Publications by authors named "Matthew Glyn"

The co-administration of absorption enhancing agents with macromolecular drugs (e.g., protein and peptide drugs) has been identified as a means to improve the oral bioavailability of these drugs.

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Background: Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a fundamental role in angiogenesis, and in turn, angiogenic growth factors also affect ROS. Angiogenesis and ROS are intricately involved in vascular deterioration. Since black populations are known to have elevated oxidative stress and hypertension, we determined whether relationships exist between angiogenic growth factors and serum peroxides in Africans and Caucasians and evaluated the relationships with cardiovascular measurements.

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Hypertension (HT) and the metabolic syndrome are major problems in Africa. The role of sex hormones in the cardiovascular profile of black Africans in South Africa has not been studied. Our objective was to study the association between the sex hormones and ambulatory blood pressure and the heart rate (HR) in black and white South Africans.

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Aim: Serum γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT) is increasingly regarded as a marker of vascular function. However, the usefulness of this marker is in dispute. Gender and ethnic differences, as well as the serum level range where correlations with vascular function will emerge, may complicate the usefulness of GGT.

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Recent evidence suggests that low-grade urinary albumin excretion is a marker of early general attenuation of vascular function, but studies are limited to Caucasian population groups. We compared low-grade urinary albumin excretion (<3.5 mg mmol(-1) or 30 μg mg(-1)) between non-diabetic African (aged, 41.

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Background: The Omron HEM-9000AI is the first automated tonometer to provide an estimate of central SBP (cSBP), which is considered to be more predictive of cardiovascular events than brachial pressure. However, considerable differences between the cSBP estimate of Omron and that of SphygmoCor have been reported, but not explained. This study assesses the sources of differences between both cSBP estimates and provides a handle on which estimate is closest to reality.

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Objective: We previously showed that ischemia, induced by interrupting vascular flow, reduced cardiac capillary caliber. This was accomplished by a reduction in endothelial cell dimensions which was sensitive to Rho kinase (ROK) inhibition and stabilization of the actin cytoskeleton. Here, we investigated whether similar changes in endothelial cells, in situ, could be elicited in the presence of flow through the capillary bed.

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During inflammation, leukocytes bind to the adhesion receptors ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 on the endothelial surface before undergoing transendothelial migration, also called diapedesis. ICAM-1 is also involved in transendothelial migration, independently of its role in adhesion, but the molecular basis of this function is poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that, following clustering, apical ICAM-1 translocated to caveolin-rich membrane domains close to the ends of actin stress fibres.

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Objective: We have previously demonstrated that ischaemia and reperfusion of the myocardium alter capillary dimensions and endothelial cell shape and that these changes are likely to be effected by the actomyosin contractile system in endothelial cells. Rho GTPases are involved in the regulation of cytoskeletal re-organization and in cell contraction. Rho-associated kinase regulates the sensitivity of myosin light chain to Ca(2+) in smooth muscle but not in cardiac or skeletal muscle myocytes.

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Reperfusion of the ischemic myocardium results in structural changes in the capillary bed, which may contribute to decreased microcirculatory flow ("no reflow"). This study was designed to correlate the endothelial cell shape changes with both oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation and to evaluate the beneficial potential of Trolox (a hydrophilic analogue of alpha-tocopherol) and ascorbic acid. Isolated buffer-perfused rat hearts were made ischemic for 45 min and then reperfused with 100 microM Trolox and/or 100 microM ascorbic acid.

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The recovery of any tissue following a period of ischaemia is dependent on a patent microvasculature to restore blood flow. In the ischaemic myocardium, a reduction in capillary cross-sectional dimensions occurs, which is likely to contribute to "no-reflow" injury. Clinical and experimental evidence indicates that the retina is able to tolerate moderate periods of ischaemia without significant loss of function.

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A reduction in capillary dimensions has been demonstrated in postischaemic reperfusion in the heart. The aim of this study was to demonstrate that in ischaemia and ischaemia followed by reperfusion, the change in shape of the constituent endothelial cells can be inhibited by phalloidin which stabilises the actin microfilament system. Isolated, perfused rat hearts were made globally ischaemic both with and without reperfusion and in the presence or absence of phalloidin.

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Nuclei from different cell types in plants and animals show many features of differentiation; they differ in shape, volume, structure, ultrastructure and in the distribution of nuclear components. Using the filamentous caulonema of the moss Funaria hygrometrica Hedw. this study records the changes in cytoplasmic organization alongside the reorganization of the interphase nucleus, Events taking place in the meristematic cells at or near the lip of the advancing caulonemal filaments (e.

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