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Query: UMLS:C0162871 (
abdominal aortic aneurysm
)
8,664
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to elucidate the involvement of adhesion mechanisms in the process of megakaryocyte-dependent fibroblast growth, we applied BSA-coupled polymers of
glucose
, galactose, fucose, mannose, and several lectins (
AAA
, LCA, LTA, UEA-I) to cocultures of CD61 -positive (CD61+)/MACS-enriched megakaryocytes and human bone marrow fibroblasts. Fibroblast monocultures served as controls. After 6 days,
glucose
, as well as galactose-treated cultures showed a significant reduction of fibroblast growth in cocultures and fibroblast monocultures. In contrast, application of mannose caused no reducing effect on fibroblast numbers. Administration of fucose,
AAA
, LTA or UEA-I revealed a strong impairment of fibroblast growth in the megakaryocyte-fibroblast cocultures. Adhesion experiments using MACS-enriched, fluorescein-labelled megakaryocytes cultured in the presence of carbohydrates and lectins on a near-confluent layer of fibroblasts were additionally performed. Following fucose-BSA, alpha Fuc-1,2Gal beta-HSA or UEA-I treatment a significant reduction of megakaryocyte adhesion to the fibroblast layer could be observed. In the case of
AAA
a weak impairment of megakaryocyte adhesion could be noticed. Selective pretreatment of either fibroblasts or megakaryocytes with fucose-BSA or alpha Fuc-1,2Gal beta-HSA was consistent with the finding of a prominent involvement of fucosylated residues located on megakaryocytes in this interaction. In conclusion, our studies are in keeping with the assumption that fucosylated and fucose-binding structures are playing a key role in adhesion mechanisms between megakaryocytes and fibroblasts and thus influence significantly the megakaryocyte-dependent growth of bone marrow fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Interactions between endogeneous lectins and fucosylated oligosaccharides in megakaryocyte-dependent fibroblast growth of the normal bone marrow. 884 95
Kir6.2 is an inwardly rectifying potassium channel that is expressed in pancreatic beta-cells and cardiac and skeletal muscle. Expressed together with the high-affinity sulphonylurea receptor, it reconstitutes a sulphonylurea- and also ATP-sensitive potassium channel resembling the native beta-cell channel. The objective of this study was to search for mutations in the Kir6.2 gene that might be associated with NIDDM or related to altered insulin secretion, insulin action, or
glucose
metabolism in healthy subjects. Using polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis (PCR-SSCP) on genomic DNA from 69 Danish NIDDM patients and 66 matched control subjects, we report the finding of three missense polymorphisms in otherwise conserved codons and three silent polymorphisms in the gene encoding Kir6.2: codon 23 (GAG/AAG), Glu-->Lys; codon 190 (GCT/GCC), Ala-->Ala; codon 267 (CTC/CTG), Leu-->Leu; codon 270 (CTG/GTG), Leu-->Val; codon 337 (ATC/GTC), Ile-->Val; codon 381 (AAG/
AAA
), Lys-->Lys. The codon 23 and codon 337 amino acid polymorphisms were always coupled. The allelic frequencies of the polymorphisms were similar in NIDDM patients and control subjects. The amino acid polymorphisms were not associated with altered insulin secretion after intravenous
glucose
or tolbutamide injections or with altered
glucose
effectiveness in a phenotype study of 346 young healthy subjects. However, carriers of the maximal load of amino acid variants, the compound homozygous codon 23/337 and heterozygous codon 270, had on average a 62% higher insulin sensitivity index (P = 0.006), compared with noncarriers. We conclude that a combination of common Kir6.2 amino acid variants may contribute to the genetic background behind the large variation of the insulin sensitivity index in the general population.
...
