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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
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A new technique employing continuous recirculating perfusion of the rat liver in situ, shaking of the liver in buffer in vitro, and filtration of the tissue through nylon mesh, results in the conversion of about 50% of the liver into intact, isolated parenchymal cells. The perfusion media consist of: (a) calcium-free Hanks' solution containing 0.05% collagenase and 0.10% hyaluronidase, and (b) magnesium and calcium-free Hanks' solution containing 2 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetate. Biochemical and morphologic studies indicate that the isolated cells are viable. They respire in a medium containing calcium ions, synthesize glucose from lactate, are impermeable to inulin, do not stain with trypan blue, and retain their structural integrity. Electron microscopy of biopsies taken during and after perfusion reveals that desmosomes are quickly cleaved. Hemidesmosome-containing areas of the cell membrane invaginate and appear to pinch off and migrate centrally. Tight and gap junctions, however, persist on the intact, isolated cells, retaining small segments of cytoplasm from formerly apposing parenchymal cells. Cells which do not retain tight and gap junctions display swelling of Golgi vacuoles and vacuoles in the peripheral cytoplasm. Cytoplasmic vacuolization in a small percentage of cells and potassium loss are the only indications of cell injury detected. By other parameters measured, the isolated cells are comparable to normal hepatic parenchymal cells in situ in appearance and function.
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PMID:High-yield preparation of isolated rat liver parenchymal cells: a biochemical and fine structural study. 490 Jun 11

Clifton, C. E. (Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.), and John Cherry. Influence of glutamic acid on the endogenous respiration of Bacillus subtilis. J. Bacteriol. 91:546-550. 1966.-Amino acids serve as the major initial endogenous substrate for Bacillus subtilis. The endogenous activity of freshly harvested washed cells is high and falls off rapidly with time of shaking at 30 C to lower but still significant levels. The rate of O(2) consumption after the addition of glutamic acid also decreases as the cells age, but more slowly than noted for endogenous respiration. When cells were fed glutamate as soon as possible after harvesting, an apparent stimulation of endogenous respiration was noted. However, endogenous activity was inhibited if the cell suspensions were shaken for at least 1 hr before addition of the glutamate. Similar results were obtained with glycerol or glucose as exogenous substrates. Variation in rates of respiration with age of the cells, inherent instability of B. subtilis, and possible utilization of substances initially excreted by the cells appear to account for the variations noted regarding the influence of an exogenous substrate on endogenous respiration.
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PMID:Influence of glutamic acid on the endogenous respiration of Bacillus subtilis. 495 54

Previous workers from this laboratory observed considerable variation in the proportions of acetic and lactic acids produced in pure broth culture as compared to consistently high proportions of acetic acid produced in the sourdough and flour suspension systems. In the latter the proportion of acetic acid was always in the range of 20 to 35% of the total, whereas in pure broth culture frequently less than 5% acetic acid was produced. In the natural environment, the sourdough bacteria, tentatively identified as lactobacilli, coexist with a yeast, Saccharomyces exiguus, and this study was undertaken to determine whether this yeast or flour ingredients including glucose or other factors were involved in this variable production of acetic acid. The proportion of acetic acid produced in broth culture on maltose, the preferred carbohydrate source, was found to depend almost entirely on the degree of aeration. Essentially anaerobic conditions, as obtained by thorough evacuation and flushing with CO(2) or N(2), resulted in very low (5% or less) proportions of acetic acid. Aerobic conditions, achieved by continuous shaking in cotton-plugged flasks, yielded high levels (23 to 39% of the total) of acetic acid. Similar effects of aeration were observed with glucose as the substrate, although growth was considerably slower, or in nonsterile flour suspension systems. It is theorized that, under aerobic conditions, the reduced pyridine nucleotides generated in the dissimilation of carbohydrate are oxidized directly by molecular oxygen, thereby becoming unavailable for the reduction of the acetyl phosphate intermediate to ethyl alcohol, the usual product of anaerobic dissimilation of glucose by heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria. Comparative studies with known strains of homo- and heterofermentative lactobacilli showed similar effects of aeration only on the heterofermentative strains, lending additional support to the tentative grouping by previous workers from this laboratory of the sourdough bacteria with the heterofermentative lactobacilli.
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PMID:Factors affecting organic acid production by sourdough (San Francisco) bacteria. 504 65

