Publications by authors named "Michl J"

The influence of insulin on transport and utilization of amino acids and glucose in purified human peripheral blood monocytes has been studied. Insulin had an immediate stimulating effect on the uptake of 3-O-methylglucose and 2-deoxyglucose; the maximal effects were 55% and 47% increases, respectively, during the first 2 min, in which energy-dependent hexose uptake dominates. Later, with advancing free diffusion, values declined to 16% and 25%.

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We have examined the Fc- and complement-receptor function of resident and thioglycollate-elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages plated on surfaces coated with rabbit antibody-antigen complexes and with complement. We derive four major conclusions from these studies. (a) The trypsin-resistant Fc receptors of resident and thioglycollate-elicited macrophages are completely modulated when these cells are plated on rabbit antibody-antigen complexes.

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GPAG stimulates the uptake of exogenous 3H-DNA by L cells and facilitates its retention in host cell nuclei during 48-h postcultivation; the nuclei contain 1.5 times more radioactivity than GPAG-free controls. Owing to the well-known properties of GPAG, the formation of the 3H-DNA-GPAG complex may affect the incorporation of exogenous 3-H-DNA and its intracellular transport and retention in the host cell nuclei.

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Isologous and heterologous 3H-DNA (optimum concentration 25 microgram/ml of medium) are incorporated into L-cells from the medium during short-term incubation (up to 60 min). The incorporation of DNA is stimulated by a protein complex from calf serum--the growth-promoting alpha-globulin (GPAG) in the concentration 0.8 mg/ml of medium), which is rapidly taken into cells by pinocytosis.

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Proliferative capacity of metazoan cells in culture may be defined quantitatively by using GPAG-supplemented medium. For this purpose an expression called proliferative capacity constant (KPC) was introduced. KPC represents the logarithm of GPAG concentration over which the mitotic activity of cells is induced.

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Incubation of normal or thioglycollate-elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages with 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-dG) inhibits the capacity of these macrophages to phagocytize IgG- or complement-coated particles via their Fc and C3 receptors. 2-dG has no inhibitory effect on the capacity of these macrophages to phagocytize latex or zymosan particles, which are ingested in the absence of specific opsonins, and it does not inhibit binding of IgG- or C3-coated particles to their respective receptors on the macrophage's plasma membrane. 2-dG exerts its inhibitory effect on the macrophage and not on the opsonized particle.

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Macrophages incubated in 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-dG)-containing medium showed a marked decrease in cellular ATP content, and were unable to ingest IgG- and complement-coated erythrocytes via the corresponding membrane receptors for these ligands. However, the inhibitory effects of 2-dG on Fc- and C3 receptor-mediated phagocytosis were not a consequence of lowered macrophage ATP levels since addition of glucose or mannose to the culture medium restored the capacity of the macrophages to ingest IgG- and C3-coated particles without increasing ATP levels. These results indicate that Fc- and C3 receptor-mediated phagocytosis (opsonin dependent) differs qualitatively from the ingestion of latex and zymosan particles (opsonin independent); they suggest that the same regulatory molecules govern the responses of phagocytic cells to signals initiated by both the Fc and C3 receptors.

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For the biosynthesis of macromolecules in amounts sufficient for indefinite growth or survival in dividing as well as in nondividing metazoan cells, a specific serum protein is required. As the addition of this factor to the medium triggers off a chain of events which leads to RNA, DNA, and protein synthesis, we have called it the pleiotropin. Pleiotropin is taken into the cells by pinocytosis.

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A method is described which allows a quality control for demonstrating mycobacteria in the diangosis of tuberculosis. It does not test the differentiating procedures, but the manner of culturing and concentrating the bacteria by applying a statistical evaluation of serial experiments, thus allowing the statistically proven determination of the bacterial count. For this an evaluation method given by Cavalli-Storza was employed.

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