PMID:Amino acid polymorphisms in the ATP-regulatable inward rectifier Kir6.2 and their relationships to glucose- and tolbutamide-induced insulin secretion, the insulin sensitivity index, and NIDDM. 903 10
Collections of serous fluid surrounding prosthetic grafts can be caused by infection or transudation of serum, and making the distinction is often troublesome. Bergamini and his colleagues developed a dog model of low-grade prosthetic graft contamination with Staphylococcus epidermatis. All animals developed evidence of graft infection, and 13 of 18 dogs developed a fluid-filled perigraft cyst. Signs of systemic infection, however, were present in only 1 animal, and the Staphylococcus epidermatis study strain was isolated from the tissue surrounding the graft in only 1 dog. The authors had to disrupt the biofilm to achieve positive cultures in 14 of 18 animals. This animal model seemed to conform to clinical experience and placed great emphasis on the role of indolent infections in the pathogenesis of perigraft fluid collection. It is equally clear that perigraft fluid collections may result from transudation of fluid through the prosthetic surfaces, which act similar to a dialysis membrane under certain circumstances. Noninfectious seromas are characterized generally by the accumulation of clear serous fluid with a protein and
glucose
content of serum and the lack of acute inflammatory cells when the sediment is examined. The need to distinguish between these 2 forms of fluid accumulation became important in the treatment of a 62-year-old man who was seen 2 1/2 years after the repair of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
with an aortobiiliac stretch polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) prosthesis. There was no evidence of infection, and there was a 12 cm cystic mass surrounding a patent PTFE prosthesis.
...
PMID:The management of massive ultrafiltration distending the aneurysm sac after abdominal aortic aneurysm repair with a polytetrafluoroethylene aortobiiliac graft. 973 68
L6 myoblasts stably transfected with a GLUT4 cDNA harboring an exofacial myc epitope tag (L6-GLUT4myc myoblasts) were used to study the role of protein kinase B alpha (PKBalpha)/Akt1 in the insulin-induced translocation of GLUT4 to the cell surface. Surface GLUT4myc was detected by immunofluorescent labeling of the myc epitope in nonpermeabilized cells. Insulin induced a marked translocation of GLUT4myc to the plasma membrane within 20 min. This was prevented by transient transfection of a dominant inhibitory construct of phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase (Deltap85alpha). Transiently transfected cells were identified by cotransfection of green fluorescent protein. A constitutively active PKBalpha, created by fusion of a viral Gag protein at its N terminus (GagPKB), increased the cell surface density of GLUT4myc compared to that of neighboring nontransfected cells. A kinase-inactive, phosphorylation-deficient PKBalpha/Akt1 construct with the mutations K179A (substitution of alanine for the lysine at position 179), T308A, and S473A (
AAA
-PKB) behaved as a dominant-negative inhibitor of insulin-dependent activation of cotransfected wild-type hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged PKB. Furthermore,
AAA
-PKB markedly inhibited the insulin-induced phosphorylation of cotransfected BAD, demonstrating inhibition of the endogenous PKB/Akt. Under the same conditions,
AAA
-PKB almost entirely blocked the insulin-dependent increase in surface GLUT4myc. PKBalpha with alanine substitutions T308A and S473A (AA-PKB) or K179A (A-PKB) alone was a less potent inhibitor of insulin-dependent activation of wild-type HA-PKB or GLUT4myc translocation than was
AAA
-PKB. Cotransfection of
AAA
-PKB with a fourfold DNA excess of HA-PKB rescued insulin-stimulated GLUT4myc translocation.
AAA
-PKB did not prevent actin bundling (membrane ruffling), though this response was PI 3-kinase dependent. Therefore, it is unlikely that
AAA
-PKB acted by inhibiting PI 3-kinase signaling. These results outline an important role for PKBalpha/Akt1 in the stimulation of
glucose
transport by insulin in muscle cells in culture.
...
PMID:Protein kinase B/Akt participates in GLUT4 translocation by insulin in L6 myoblasts. 1033 Jan 41
Abdominal aortic reconstruction surgery in patients with arteriosclerosis obliterans usually has been carried out under standard intratracheal anaesthesia and only a some few centres have included continuous suprameningeal anaesthesia. On the basis of that scanty data it seems that combined intratracheal and suprameningeal anaesthesia might have some advantages over the standard anaesthesia owing to reducing general symptoms of perioperative stress. The aim of this study was to investigate the operative stress during abdominal aortic reconstruction in patients with arteriosclerosis obliterans as dependent on a type of anaesthesia: standard intratracheal and combined-intratracheal supported by suprameningeal doses of anaesthetics. The evaluation of a magnitude of perioperative stress was based on determinations standard markers of stress response in serum: cortisol, adrenaline, noradrenaline, somatotropic hormone and
glucose
as well. The assessment of the stress condition during abdominal aortic reconstruction in patients with arteriosclerosis obliterans might be of a great importance as most of the patients suffer from ischaemic heart disease. Thus, the choice of an optimal perioperative treatment might improve recovery process. Elective abdominal aortic reconstruction with prosthesis implantation were performed in the year 1995 in 42 patients--8 with
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(
AAA
) and 34 with aorto-iliac occlusion (AIO) divided at random in 2 comparable groups according to a type of anaesthesia: I--standard, general anaesthesia supported by myorelaxants and by analgetic drugs given intravenously in a postoperative period, II--combined anaesthesia with a standard general anaesthesia fortified by subarachnoid anaesthesia (0.5% bupivacaine with morphine) reaching the T4-T5 dermatome. The case protocol included: duration of surgery, duration of aorta clamping, type of prosthesis, blood loss, fluid balance, serum level of cortisol, adrenaline, noradrenaline, human growth hormone,
glucose
, blood morphology, and total creatine kinase activity. Analysing of mean levels of stress markers has shown that they have been lower in combined anaesthesia. It seems that combined anaesthesia is better than the standard anaesthesia owing to reducing general symptoms of perioperative stress.
