Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0153470 (Spleen)
4,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The intraperitoneal administration of PtCl4 or Pd(NO3)2 at levels of 28 or 56 mumole/kg body weight decreased the thymidine incorporation into DNA of spleen, liver, kidney, and testis. Spleen was most sensitive to both the platinum and the palladium salt. In liver, DNA syntheses in parenchymal cells and stromal cells were about equally sensitive to PtCl4. In control rats, only 20-30% of the 3H in the acid-soluble fraction of liver or spleen was in the form of thymidine and its phosphate esters 2 hr after the intraperitoneal injection of 3H-thymidine; prior injection of PtCl4 (56 mumol/kg body weight) did not change the pattern.
...
PMID:Effect of platinum and palladium salts on thymidine incorporation into DNA of rat tissues. 122 61

Rat thymocytes were exposed in vitro to the corticosteroid dexamethasone, 10 nM, for 10 min, or to oleic acid, 500 nM for 2 min. This results in cytolysis after 6 hr, if incubation is continued. Instead, the cells were centrifuged, the supernatant fluid decanted, and the cells subjected to osmotic shock in 1.5 mM MgCl2. The naked nuclei were incubated at 37 degrees C and examined by light and electron microscopy. Nuclear edema was evident early, and most nuclei showed damage with variation in shape and size and distinct folds, which was maximal by 1-2 hr as a result of these treatments. This was true also if nuclei were incubated in MgF2 or Mg(NO3)2 but not in MgBr2, MgI2, MgSO4 or Mg-citrate. Spleen lymphocyte nuclei showed similar damage but only after incubation with 20 microM oleic acid, and not at all with corticosteroids. The effects of both steroid and fatty acid, even at greatly increased concentrations, were inhibited by tri-n-butyl tin chloride, 10 microM, and by 4-4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid, sodium salt, 10 microM, both of which block chloride ion transport. It is concluded that the cytolytic effects of both corticosteroids and free fatty acids involve influx of chloride ion resulting in nuclear edema, which subsequently leads to fragmentation of chromatin, karyorrhexis and, ultimately, cytolysis.
...
PMID:Role of anions in the lymphocytolytic action of corticosteroids and fatty acids. 649 16

Spontaneously diabetic Torii (SDT) rats were established from Sprague-Dawley (SD) rat and are used as an animal model of type 2 diabetes mellitus. In the present study, the mechanism of the development of injury in the pancreas of these rats was examined focusing on the role of monocytes/macrophages. The number of lymphocytes and monocytes in the circulation of SDT rats increased with age, reaching a plateau at around 9 weeks of age and remaining at that level thereafter. The number of leukocytes in SDT rats was almost twice that of wild-type SD rats. Serum IL-18 levels began to increase at 8 weeks of age, forming a prominent peak at 9 weeks of age. In parallel with this, serum levels of NO2/NO3 showed an abrupt rise and decline. Spleen cells prepared from 9-week-old SDT rats expressed high levels of IFN-gamma in response to IL-18, while those from 9-week-old wild-type SD rats did not. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed marked infiltration of CD68+ cells in the islets of SDT rats. Treatment of SDT rats with Cl2MDP-liposomes reduced the number of monocytes as well as levels of NO2/NO3 in the circulation. Consistent with this, the number of infiltrated CD68+ cells in the islets was reduced in SDT rats treated with Cl2MDP-liposomes. These results suggest that macrophages are involved in pancreatic islet injury in SDT rats through excess production of NO induced by IL-18 which increases transitorily at around 9 weeks of age.
...
PMID:Role of macrophages in the development of pancreatic islet injury in spontaneously diabetic torii rats. 1965 36