3D imaging in animal models, during development or in adults, facilitates the identification of structural morphological changes that cannot be achieved with traditional 2D histological staining. Through the reconstruction of whole embryos or a region-of-interest, specific changes are better delimited and can be easily quantified. We focused here on high-resolution episcopic microscopy (HREM), and its potential for visualizing and quantifying the organ systems of normal and genetically altered embryos and adult organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Eukaryotes, DNA is wound around the histone octamer forming the basic chromatin unit, the nucleosome. Atomic structures have been obtained from crystallography and single particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) of identical engineered particles. But native nucleosomes are dynamical entities with diverse DNA sequence and histone content, and little is known about their conformational variability, especially in the cellular context.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany areas of biological research demand the combined use of different imaging modalities to cover a wide range of magnifications and measurements or to place fluorescent patterns into an ultrastructural context. A technically difficult problem is the efficient specimen transfer between different imaging modalities without losing the coordinates of the regions-of-interest (ROI). Here, we report a new and highly sensitive integrated system that combines a custom designed microscope with an ultramicrotome for in-resin-fluorescence detection in blocks, ribbons and sections on EM-grids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing cryoelectron microscopy of vitreous sections, we investigated in situ the ultrastructure of biological membranes, selected from several cell types for their diverse biological functions. Here we describe how to visualize the two membrane leaflets and tightly apposed membranes, lying as close as 1.1 nm apart, by tuning the imaging conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty-seven patients with chronic granulocytic leukemia have been treated with supralethal chemoradiotherapy followed by transplantation of bone marrow from HLA-identical donors. All patients showed engraftment, and the Philadelphia chromosome (PH1) disappeared in each case. Four patients had syngeneic grafts before blast crisis and are still alive; 2 are in remission not maintained by therapy, and 2 others are receiving chemotherapy after having relapsed in the chronic phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred seventy-eight previously untreated children with biopsy-proven Hodgkin's disease of clinical Stages I and II were treated and followed between 1965 and 1978. Staging laparotomy was performed in 30 patients. Ninety-four percent of the patients obtained a complete remission; 24 patients have died.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Med Interne (Paris)
September 1980
A total of 1200 children were treated for leukemia between 1958 and 1971, and 100 of these cases have had an uninterrupted remission for more than seven years: 10 children who relapsed at an early stage have had no further relapses; 93 are alive and in remission after discontinuation of treatment for between 1 and 12 years. Five of the children relapsed and four of these are in remission again. Two children died, one from a hepatocarcinoma and the other after cardiac failure of late onset.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmongst 1,200 leukemie children treated between 1958 and 1971, 60 are in complete remission for more than 10 years and 100 for more than 7 years. There were 96 acute lymphoid and 4 acute myeloid leukemias. Ten patients who have relapsed in the past have not done so lately.
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