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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (
Brown
)
12,436
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Brown
adipose tissue (BAT) is thought to be responsible for increased heat production in cold-acclimated rodents. We measured sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in interscapular BAT (IBAT) during cold stimulation in cold-acclimated C57BL/6J mice (ACCLI). Cold acclimation was achieved (cold tolerance was increased) by repeated exposure to cold stress every other week for 3 weeks. We compared SNA in these animals with SNA in mice that had no previous cold stress experience (naive). During the test, mice were anesthetized by urethane and isoflurane and were paralyzed with vecuronium bromide. Sympathetic nerve activity was recorded directly from one of the fine nerves to IBAT. The animal's body caudal to the pelvic area was covered with a plastic bag containing a slurry of ice
water
to decrease colonic temperature 7 degrees C below control level, which took approximately 20 min. Interscapular BAT-SNA increased during cold stress in both groups, but ACCLI mice had higher IBAT-SNA during cold stress than naive mice. These findings confirmed the hypothesis that during the acute cold exposure, cold-acclimated mice have greater sympathetic outflow to BAT adipocytes.
...
PMID:Sympathetic nervous activity to brown adipose tissue increases in cold-tolerant mice. 802 14
It has recently been shown in several species that lung tissue resistance increases after administration of exogenous bronchoconstrictors. This finding suggests the possibility that lung parenchymal tissues could be involved in the pathophysiology of pulmonary allergic responses. To test this hypothesis, we sensitized
Brown
Norway rats with ovalbumin (OA) and performed experiments in anesthetized, open-chested, mechanically ventilated (respiratory frequency [f] = 1 Hz, tidal volume [VT] = 9 ml/kg, positive end-expiratory pressure [PEEP] = 3 cm
H2O
) animals. We affixed alveolar capsules to the lungs to measure alveolar pressure and calculated the resistance of lung (RL), tissue (Rti), and airway (Raw) under control conditions and after aerosol administration of saline (S) (n = 10) or OA (n = 14). To assess lung morphometry during the late response, the lungs of six S and six OA animals were frozen with liquid nitrogen (PEEP = 3 cm
H2O
) and processed via freeze substitution. Airway constriction was assessed by measuring the ratio of the airway lumen (A) to the ideally relaxed airway (Ar). Tissue distortion was assessed by measuring the mean linear intercept between alveolar walls (Lm), an atelectasis index (ATI) derived by calculating the ratio of tissue/airspace, and the standard deviation (SD) of Lm and ATI. In the OA group, all animals demonstrated an early response (ER; RL, Rti, Raw = 183.5 +/- 7.7, 159.7 +/- 9.9, 232.5 +/- 17.2% baseline, respectively) and 11 animals showed a late response (LR; RL, Rti, Raw = 178.9 +/- 5.1, 191.3 +/- 11.5, 176.6 +/- 17.3% baseline, respectively). Neither ER nor LR were observed in the saline group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Airway and tissue responses to antigen challenge in sensitized brown Norway rats. 802 52
Two procedures are currently in use for the determination of proton magnetization transfer rate constants between macromolecular tissue components and
water
. The first method assumes that there are only two spin baths (macromolecular plus solvent) and that during off-resonance irradiation complete saturation of the "immobile" proton spin bath occurs (S. H. Koenig, R. D.
Brown
, III, R. Ugolini, Magn. Reson. Med. 29, 311 (1993)). This approach neglects the possibility of incomplete saturation and polydispersity, and yields an apparent magnetization transfer rate constant, Kapp. The second approach utilizes a formalism which can account for polydispersity and incomplete saturation of the immobile spin bath (K. Kuwata, D. Brooks, H. Yang, T. Schleich, J. Magn. Reson., in press). In this work magnetization transfer rate constants derived by the use of both methods for two systems, ocular lens tissue and cross-linked bovine serum albumin (BSA) were compared. For both samples Kapp was dependent on B2 off-resonance irradiation frequency and power when the first method was used. The second method provided values of the magnetization transfer rate constant that were similar to the values obtained by the first method, as the limit of complete saturation was approached.