To develop an efficient method for the production of l-citrulline, optimum conditions for the conversion of l-arginine to l-citrulline by microbial l-arginine deiminase and for production of the enzyme were studied. A number of micro-organisms were screened to test their ability to form and accumulate l-citrulline from l-arginine. Pseudomonas putida was selected as the best organism. With this organism, enzyme activity as high as 9.20 units per ml could be produced by a shaking culture at 30 C in a medium containing glucose, ammonium phosphate, l-arginine hydrochloride, yeast extract, peptone, and inorganic salts. Appropriate addition of a surface active agent to the reaction mixture was found to shorten the time required for the conversion. A large amount of l-arginine hydrochloride was converted stoichiometrically to l-citrulline in 62 hr at 37 C. Accumulated l-citrulline was readily isolated in pure form by ordinary procedures with ion-exchange resins. Yields of isolated l-citrulline of over 90.5% from l-arginine hydrochloride were easily attainable.
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PMID:Enzymatic production of L-citrulline by Pseudomonas putida. 513 89

Cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes, harvested during growth as spheres and as rods, were starved by shaking at 30 C in phosphate buffer for 30 days, during which time they maintained 100% viability. Changes in cellular components and the activity of specific enzyme pathways were monitored. A glycogen-like polysaccharide comprised 40% of the dry weight of growing spherical cells and 10% of the dry weight of rod cells. This material was utilized at approximately the same rate, on a percentage basis, during starvation of both cell forms. The rods degraded intracellular protein at approximately twice the rate of the spheres. At the end of 30 days, the rods had degraded 40% and the spheres 20% of their initial content of protein. Ribonucleic acid (RNA) was degraded significantly more rapidly in the rods. After 30 days starvation, 85 and 32% of the initial RNA of rods and spheres, respectively, had been depleted. Magnesium ion followed this same general pattern; the rods lost 65% and the spheres 45% of their initial content during 28 days of starvation. Deoxyribonucleic acid increased by 20% during the first few hours of starvation of both cell forms and then remained constant. The ability of glucose-, succinate-, and 2-hydroxypyridine (2-HP)-grown cells to oxidize glucose remained constant during 14 days of starvation. The ability of succinate-grown cells to oxidize succinate decreased rapidly during the first few hours of starvation to a rate which remained constant for 14 days. Cells adapted to growth on 2-HP completely lost their ability to oxidize this substrate after 3 days starvation.
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PMID:Intracellular substrates for endogenous metabolism during long-term starvation of rod and spherical cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes. 547 76

Previous work on the control of fimbriation in bacteria has demonstrated the importance of environmental factors such as static versus shaking broth and the absence versus the presence of glucose on the degree of fimbriation. When the Pil+ K-12 strain of Escherichia coli CSH50 was grown in static broth, the bacteria grown with glucose were less fimbriate (as determined by electron microscopy) than those grown without glucose. In contrast, a derivative, the pil-lac operon fusion strain VL361, gave off similar proportions of Lac+ and Lac- colonies when grown with or without glucose. Introduction of delta cya into either CSH50 or VL361 did not affect synthesis of either fimbriae or beta-galactosidase, respectively. When total synthesis of fimbriae by strain CSH50 was assayed, using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent inhibition test, glucose-grown bacteria made less antigen when they were grown in static broth but not when they were grown in shaking broth. When results are taken together, we interpret them as showing that glucose does not suppress fimbrial synthesis by classic catabolite repression but rather merely prevents the outgrowth or fimbriate bacteria in static broth.
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PMID:Pseudocatabolite repression of type 1 fimbriae of Escherichia coli. 612 1

