction of the mRNA for each lymphokine occurs in vitro only after cells are primed and re-stimulated. This priming can be achieved by mitogens (Con A), by antibodies to the TCR (anti-T3) or by stimulation with alloantigen.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Basement membrane immunostaining was performed on pepsin-digested, paraffin-embedded blocks of 29 squamous cell carcinomas of the cervix (invasive and in situ) and 13 of the vulva, using polyclonal rabbit antibodies to human laminin and type IV collagen, both staining identically. Laminin with varying defectiveness surrounded invasive foci, whereas adjacent carcinoma in situ or normal epithelium had intact laminin. The amount of laminin usually reflected the degree of tumor differentiation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent studies have shown that normal human alveolar macrophages and blood monocytes, as well as HL-60 and U937 monocyte cell lines, newly express IL-2R after stimulation with rIFN-gamma or LPS. In addition, macrophages transiently express IL-2R in vivo during immunologically mediated diseases such as pulmonary sarcoidosis and allograft rejection. We therefore investigated in vitro factors that modulate macrophage expression of IL-2R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although not reviewed during this session of the Workshop, other reactions in the hemostatic pathways are relevant to tumor-host cell interactions, are potential targets for antimetastatic agents, and are therefore included in Figure 1 and Table 1. For example, elsewhere in this issue of Seminars Loskutoff reviews the recent evidence for the importance of naturally occurring plasminogen activator inhibitors in the regulation of fibrinolysis. Since tumor cells may contain both tissue plasminogen activator and a urokinase-like plasminogen activator, the balance between tumor-mediated fibrin formation and fibrinolysis becomes an important issue in assessing antimetastatic treatment protocols.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A methodology is presented with examples of the productivity, the staffing required, the resultant productivity, and costs that can be obtained for hospital units that are subject to random work demands such as laboratory, radiology, physical therapy, and nuclear medicine. The methodology assumes that the hospital has a labor productivity system that produces the RVUs or earned hours of work accomplished daily by shift. Factors considered are the distribution of the capabilities of the work force, the fatigue and delay allowances of the work standards, the quality of the work standards, the maximum amount of overtime that people will be asked to work, staffing policies such as constant or different staffing levels for each day of the week, and worker selection processes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Epidermal dendritic cells (Langerhans cells) present cutaneously derived antigens to T cells in the skin and draining lymph nodes and therefore are important in many afferent immune responses. The role of dermal dendritic cells on the other hand is more obscure, although it has been suggested that these cells are precursor forms of Langerhans cells. Although human cutaneous dendritic cells have been previously characterized by using monoclonal antibodies, there are no reports of comparable studies in the skin of rhesus monkeys.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF