Plant cells and bacterial cells are surrounded by a massive polysaccharide wall, which constrains their high internal osmotic pressure (tens of atmospheres). Animal cells, in contrast, are in osmotic equilibrium with their environment, have no restraining surround, and can take on a variety of shapes and can change these from moment to moment. This osmotic balance is achieved, in the first place, by the action of the energy-consuming sodium pump, one of the P-type ATPase transport protein family, members of which are found also in bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical data on the use of artesunate combined with mefloquine in a variety of treatment regimens and parasite loads in Thailand were modelled on the basis of experimentally determined pharmacokinetic data. The model assumed no pharmacodynamic interaction between artesunate and mefloquine, but that the parasites were already resistant to mefloquine. Predictions of the model accorded well with the data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTreatment protocols for the chemotherapy of malaria are usually acquired through clinical trials. Once pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic information becomes available, it is possible to use mathematical modelling for testing these protocols and, possibly, for improving them. In this report the case of monotherapy by mefloquine is analysed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ATP binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of membrane transporters is one of the largest protein classes known, and counts numerous proteins involved in the trafficking of biological molecules across cell membranes. The first known human ABC transporter was P-glycoprotein (P-gp), which confers multidrug resistance (MDR) to anticancer drugs. In recent years, we have obtained an increased understanding of the mechanism of action of P-gp as its ATPase activity, substrate specificity and pharmacokinetic interactions have been investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe treatment of pain in the nursing home setting continues to present several unique and challenging problems. Increasingly, studies are focusing on the large number of elderly with important pain problems in long-term care. The inclusion of pain as an area of clinical focus in the Minimum Data Set has fueled interest in this problem and will provide solid data for future study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: (I) Introducing an intraoral camera system with a special positioner to allow computer-based analysis of reproducible images on lingual tooth surfaces and (II) comparing plaque removal by three manual toothbrushes with different brushhead designs (convex, multilevel and flat trimmed) on lingual mandibular tooth surfaces.
Method: In a clinical single-blind, crossover, 24-h plaque-regrowth study on 25 subjects, a computer-based index (PPI) was used to evaluate pre- and postbrushing plaque on lingual surfaces of mandibular premolars and molars. Subjects brushed their teeth under standardized conditions at three visits, each time with a different, randomly assigned toothbrush.
The MDR1 P-glycoprotein (Pgp), responsible for a clinically important form of multidrug resistance in cancer, is an ATPase efflux pump for multiple lipophilic drugs. The G185V mutation near transmembrane domain 3 of human Pgp increases its relative ability to transport several drugs, including etoposide, but decreases the transport of other substrates. MDR1 cDNA with the G185V substitution was used in a function-based selection to identify mutations that would further increase Pgp-mediated resistance to etoposide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe multidrug transporter P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is an ATPase efflux pump for multiple cytotoxic agents, including vinblastine and colchicine. We have found that resistance to vinblastine but not to colchicine in cell lines derived from different types of tissues and expressing the wild-type human Pgp correlates with the Pgp density. Vinblastine induces a conformational change in Pgp, evidenced by increased reactivity with a conformation-sensitive monoclonal antibody UIC2, in all the tested cell lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe reactivity of the ATP-dependent multidrug transporter P-glycoprotein (Pgp) with the conformation-sensitive monoclonal antibody UIC2 is increased in the presence of Pgp transport substrates, ATP-depleting agents, or mutations that reduce the level of nucleotide binding by Pgp. We have investigated the effects of nucleotides and vinblastine, a Pgp transport substrate, on the UIC2 reactivity of Pgp in cells permeabilized by Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin. ATP, ADP, and nonhydrolyzable ATP analogues decreased the UIC2 reactivity; this effect was potentiated by vanadate, a nucleotide-trapping agent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of N,N'-bis (2-hydroxybenzyl) ethylenediamine-N,N'-diacetic acid (HBED) for iron chelation therapy is currently being tested. Besides its affinity for iron, bioavailability, and efficacy in relieving iron overload, it is important to assess its anti- and/or pro-oxidant activity. To address these questions, the antioxidant/pro-oxidant effects of HBED in a cell-free solution and on cultured Chinese hamster V79 cells were studied using UV-VIS spectrophotometry, oximetry, spin trapping, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Geriatr Soc
December 2000
Background: Pain is a multidimensional experience that should be evaluated beyond an estimate of intensity. A multidimensional pain measure has not been developed for older persons undergoing comprehensive geriatric assessment.
Objective: To develop and evaluate validity and reliability of a multidimensional pain assessment instrument for older persons.
Although artesunate, one of the potent derivatives of the qinghaosu family of drugs for treating falciparum malaria, is already in use in the field, its therapeutic protocol has only been developed empirically by hit-or-miss. A pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) model, required for creating such a protocol, is not straightforward. Artesunate presents extremely fast pharmacokinetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasitology
September 2000
The development of malaria due to Plasmodium falciparum is a complex, multi-stage process. It is usually characterized by an exponential growth in the number of parasite-infected erythrocytes, followed by marked oscillations in this number with a period of 48 h, which are eventually dampened. This course of events has been the subject of various mathematical models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncubation of drug-resistant human tumor cells with a combination of prochlorperazine and dipyridamole has additive/synergistic effect on the cellular retention and cytotoxicity of doxorubicin. In patients administered a fixed dose of doxorubicin and prochlorperazine with escalating doses of dipyridamole, mean plasma levels of dipyridamole and prochlorperazine achieved were as high as 3.01 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurobiol
March 2000
The interaction of two feedback loops was investigated: one regulating cuticular stress in the stick insect's leg and the other controlling leg posture. Exclusive stimulation of either of the two relevant sense organs, the load-sensitive trochantero-femoral campaniform sensilla (CS) or the position-/movement-sensitive ventral coxal hairplate (cxHPv), elicits resistance reflex responses in the retractor and the protractor coxae motoneuron pools. Concurrent application of both stimulus modalities reveals that the strength of the postural feedback response is dependent on sign and amplitude of the load feedback response and vice versa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpecificity in the actions of different modulatory neurons is often attributed to their having distinct cotransmitter complements. We are assessing the validity of this hypothesis with the stomatogastric nervous system of the crab Cancer borealis. In this nervous system, the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) contains a multifunctional network that generates the gastric mill and pyloric rhythms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
July 1999
In the leg motor system of insects, several proprioceptive sense organs provide the CNS with information about posture and movement. Within one sensory organ, presynaptic inhibition shapes the inflow of sensory information to the CNS. We show here that also different proprioceptive sense organs can exert a presynaptic inhibition on each other.
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