Publications by authors named "Marietta R Issidorides"

Our previous histochemical and ultrastructural studies have identified, in human catecholamine neurons, abundant spherical acidophilic protein bodies (pb), which originate from regular mitochondria, retaining their double membrane. In locus coeruleus (LC) neurons, pb have somatodendritic distribution and are unequivocal storage vesicles for noradrenaline, as demonstrated by immunolocalization of Dopamine-β-Hydroxylase. In the present study, in order to reinforce the identity of pb as monoamine storage sites in human LC, and to assess their potential of somatodendritic release, we studied the subcellular immunolocalization of chromogranin A (CgA) and vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2), given the fact that their localization defines the vesicles capacity of filling with monoamine and hence exocytotic release.

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Studies of peripheral blood leukocytes of schizophrenic patients have shown in electron microscopy (EM) that decondensation of the chromatin constitutes a biological marker indicating increased genomic expression. Since this increase depends on chromatin relaxation by dissociation of lysine-rich histone H1 from nucleosomes, with exposure of arginine residues of core histones, the ratio of arginine to lysine residues in each nucleus represents a reliable measure of activation. Lysine- and arginine-rich proteins are demonstrable in light microscopy (LM), differentially, as yellow and black, respectively, with the ammoniacal silver reaction (ASR).

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This study investigated the ultrastructural conformation changes of the chromatin in blood leukocytes of bipolar patients, versus normal controls, by using the phosphotungstic acid-hematoxylin (PTAH) block-staining method, modified for electron microscopy, and the immunohistochemical localization of the histone H1, by the immunogold method. These two methods are basically complementary. If histone H1 immunolabeling is used, it shows that the immunogold labeling on chromatin is different in the three phases of the illness, i.

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Our histochemical and ultrastructural studies have identified, in human catecholamine locus coeruleus (LC) neurons, abundant and large spherical protein bodies (PB), containing histone-like, arginine-rich proteins, which originate as dense bodies in mitochondria. This species-specific phenotype in the neurons of man is highly intriguing. In the electron microscope PB are disrupted in LC neurons in depressed individuals, where noradrenaline is known to be reduced.

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In a previous communication, based on the total histone and histone variants' synthesis rates, biochemical parameters used for the characterization of the activation state of lymphocytes, we showed that a portion of the lymphocyte population obtained from peripheral blood of patients with bipolar disorder in the manic and/or depressed phases of the illness were in an activated state as opposed to normothymic patients and control subjects whose lymphocytes are in a resting, Go, state. In light of these previous findings, in the present investigation, we have analyzed total histone synthesis rates and the H2A and H3 histone variants' synthesis pattern of acid-extracted histones from the lymphocytes' nuclear fraction obtained from control subjects, patients with bipolar disorder in all phases of the illness, and patients with schizophrenia. Additional biochemical parameters, such as total cellular protein and DNA synthesis rates, were also studied.

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