Publications by authors named "Holeckova E"

Phagocytosis of native allogenic red blood cells was observed in cultures of skin fibroblasts obtained from patients with neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis, Niemann-Pick disease type C and morbus Fabry. Occasional phagocytizing cells were observed in 9 other syndromes. Cells from three normal donors did not phagocytize.

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Complexes of triiodothyronine-bovine serum albumin-colloidal gold were specifically internalized in human peripheral leukocytes after 5 min of incubation. The specificity was partially lost after a longer incubation.

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Ultrastructural autoradiography showed high specific binding of (125I) triiodothyronine, as confirmed by a competition test, to plasma membranes, nuclei and mitochondria of human peripheral leukocytes. A high level of binding was also noted on the granulocytes' granules, especially in eosinophils.

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Two L cell sublines (L-As and LC3), differing in the ability to induce sarcomas in irradiated C3H mice, were grown on special gold electrodes interrupted in the middle by a 50 micron wide slot. Electrical impedance of the two sublines was compared at 100 kHz in a special measuring device connected with an apparatus used for impedance measurement in clinics. Significantly lower values of impedance characterized the LC3 cells, which induced more sarcomas in susceptibility hosts than the L-As cells.

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Branching and budding myotube-like structures developed in primary cultures of rat liver cells and in the JH1 cell line derived from them. Elongated uninuclear cells aligned in chains and fused into multinuclear tubes of varying length and thickness. The tubes contained thick and thin filaments running in all directions.

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Normal human thyroid cells and cells from patients with Grave's disease were cultured for 5 months (11 passages) in vitro. Both normal and diseased thyreocytes, similar in morphology, proliferated actively and responded to thyrotropin stimulation by cytoplasmic arborization of a part of the population. Slight inhibition of mitotic activity was present under the influence of thyrotropin.

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Serum from rats exposed for 3 days to 5 degrees C stimulated the multiplication of mouse heteroploid and human and rat diploid cells in culture. The response of the cells to this unspecific growth stimulation was related to the growth capacities of the different cell types.

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A cold-resistant (cr) variant of mouse L fibroblasts called LC3, isolated by repeated cooling of the parent population for several weeks at 4 degrees C, differed from the wild-type cells in morphology and function. Microcinematographic records demonstrate that their motility is markedly reduced when compared with that of the L cells. They enter mitosis at 30 degrees C, at 37 degrees C and at 39 degrees C, but they finish cytodieresis only at 30 degrees C.

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Adaptation of a cultured mouse L cell population to 4 degrees C increased the survival of the cells and induced the uptake of potassium from the medium at this temperature.

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LC3 cells, selected from the L-As cells by repeated exposures to 4 degrees C for 3--6 weeks with intermittent reincubations at 36 degrees C, differ from the initial population by better survival at 4 degrees C, more rapid recovery at 36 degrees C, a higher multiplication at subnormal temperature, a higher sensitivity to supranormal temperature, increased cell size at 36 degrees and 4 degrees C, and higher oxygen consumption at 36 degrees C. These properties are the same as those described in our previously isolated cold-resistant L cell variants and are typical for the resistance to low temperature. The increased activity of alkaline phosphatase, detected in two of our cold-resistant L cell sublines, was not found in the LC3 cells and has thus no relation to decreased cold sensitivity.

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L cells (L-As subline) have been adapted to a temperature of 4 degrees C. In the cold-adapted cells, designated LC3, greater amounts of infectious herpes simplex virus types 1 (HSV-1) and 2 (HSV-2) were synthesized than in the original L-As cells or in another control L-cell line. Two strains of HSV-1 reached higher infectious titres in LC3 cells grown at 36 degrees C than in those grown at 32 degrees C.

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In adult rats acclimated to 5 degrees C, the kidney weight increases with the length of the exposure. Kidney cells of younger rats survive explantation better than the cells of control rats of the same age. Kidney cells of older rats after cold acclimation and after unilateral nephrectomy have a lower vitality in vitro than corresponding control cells.

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The activities of acid and alkaline phosphatase were measured. The activity of acid phosphatase increased during the whole onto- genesis of both Drosophila strains studied--the short-lived vestigial and the long-lived white. This increase was more marked in the more rapidly ageing vestigial flies.

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Exposure of adult Wistar female rats for 7 days to 4 degrees C leads to a marked increase in the weight of the liver and kidney, caused by an increased content of DNA and an increased number of cells in these organs. The weight as well as the DNA content of the cross-striated muscle do not change appreciably. Acclimation of the warmblooded rat to cold stimulates mitosis indirectly in cells capable of division, similarly as it stimulates directly the mitotic activity in mouse and human cells cultured and adapted to cold in vitro.

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