...
PMID:[Operative stress during aorto-bifemoral reconstruction as dependent on a type of anesthesia]. 1107 Jul 62
Adiponectin is secreted by adipose cells and mimics many metabolic actions of insulin. However, mechanisms by which adiponectin acts are poorly understood. The vascular action of insulin to stimulate endothelial production of nitric oxide (NO), leading to vasodilation and increased blood flow is an important component of insulin-stimulated whole body
glucose
utilization. Therefore, we hypothesized that adiponectin may also stimulate production of NO in endothelium. Bovine aortic endothelial cells in primary culture loaded with the NO-specific fluorescent dye 4,5-diaminofluorescein diacetate (DAF-2 DA) were treated with lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) (a calcium-releasing agonist) or adiponectin (10 microg/ml bacterially produced full-length adiponectin). LPA treatment increased production of NO by approximately 4-fold. Interestingly, adiponectin treatment significantly increased production of NO by approximately 3-fold. Preincubation of cells with wortmannin (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor) blocked only adiponectin- but not LPA-mediated production of NO. Using phospho-specific antibodies, we observed that either adiponectin or insulin treatment (but not LPA treatment) caused phosphorylation of both Akt at Ser473 and endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) at Ser1179 that was inhibitable by wortmannin. We next transfected bovine aortic endothelial cells with dominant-inhibitory mutants of Akt (Akt-
AAA
) or AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) (AMPKK45R). Neither mutant affected production of NO in response to LPA treatment. Importantly, only AMPKK45R, but not Akt-
AAA
, caused a significant partial inhibition of NO production in response to adiponectin. Moreover, AMPK-K45R inhibited phosphorylation of eNOS at Ser1179 in response to adiponectin but not in response to insulin. We conclude that adiponectin has novel vascular actions to directly stimulate production of NO in endothelial cells using phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-dependent pathways involving phosphorylation of eNOS at Ser1179 by AMPK. Thus, the effects of adiponectin to augment metabolic actions of insulin in vivo may be due, in part, to vasodilator actions of adiponectin.
...
PMID:Adiponectin stimulates production of nitric oxide in vascular endothelial cells. 1294 90
ATP-sensitive K+ channels (K(ATP) channels) control electrical activity in beta-cells and therefore are key players in excitation-secretion coupling. Partial suppression of beta-cell K(ATP) channels in transgenic (
AAA
) mice causes hypersecretion of insulin and enhanced
glucose
tolerance, whereas complete suppression of these channels in Kir6.2 knockout (KO) mice leads to hyperexcitability, but mild glucose intolerance. To test the interplay of hyperexcitability and dietary stress, we subjected
AAA
and KO mice to a high-fat diet. After 3 months on the diet, both
AAA
and KO mice converted to an undersecreting and markedly
glucose
-intolerant phenotype. Although Kir6.2 is expressed in multiple tissues, its primary functional consequence in both
AAA
and KO mice is enhanced beta-cell electrical activity. The results of our study provide evidence that, when combined with dietary stress, this hyperexcitability is a causal diabetic factor. We propose an "inverse U" model for the response to enhanced beta-cell excitability: the expected initial hypersecretion can progress to undersecretion and
glucose
-intolerance, either spontaneously or in response to dietary stress.
...