...
PMID:Determination of proton magnetization transfer rate constants in heterogeneous biological systems. 805 7
Homogeneous soft tissue, as regards its magnetic relaxation properties, is well-modeled by solutions of cross-linked protein (see Koenig and
Brown
, Prog. NMR Spectr. 22, 487 (1991)). Interactions at the solute-solvent interface alter the hydrodynamics of solvent
water
, and also couple the solute and solvent proton Zeeman energy reservoirs, giving hydrodynamic and cross-relaxation contributions to
water
proton relaxation that respond differently to deuteration of solvent. We report measurements of the magnetic field dependence of 1/T1 of
water
protons in cross-linked bovine serum albumin (BSA), for partially deuterated solvent and, in order to separate these two contributions, of 1/T1 of deuterons. The major experimental finding is that, in addition to recently identified
water
-binding sites on protein (covering approximately 0.2% of the surface) with
water
lifetimes of about 1 microsecond, there is another group of sites with lifetimes of about 23 ns, covering approximately 2% of the surface, which are evident in both proton and deuteron data. In addition, we have formulated a theory of interfacial proton-proton magnetic interactions which--with these four parameters, plus two that quantify the protein-
water
coupling at each site--can account for all the proton and deuteron data, in both native and cross-linked BSA.
...
PMID:A molecular theory of relaxation and magnetization transfer: application to cross-linked BSA, a model for tissue. 813 50
Albino (Sprague-Dawley) and pigmented (Norwegian
Brown
) male rats were exposed to 2,5-hexanediol (H; 1%) in their drinking
water
for 5 or 8 weeks, respectively. Half of the rats of each strain were housed in light (average 30 cd/cm2 inside cage, 12 h/day); the other half was kept in constant darkness. Control groups were studied in parallel under identical conditions but without H. Electrophysiological recordings were made 2-5 days and 13 weeks after the end of the exposure to H. Alterations in the visual system, as measured by electroretinography and visual evoked response, were found in groups of albino rats exposed to H and/or light. The pupillary diameter was enlarged in the albino group exposed to both H and light. Among the pigmented rats, alterations were recorded only in the visual evoked response of the H exposed groups. The results demonstrate that simultaneous exposure to H and light can lead to alterations in visual function that are more severe than those induced by each agent alone, and may exceed a simple summation.
...
PMID:Effect of exposure to 2,5-hexanediol in light or darkness on the retina of albino and pigmented rats. II. Electrophysiology. 821 14
Fluid ingestion was studied in Fischer 344/
Brown
Norway F1 rats aged 3, 12, 20, and 24 months of age. There was an age-related decrease in fluid ingestion when fluid intake was measured over 24 h. After
water
deprivation, 24- and 20-month-old rats drank less than 3- and 12-month-old rats. Twelve, 20-, and 24-month-old rats had less fluid intake associated with food deprivation than did 3-month-old rats. Three month old rats drank more fluid after angiotensin II than did 12-, 20-, and 24-month-old rats when expressed as fluid intake per kg body weight. These studies confirm that the rat is a reasonable model to study age-related hypodipsia.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II and fluid ingestion in old rats. 829 53
In order to find an appropriate model of experimentally induced streptozotocin diabetic cataract rat for evaluation of the anti-cataract agents. Experimental diabetic cataracts were induced in 3 rat strains (Sprague-Dawley SD,
Brown
Norway BN, Wistar WIS), age 5 and 7 weeks old, by intravenous injection of 70 mg/kg streptozotocin. The cataract progression was followed by morphological and biochemical assessment. Two types of initial cataractous change were observed in SD and WIS rats which mainly consisted of
water
-vacuole formation in the peripheral area and a diffuse cloudiness progressing around the anterior Y-suture area. The initial change of BN rats was a Y-suture dissociation and fine
water
-clefts with dot-like vacuoles. Those initial changes in SD and WIS rats differed from those in BN. No difference in aldose reductase activities among the three strains was found, but BN rats had significantly higher sorbitol dehydrogenase activity than SD or WIS rats. It seems that 7-week-old BN rats are more suitable for experimental diabetic cataract models than SD or WIS.
