Methods Achiev Exp Pathol
December 1991
CRF plays a fundamental role in integrating stress-related responses throughout the neuro-immuno-endocrine axis. Its endocrine effects include actions at the pituitary level to stimulate the synthesis and release of POMC-derived peptides. CRF acts within the CNS to integrate the autonomic, behavioral, endocrine and immune responses to stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious studies have shown that beta-xyloside inhibits maturation of the fetal mouse lung (Smith et al., Dev. Biol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCRF is a primary integrator of the organism's coordinated neuroendocrine, autonomic, behavioral, and immune responses to stress. In the present study the identity of the cell type(s) expressing CRF receptors in mouse spleen was determined using a combination of cell fractionation and receptor-binding techniques. Autoradiographic studies of the distribution of [125I]Tyro-ovine CRF [( 125I]oCRF)-binding sites in spleen localized CRF receptors primarily to the red pulp and marginal zones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProgress in understanding rheumatoid (RA) and inflammatory arthritis has been limited in part because there has been no widely accepted animal model of naturally occurring human disease and because the clinical syndrome of RA may reflect the expression of multiple etiologies. We have considered that inflammatory joint disease may be induced and/or exacerbated by food related antigens. To facilitate our investigations, we studied inflammatory synovitis in rabbits induced by oral exposure to environmental antigens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) has published a substantive series of reports concerning sources, effects, and risks of ionizing radiation. This article summarizes the highlights and conclusions from the most recent 1986 and 1988 reports. The present annual per person effective dose equivalent for the world's population is about 3 mSv.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo assess the influence of foundry exposure on malignant and non-malignant respiratory disease, the proportional mortality ratio (PMR) was used to compare the cause of death distributions of the 578 dead members of the Iron Moulders Society of South Africa, recipients of the union's death benefit fund between 1961 and 1983. Comparisons were made with the age and period specific white male deaths. For the 419 members where job information was available, the influence of occupation (journeyman, production moulder) was assessed using different techniques--the relative proportional mortality ratio (RPMR), the mortality odds ratio (MOR), and the proportional cancer mortality ratio (PCMR) for comparison.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrompted by increasing litigation claiming cancer induction from exposure to radiation from nuclear weapons tests, the United States Congress enacted an amendment to the Orphan Drug Act (Public Law 97-414, January 4, 1983), through which the National Institutes of Health was directed to and did produce Probability of Causation (PC) Tables. This review defines PC and discusses the data, limitations, and uses of the concept.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadioligand binding studies have previously identified a high affinity, magnesium-dependent, guanine nucleotide-sensitive binding site for corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) in mouse spleen. In order to determine the functional nature of these CRF binding sites, we examined the effects of CRF on adenylate cyclase activity in mouse spleen homogenates. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity was dependent on time, tissue protein concentration, and guanine nucleotides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCorticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) are two major components of the brain-endocrine-immune response to stress. We identified, characterized, and localized CRF and IL-1 receptors in brain, pituitary, and spleen using 125I-CRF and 125I-IL-1 alpha, respectively. 125I-CRF binding had comparable kinetic (KD:200-400 pM) and pharmacological characteristics in brain, pituitary, and spleen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOccasionally patients with overlapping features of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), termed "rhupus," have been encountered. We wanted to ascertain the frequency of such patients and determine whether they represent a unique overlap syndrome. Of approximately 7000 new patients evaluated over 11 years, we identified six patients who had, on the average, 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe radioligand [125I-Tyro]ovine CRF [( 125I] oCRF) was used to identify, characterize, and localize CRF receptors in a crude homogenate of mouse spleen. The binding was linear with increasing membrane protein concentration, saturable, and of high affinity. Scatchard analysis of [125I]oCRF saturation curves revealed a high affinity component with an apparent dissociation constant of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTechnetium-99M pyrophosphate (TcPYP) nuclear scans of extremities were performed on 15 patients at 10 minutes and 2 hours after isotope injection. Scans were carried out both to confirm the diagnosis of myositis and to