PMID:Diet-induced glucose intolerance in mice with decreased beta-cell ATP-sensitive K+ channels. 1556 46
The function of the peroxisomes was examined in the pathogenic basidiomycete Cryptococcus neoformans. Recent studies reveal the glyoxylate pathway is required for virulence of diverse microbial pathogens of plants and animals. One exception is C. neoformans, in which isocitrate lyase (encoded by ICL1) was previously shown not to be required for virulence, and here this was extended to exclude also a role for malate synthase (encoded by MLS1). The role of peroxisomes, in which the glyoxylate pathway enzymes are localized in many organisms, was examined by mutation of two genes (PEX1 and PEX6) encoding
AAA
(ATPases associated with various cellular activities)-type proteins required for peroxisome formation. The pex1 and pex6 deletion mutants were unable to localize the fluorescent DsRED-SKL protein to peroxisomal punctate structures, in contrast to wild-type cells. pex1 and pex6 single mutants and a pex1 pex6 double mutant exhibit identical phenotypes, including abolished growth on fatty acids but no growth difference on acetate. Because both icl1 and mls1 mutants are unable to grow on acetate as the sole carbon source, these findings demonstrate that the glyoxylate pathway can function efficiently outside the peroxisome in C. neoformans. The pex1 mutant exhibits wild-type virulence in a murine inhalation model and in an insect host, demonstrating that peroxisomes are not required for virulence under these conditions. An unusual phenotype of the pex1 and pex6 mutants was that they grew poorly with
glucose
as the carbon source, but nearly wild type with galactose, which suggested impaired hexokinase function and that C. neoformans peroxisomes might function analogously to the glycosomes of the trypanosomid parasites. Deletion of the hexokinase HXK2 gene reduced growth in the presence of
glucose
and suppressed the growth defect of the pex1 mutant on
glucose
. The hexokinase 2 protein of C. neoformans contains a predicted peroxisome targeting signal (type 2) motif; however, Hxk2 fused to fluorescent proteins was not localized to peroxisomes. Thus, we hypothesize that
glucose
or glycolytic metabolites are utilized in the peroxisome by an as yet unidentified enzyme or regulate a pathway required by the fungus in the absence of peroxisomes.
...
PMID:Peroxisome function regulates growth on glucose in the basidiomycete fungus Cryptococcus neoformans. 1704 Nov 84
Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-modulated (HCN) channels mediate the pacemaker current (Ih or If) observed in electrically rhythmic cardiac and neuronal cells. Here we describe a hyperpolarization-activated time-dependent cationic current, beta-Ih, in pancreatic beta-cells. Transcripts for HCN1-4 were detected by RT-PCR and quantitative PCR in rat islets and MIN6 mouse insulinoma cells. beta-Ih in rat beta-cells and MIN6 cells displayed biophysical and pharmacological properties similar to those of HCN currents in cardiac and neuronal cells. Stimulation of cAMP production with forskolin/3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (50 microM) or dibutyryl-cAMP (1 mM) caused a significant rightward shift in the midpoint activation potential of beta-Ih, whereas expression of either specific small interfering (si)RNA against HCN2 (siHCN2b) or a dominant-negative HCN channel (HCN1-
AAA
) caused a near-complete inhibition of time-dependent beta-Ih. However, expression of siHCN2b in MIN6 cells had no affect on
glucose
-stimulated insulin secretion under normal or cAMP-stimulated conditions. Blocking beta-Ih in intact rat islets also did not affect membrane potential behavior at basal
glucose
concentrations. Taken together, our experiments provide the first evidence for functional expression of HCN channels in the pancreatic beta-cell.
...
PMID:Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated channels in pancreatic beta-cells. 1715 21
Dysregulation of the proteasome has been documented in a variety of human diseases such as Alzheimer, muscle atrophy, cataracts etc. Proteolytic activity of 26 S proteasome is ATP- and ubiquitin-dependent. O-GlcNAcylation of Rpt2, one of the
AAA
ATPases in the 19 S regulatory cap, shuts off the proteasome through the inhibition of ATPase activity. Thus, through control of the flux of
glucose
into O-GlcNAc, the function of the proteasome is coupled to
glucose
metabolism. In the present study we found another metabolic control of the proteasome via cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). Contrary to O-Glc-NAcylation, PKA activated proteasomes both in vitro and in vivo in association with the phosphorylation at Ser(120) of another
AAA
ATPase subunit, Rpt6. Mutation of Ser(120) to Ala blocked proteasome function. The stimulatory effect of PKA and the phosphorylation of Rpt6 were reversible by protein phosphatase 1 gamma. Thus, hormones using the PKA system can also regulate proteasomes often in concert with
glucose
metabolism. This finding might lead to novel strategies for the treatment of proteasome-related diseases.
...
PMID:Proteasome function is regulated by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase through phosphorylation of Rpt6. 1756 87
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