Publications by authors named "Zuasti A"

Radiofrequency (RF) has been included in the techniques used in aesthetic surgery/medicine. To date, no studies have performed a histological assessment of changes in the tissue after application of bipolar radiofrequency (BRF) with low energy and frequency. The aim of this study was to examine changes that are produced in connective tissue, principally in the fibroblasts, following BRF treatment.

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Imbalances in the proliferation and apoptosis processes are involved in numerous epithelial alterations. In the seminiferous epithelium, normal spermatogenesis is regulated by spermatogonia proliferation and germ cell apoptosis, and both processes are involved in diverse pathological alterations of the seminiferous epithelium. Other physiological phenomena including aging and short photoperiod, in which apoptosis and proliferation seem to play important roles, cause testicular changes.

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The glycoside residues (glycoconjugates, GC) of the zona pellucida (ZP) glycoproteins are important during the first phases of fecundation. Our aim in this work was to determine the lectin affinity pattern of porcine ZP in order to analyze the changes that take place during: (a) preantral folliculogenesis, (b) the follicular atresia process, and (c) antral growth. Several prepubertal and adult pig ovaries and different sized antral follicles were used.

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The gastric glands synthesize glycoproteins whose oligosaccharides are linked to the peptide core mainly by the O-glycosidic bond, specifically removed by beta-elimination procedure. Our aim was to research the possibility of the existence of two subtypes of O-linked oligosaccharides with a different behavior to the removal procedure. The lectins from peanut (PNA) and Maackia amurensis (MAA-I) were histochemically used as markers of the O-linked oligosaccharides.

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The renin-angiotensin system plays an important role in renal development. However, it is unknown whether reduction in angiotensin II effects during the nephrogenic period leads to different renal alterations in males and females during the adult age. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the role of angiotensin II on renal development is sex dependent and whether there are sex differences in blood pressure, renal hemodynamics, and severity of renal damage during adult life when nephrogenesis is altered by blocking angiotensin II effects.

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Aging and short photoperiod exposure induce germ cell apoptosis in the Syrian hamster; however, the specific germ cells affected and the molecular pathways triggered have not been elucidated. We analyzed germ cell apoptosis and the expression of the Fas/Fas-L system, Bcl-2 family, and p53 in aged and photoinhibited hamsters and compared with those young maintained in natural photoperiod. Aging increased apoptosis in spermatogonia and spermatocytes, but in photoinhibited hamster testes only an increase in apoptotic spermatocytes was observed.

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It has been shown that there are sugars in corpora amylacea, but little attention has been focused on the expression of glycoconjugates in corpora amylacea of normal and hyperplastic prostatic glands. The present study characterizes and compares the expression of glycoconjugates in corpora amylacea of normal and hyperplastic prostatic glands of elderly men by using alcian blue (AB) stain and lectin histochemistry. Corpora amylacea were larger and more numerous in hyperplastic glands compared to normal glands.

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Cryptorchidism is a frequent male sexual disorder in mammals, which affects the histology of the tunica propria, interstitial tissue, blood vessels, seminiferous epithelium and testis functioning. In this paper, proliferation and apoptosis were examined in the seminiferous epithelium of both testes from unaffected boars and from boars suffering unilateral and bilateral cryptorchidism. In germ cells, proliferation was studied using the immunohistochemical PCNA technique, and apoptosis was analysed by in situ TUNEL labelling.

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In this study, we examined the age-related changes on morphometric parameters and ultrastructure of seminiferous tubules, and on the expression of extracellular matrix proteins in lamina propria of Syrian hamsters. A significant decrease in the percentage of normal tubules and an increase in the percentage of hypospermatogenic and arrested maturation tubules was observed with aging. Aged animals showed a decrease in tubular diameter, tubular lumen, seminiferous epithelium volume and total tubular volume.

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The cellular mechanisms implicated in the atrophy of seminiferous epithelium in ageing are currently under debate, although recent reports suggest that apoptosis may be the primary mechanism implicated in aged germ cell loss. Other investigators have suggested that changes in spermatogonial proliferation are also involved. In the present work, the changes in proliferation and apoptosis in the seminiferous epithelium of aged (24 months) Syrian hamsters were examined in concert and compared with those in young (6 months) animals.

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In the hamster, male reproductive quiescence is accomplished via testicular atrophy and the germinal epithelium is regressed to spermatogonia and spermatocytes after 8-14 weeks of short photoperiods. However, the cellular mechanisms involved in this process have not been elucidated. As it is suggested that the regulation of seasonal testicular activity is characterized by coordinated shifts in the relationships between mitosis, meiosis and apoptosis, the changes in the proliferative and apoptotic activity in the seminiferous epithelium of photoinhibited Syrian hamster were examined and compared with those maintained in natural photoperiod.