direct subsequent muscle biopsy. Five of six patients with clinical features strongly suggestive of inflammatory muscle disease had positive scans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLenses of late gestational and postnatal normal-eyed mice were tested for accumulated sulfated materials by using Spicer's high-iron-diamine staining method and also for newly incorporated sulfate autoradiographically following administration of 35SO4 either in vivo or in isolated and organ-cultured lenses. Accumulated and newly incorporated sulfate was observed in all lenses for each age group tested. Discrete regional differences were seen in histochemical staining patterns for sulfate on the lens capsule in specimens of all ages, and distinct laminar zonations were seen in the various regions of the capsule in older specimens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFApical cell surface materials were analysed with staining and lectin histochemistry in the chicken lens, from the earliest stages of lens morphogenesis through the completion of primary fibre cell elongation. Acidic materials were found to accumulate on the apical cell surface of the presumptive lens fibres from the mid cup stage through the early stages of lens vesicle formation, peaking just before lens fibre cell elongation. These materials labelled strongly with concanavalin A, but not with soybean lectin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report here that corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) stimulates adenylate cyclase activity in the rat central nervous system (CNS). In frontoparietal cortex homogenates, the stimulation by CRF was dependent on time, temperature, tissue protein concentration, and guanine nucleotides. The rank order of potency for CRF analogs and fragments in stimulating adenylate cyclase activity [(Nle21,38) rat CRF greater than rat CRF approximately equal to acetyl ovine CRF (4-41) approximately equal to alpha helical ovine CRF greater than ovine CRF much greater than ovine CRF (1-39) approximately equal to ovine CRF (7-41)] was consistent with their affinities for CRF receptors in the brain and their relative potencies in stimulating pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone secretion in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA patient with follicular small cleaved cell lymphoma presented with Sjögren's syndrome and symptoms of polymyalgia rheumatica and temporal arteritis. Biopsy of the temporal artery showed an extensive perivascular infiltrate by malignant cells without evidence of giant cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLittle information is available regarding the long-term effects, if any, of running on the musculoskeletal system. We therefore compared the prevalence of degenerative joint disease among 17 male runners (mean age, 56 years; height, 180 cm [5 ft 11 in]; and weight, 73.02 kg [161 lb] with 18 male nonrunners (mean age, 60 years; height, 178 cm [5 ft 10 in]; and weight, 78 kg [171 lb]).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Embryol Exp Morphol
March 1986
Sulphated materials were tested for in the eyes of late gestational and postnatal normal mice and mice with the aphakia mutation using Spicer's high iron diamine staining method. Qualitative identification of these materials was attempted with bovine testicular hyaluronidase and nitrous acid digestion methods. The grossly abnormal morphology of the aphakia lens made it necessary to confirm identification of lens-derived tissue by testing for lens crystallins using standard immunohistological methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthritis Rheum
February 1986
Suggestive, but largely unproven, observations have associated arthritis with environmental antigens, including foods. We studied a patient with inflammatory arthritis in a prospective, "blinded," controlled fashion to determine whether her symptoms were associated with food sensitivities. This 52-year-old white woman with 11 years of class I, stage I, active disease, had symptomatic exacerbations allegedly associated with meat, milk, and beans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLow-dose transaxial tomography is a technique that can produce cross-sectional images of the hips and femurs in children to permit calculation of the angle of femoral anteversion. Transaxial tomography was compared with computed tomography in terms of measured radiation dose and image quality. Transaxial tomography was found to require at least 90% less radiation dose, and the images were judged to be acceptable for the determination of anteversion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe increased grooming behavior observed in a novel environment has been attributed to release of peptides derived from proopiomelanocortin (POMC), such as ACTH, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH), or beta-endorphin, which themselves can elicit grooming. This is because novelty-induced grooming is attenuated both by hypophysectomy and by antiserum to ACTH injected into the cerebral ventricles. Administration of monosodium glutamate (MSG) to neonatal rats destroys neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, depleting the brain of POMC peptides, and also hypothalamic dopamine and choline acetyl-transferase activity.
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