...
PMID:[Reinvestigation of streptozotocin induced diabetic cataract as a standard experimental model]. 831 49
We report results for proton 1/T1, 1/T2, and K, the rate of magnetization transfer from solvent to solute, for 5 and 10 wt. % solutions of bovine serum albumin, both native and chemically cross-linked, in undeuterated and approximately 50% deuterated
water
, at 4.7 T (200.1 MHz) and 19 degrees C. At this field, although K > 1/T1 for the cross-linked samples, magnetization transfer contributes little to 1/T1 directly. Therefore K was measured using off-resonance irradiation of the protein protons. The data for all the samples can be fit using a theoretical model for magnetization transfer, with three parameters: the intrinsic longitudinal relaxation rates of solute and solvent protons, and K. The magnitude of K is so large that the newly-identified, long-lived (approximately 1 microseconds) hydration sites (S.H. Koenig, R.D.
Brown
III, and R. Ugolini, Magn. Reson. Med., 29, 77 (1993)) must be invoked to account for K, as is necessary to explain the differential effects of cross linking on the magnetic field dependence of 1/T1 of protons and deuterons and the large 1/T1 and 1/T2 values below approximately 20 MHz in immobilized systems. Although these sites are few in number, their long resident lifetime becomes the correlation time for magnetization transfer when protein is immobilized, accounting for the large value of K. Recent data from several laboratories have shown that cross-linked protein, as used here, is a good model for 1/T1 and 1/T2 of tissue, as a function of temperature and magnetic field.
...
PMID:Magnetization transfer in cross-linked bovine serum albumin solutions at 200 MHz: a model for tissue. 838 88
A NMR method based on the analysis of the transverse magnetization decay curve of
water
protons, was employed to study the hydration process of Ife
Brown
cowpeas. In order to investigate the role of pH and Ionic Strength (IS) on the hydration process the beans were soaked in solutions at different IS and at different pH-constant IS. The kinetic constant for the hydration process and the
water
-holding capacity of the seeds in different conditions were measured.
...
PMID:NMR study of seed hydration: effect of pH and ionic strength on water uptake of soaked cowpeas. 851 74
Male albino (Sprague Dawley) and pigmented (Norwegian
Brown
) rats received 1% 2,5-hexanediol (H) in their drinking
water
for 5 or 8 weeks, respectively. The rats were housed either in 12 h light (average 30 cd/cm2 inside cage) and 12 h darkness (group LH) or in total darkness (group DH). Two control groups (Light only, LC; Darkness only, DC) were studied in parallel under identical conditions. The animals were sacrificed at the end of H exposure or after an ensuing 13-week period without H but under the same lighting conditions. The retinas of albino rats in the LH group showed a reduction (compared to the LC, DH and DC groups) in the number of nuclei per unit area of the outer nuclear layer (ONL; p < 0.05) and degeneration of the outer segment and the inner segment layers (photoreceptor cells). A less pronounced loss of nuclei was seen in the LC group. No decrease in the number of nuclei, or signs of degeneration, were demonstrated in the albino DH or DC groups. Thirteen weeks after exposure to H, the albino LH rats had lost about 50% of the nuclei in the ONL (p < 0.05) and the outer plexiform layer (OPL) had almost disappeared. At the corresponding time, in the pigmented rats the LH and DH groups differed from the LC and DC groups. The degenerative process resulted in no inflammatory changes in the retina. The results imply an interaction exceeding simple summation after exposure to light and H, in destroying photoreceptors and OPL (p < 0.001) in albino rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of exposure to 2,5-hexanediol in light or darkness on the retina of albino and pigmented rats. I. Morphology. 851 84
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