133 results match your criteria: "Strong Children's Research Center[Affiliation]"

Analysis of dynamic atrial dimension and function during early cardiac development in the chick embryo.

Pediatr Res

September 1992

Strong Children's Research Center, Dorothy S. and Frederick W. Cook Research Laboratory, University of Rochester School of Medicine, New York 14642.

Although atrial morphologic changes are well documented, the description of early atrial function is limited. We used videomicroscopic methods to define the function of the contracting atrium in stage 16 to 24 white Leghorn chick embryos. We exposed the embryo in ovo (right side up) and imaged the ventricle, then repositioned the embryo (left side up) and imaged the atrium (n greater than or equal to 8 per stage).

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Mice carrying mutations at the Sl (steel) and W (dominant white spotting) loci develop abnormalities on 3 migratory embryonic stem cell populations: hematopoietic stem cells, neural crest-derived melanocytes, and primordial germ cells. Transplantation experiments have indicated that the Sl locus affects the microenvironment where stem cells migrate, proliferate, and differentiate, while the W locus affects the migratory cells themselves. The Sl locus encodes for a multipotent growth factor known as stem cell factor.

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Pulmonary fibrosis is a crippling, essentially lethal chronic disease due to an interplay of events following irradiation between the pneumonitic and fibrotic phases. In this series of experiments it is demonstrated that there is no latent period after irradiation, but an immediate intercellular communication system which springs into action to initiate recovery. Latency was only a function of our inability to uncover the molecular events that precede and underlie the clinical pathologic course of organ/tissue irradiation.

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The antileukemic activity of L-asparaginase (ASNase), an important component of therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, is thought to result from depletion of serum L-asparagine (Asn). In studies of the pharmacological effects of ASNase, investigators have reported prolonged reduction in the serum concentration of Asn after the administration of ASNase. Such measurements may not be valid because ASNase present in the blood sample may hydrolyze Asn before its determination.

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The physiologic response of the lung to oxygen toxicity is complex, and similar among all mammals studied. Acute exposure to 100% O2 results in severe decreases in respiratory function and is accompanied by alterations in pulmonary surfactant metabolism, including the regulation of surfactant proteins A, B, and C (SP-A, SP-B, SP-C). Because surfactant proteins and their mRNAs can be expressed in alveolar epithelial type II cells, and nonciliated bronchial epithelial (Clara) cells, we were interested in determining if alterations in the abundance of SP-A, SP-B, and SP-C mRNAs occurred differentially in these two cell types during hyperoxic lung injury.

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Cell-specific alterations in expression of hyperoxia-induced mRNAs of lung.

Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol

December 1991

Department of Pediatrics (Neonatology), Strong Children's Research Center, University of Rochester Medical Center, NY 14642.

Hyperoxic lung injury is an unfortunate consequence of ventilatory oxygen therapy that is necessary to sustain life in certain clinical situations. The biochemical events that accompany hyperoxia of the lung, and the molecular mechanisms underlying these events, are incompletely understood. To better understand hyperoxic lung injury, our laboratory has cloned a set of genes corresponding to mRNAs that increase in abundance in the lungs of hyperoxic rabbits.

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We have examined with 19 tumor cell lines the discrete roles that vascular anatomy and tumor-cell-organ-affinity play in the development of metastases and their distribution among organs. Spontaneous metastases of B16-G3.26 melanoma cells from a primary tumor growing in the foot pad of mice, or experimental metastases 21 days after intravenous tumor-cell injection resulted in tumor colonies only in the lungs.

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Oxygen and developmental retinal capillary remodeling in the kitten.

Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci

October 1990

Strong Children's Research Center, University of Rochester, School of Medicine and Dentistry, New York.

During the recovery period after a high oxygen injury in the kitten, chronic hypoxia adversely affects the resulting retinopathy, but increasing oxygen breathing to 28% improves it. To test the effects of chronic hypoxia without an antecedent hyperoxic injury in the kitten, the animals were raised in 13% or 21% (room air) oxygen and their retinas examined at 3, 7, 14, or 21 days. They were also studied after 14 days of exposure to 30% or 40% oxygen to compare the graded effects of elevated oxygen to that of hypoxia on the development of the retinal capillary bed.

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