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The present studies were directed to demonstrate that adult fish skin contains putative factors that affect chromatophore and/or chromatoblast function. This hypothesis is based upon the possibility that hypo and/or hyperpigmented areas of the skin are so pigmented because of the localized expression of intrinsic factors that are either stimulatory or inhibitory to the differentiation of specific pigment cell types. In all the morphological and biochemical experiments carried out, we used culture media conditioned by dorsal (DCM) or ventral (VCM) skin from different species of fish.

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Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGFbeta1) downregulates tyrosinase in B16 melanoma cells by decreasing gene expression and the intracellular half-life of the enzyme, but does not block tyrosinase stimulation by alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (alphaMSH). In the presence of both agents, the enzymatic activity is intermediate between the one of cells treated with either agent alone. Here we show that TGFbeta1 equally inhibits the melanogenic activities of melan-a melanocytes and B16 melanoma cells, thus validating the B16 model.

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The pigment pattern expression resides in the chromatoblasts of the embryonic skin. The differentiation of these chromatoblasts is influenced by specific local factors such a melanization inhibiting factor (MIF) and a melanization-stimulating factor (MSF). We reveal the presence of these factors by means of a series of experiments on the skin of the marine species of fish Dicertranchus labrax and Mugil cephalus, each with different pigment pattern, the former having a light skin and the latter a darker one.

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In zebrafish, the transparent and rapidly developing embryo and the potential for genetic screening offer a unique opportunity to investigate the early development of the vertebrate immune system. Here we describe the initial appearance of various blood lineages and the nature of accumulating hematopoietic tissue in the thymus and kidney, the main lymphoid organs of adult teleosts. The ultrastructure of the first site of hematopoiesis, the intermediate cell mass (ICM), is described from the 5-somite stage, about 11.

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We have studied the pigmentary system of the teleost Sparus aurata skin by electron microscopy and chromatographic analysis. Under electron microscopy, we found the dermis to contain the three major types of recognized chromatophores: melanophores, xanthophores and iridophores. Melanophores were more abundant in the dorsal region, whereas the iridophores were more abundant in the ventral region.

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Melanin pigments in lower vertebrates are often found in locations other than the skin, thus forming an extracutaneous pigmentary system of unknown function. The cellular and biochemical structure of this system is still poorly characterized. This paper deals with the ultrastructural and biochemical features of the melanogenic system of Xenopus laevis.

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The surgical anatomy of the middle ear was studied in 20 adult gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) by microdissection and scanning electron microscopy. The most significant finding was a well pneumatized tympanic bulla, which facilitated the identification of useful anatomical landmarks for middle and inner ear dissection. The typical features of middle ear structures in the gerbil are described.

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Inner ear melanocytes are mainly present in the cochlea, vestibular organ, and endolymphatic sac, but their exact biological function has not been determined. In this investigation, we study the pigment cells in the membranous labyrinth of the gerbil. The inner ear melanocytes of M.

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The presence of a melanization-stimulating factor (MSF) was discovered in dorsal and/or ventral skin of Sparus auratus. Skin from this marine species was used to condition Steinberg's balanced salt solution (BSS), which was subsequently tested with the neural tube assay. BBS conditioned by dorsal and/or ventral skin of S.

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In keeping with the concept that local factors in the vertebrate integument affect the expression of pigment cells, the present study was directed toward demonstrating the existence of such factors in the skin of the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus. This species has a dark dorsal surface in marked contrast to an almost white midventral surface. Pieces of skin from these two surfaces were used to condition culture media, which were in turn bioassayed using the Xenopus neural tube explant system (Fukuzawa and Ide, 1988, Dev.

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A two step fractionation of conditioned media made from the darkly pigmented dorsal skin of the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, has produced fractions that contain a melanization stimulating factor (MSF). Isolated neural tubes of Xenopus laevis embryos exposed to conditioned media and to specific fractions exhibit greater melanization (increased numbers of melanized cells and elevated percentages of melanized cells), a greater number of dendrites per melanized cell, and a greater number of emigrated neural crest cells than control neural tubes. The presence of MSF activity in the darkly pigmented dorsal integument suggests a role for a molecule or molecules in the development and maintenance of the dorsal/ventral pigment pattern of this piscine species and possibly of other vertebrates.

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The morphological and biochemical characteristics of pigment accumulations found in the kidney, liver, spleen, and mesentery of three different species of teleost fishes have been studied. There are significant differences in number, distribution, and morphology of pigment accumulations in different organs of the three species. Biochemical studies have shown the existence of tyrosinase activity in the mesentery of Mugil cephalus and in the kidney and mesentery of Sparus auratus.

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The haemopoiesis of Sparus auratus is formed by the following series: erythro-thrombopoietic, granulopoietic, lymphoplasmapoietic and monocytes. All the cells which form these series originate from one cell called the stem-cell, there being a network of reticular cells and melanomacrophage centres amongst these cells. The erythropoietic series comprises erythroblast, proerythrocytes, polychromatocytes, reticulocytes and erythrocytes.

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