Chronic pancreatitis ablates a large majority of the acinar tissue which otherwise is a troublesome contaminant in preparing islet cells from higher mammals. Chronic pancreatitis was induced by dividing all pancreatic attachments to the duodenum, including major and minor ducts, in six dogs. After 10 weeks, biopsy of the pancreas showed marked acinar cell atrophy and fibrosis with preservation and even proliferation of islet cells. Intravenous glucose tolerance testing revealed only a minor decrease in K value from 3.4 +/- 1.0 to 2.1 +/- 0.4 during 10 weeks. All dogs then underwent total pancreatectomy and islet autotransplantation. The pancreas was dispersed to a cell suspension by perfusing the pancreatic ducts with collagenase until tissue integrity failed. The digested tissue was then chopped, dissociated by shaking, and filtered. The average cell yield from the pancreas was 7.6 X 10(7) cells of which greater than 95% were islet cells. Acid alcohol-extracted insulin values suggested an average 7% recovery of insulin content and essentially complete elimination of amylase content was demonstrated.
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PMID:Islet recovery in chronic pancreatitis. 619 73

The effects of 3-acetylpyridine (3-AP) on the neurons in the inferior olive (IO) were studied by several methods to establish the time-order of events due to the neurotoxicity of 3-AP in the rat. It was found that IO metabolism, studied with [14C]2-deoxyglucose, began to decrease detectably 1 h after 3-AP and was totally suppressed at 3 h. Retrograde axonal transport of lectin horseradish peroxidase (HRP) from cerebellar cortex to the IO was also totally suppressed 3 h after 3-AP and in fact showed a time course similar to that for the suppression of metabolism. Harmaline produced tremor has been shown to induce rhythmic activity and increase glucose consumption in the IO. When injected in 3-AP treated animals, harmaline produced its usual effects at 2 h after the 3-AP but had no effects after 3 h. The present results indicate that the neurotoxic effects of 3-AP are not simply graded in time, but tend to have the greatest effects between the 2nd and 3rd hour following its administration.
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PMID:Inferior olivary neurons: 3-acetylpyridine effects on glucose consumption, axonal transport, electrical activity and harmaline-induced tremor. 621 Jan 32

It has been shown previously that Dictyostelium discoideum NC4 cells dissociated at the early aggregation stage form cell clumps and differentiate into prespore cells in a shaking culture containing glucose, albumin, EDTA and cyclic AMP. In this culture system, we found that the cells neither differentiate nor form cell clumps in the absence of cyclic AMP. Wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) completely inhibited the cyclic AMP-induced formation of cell contact and the inhibition was nullified by the addition of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine. When the cells were prevented from forming contact by either rapid shaking or the addition of WGA, they were unable to differentiate even in the presence of cyclic AMP, indicating that contact formation is a prerequisite for prespore differentiation. Cells dissociated from migrating slugs formed cell clumps in shaking culture, with or without cyclic AMP, and the cell contact was sensitive to WGA. In the absence of cyclic AMP, prespore cells lost their differentiated state, even though the cells were in contact. This indicates that cyclic AMP has a second effect, that of pomoting differentiation, in addition to the effect of inducing contact formation. Both effects were required for prespore differentiation of strain NC4 cells.
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PMID:Effects of cyclic AMP on contact formation and differentiation in Dictyostelium discoideum. 630 Jan 53

We studied the effect of posture on the sympathoadrenal response to intravenous theophylline in six normal subjects. On three separate occasions they received an intravenous infusion of either theophylline (6 mg/kg) while supine, theophylline (6 mg/kg) while standing or saline as placebo while standing. With the subjects standing theophylline caused tremor, a peak heart rate of 99 +/- 6 beats/min, and an elevation of plasma cyclic AMP from 9.3 +/- 0.7 to 15.1 +/- 1.7 nmol/1 (mean +/- s.e. mean). There was a small, but significant, elevation of plasma adrenaline, noradrenaline and glucose. The elevation in plasma catecholamines was insufficient to explain either the sympathomimetic effects of theophylline or the rise in plasma cyclic AMP. Theophylline had little or no effect with the subjects supine. The mean peak theophylline concentration following infusion was significantly higher with the subjects upright than when supine (18.3 c.f. 12.4 mg/l, P less than 0.025). However, adequate plasma levels of theophylline were obtained in all subjects when lying or supine. Analysis of individual data suggests that differences in plasma levels of theophylline are unlikely to account for the increased effects seen on standing. The mechanism of action of theophylline cannot be explained by increased secretion of catecholamines alone. Theophylline appears to amplify the increased sympathetic activity associated with standing and this is probably by phosphodiesterase inhibition.
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PMID:The effect of posture on the sympathoadrenal response to theophylline infusion. 631 28


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