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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
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47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nasal administration of drugs is an administration method which is worthy of attention. In such therapy, local administration should not damage the nasal mucous membranes. In the present study, we conducted an investigation by the tissue culture test method of the functional and morphological effects of new nasal calcitonin preparation, which is being developed as a nasal spray agent for osteoporosis, on the nasal ciliary epithelium. The nasal septal mucous membranes of C3H-strain mice were used, and 5 types of nasal calcitonin preparations with a microcrystalline cellulose base and additives added were used. The various drugs were added to nasal mucous membrane slices in
RPMI
-1640 culture medium; ciliary activity before addition and 0.5, 2, and 4 hr after was electrophotometrically measured; and morphological observation was then carried out by
SEM
. In the various additive groups, virtually no effect on ciliary activity was observed, and the same results were obtained when 3 and 9 times the estimated clinical spray dosage was added. Moreover, in morphological observation by
SEM
, in the various additive groups, no morphological changes in samples of nasal ciliary specimens were observed after 4 hr of culturing at the maximum administered dosage (9 times the estimated clinical spray dosage). Based on these findings, it was concluded that the series of calcitonin preparations with various additives had no hazardous effect on the nasal ciliary epithelium.
...
PMID:Basic study on the effect of nasally administered salmon calcitonin preparation on the nasal ciliary epithelium. 141 74
These authors attempted to test the effect of anticoagulants on lymphocytes viability by reproducing the procedure used for lymphocyte isolation for various immunologic tests in which blood specimens are allowed to stay at room temperature for 2 h before lymphocytes are isolated. Blood was obtained with three different anticoagulants i.e. heparin, citrate, and CPDA (citrate, phosphate, dextrose, and adenine). Plasma was lyophilized and extracted with ethanol. Dried ethanol extracts were suspended in medium (
RPMI
1640 + 10% fetal bovine serum) and incubated with a lymphocyte cell line (MOLT-4). After 24 h of incubation the viability of cells was examined. The following death rates of the cells were observed: heparin -63 +/- 4.6% (mean +/-
SEM
), citrate -27 +/- 6.7%, and CPDA 6.2 +/- 0.6% (P less than 0.0005). A significant correlation was found between these results and changes in the concentrations of free fatty acids in the extracts. These results emphasize the importance of choosing the right anticoagulant when the viability of lymphocytes is obligatory.
...
PMID:Effect of anticoagulants in vitro on the viability of lymphocytes and content of free fatty acids in plasma. 185 56
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is produced by various cell types, including monocytes, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells. IL-6 has also been detected in the urine of normal and renal transplant patients. Thus, the possible production of this cytokine by glomeruli and mesangial cells was investigated. Rat glomeruli were obtained by serial sieving of cortical homogenates of blood-free kidneys. Mesangial cells were obtained from the glomeruli and cultured under standard methods in
RPMI
1640 medium containing 15% fetal calf serum. Glomeruli or confluent monolayers cells were then incubated in
RPMI
1640 for 18 hr, in the presence or not of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or platelet-activating factor (PAF). IL-6 activity was measured using the IL-6-dependent cell line subclone (B 9-9) and expressed with respect to a standard curve established with recombinant IL-6. Glomeruli generate IL-6 upon TNF alpha (100 ng/ml) and LPS (1 microgram/ml), 11,500 +/- 3000 and 22,000 +/- 7500 U/ml, respectively. Nonstimulated mesangial cells produced 50 +/- 5 U/ml (mean +/-
SEM
, n = 4) of IL-6. TNF alpha (1 ng/ml) and LPS (1 microgram/ml) induced the production of 800 +/- 90 and 40,000 +/- 5000 U/ml, respectively (n = 4). In contrast, PAF (0.1 nM-1 microM) did not increase IL-6 production from glomeruli or mesangial cells. These results demonstrate that renal cells spontaneously generate minimal amounts of IL-6 and that this production is significantly increased by TNF alpha or LPS. A synergy between LPS and TNF alpha was induced in glomerular cells with 10 ng/ml of TNF alpha and graded concentrations of LPS. Thus, the production of IL-6 by glomerular cells and its modulation by other cytokines or endotoxins may play a role in the local immunological processes leading to immune glomerular diseases.
...
PMID:Interleukin-6 production by tumor necrosis factor and lipopolysaccharide-stimulated rat renal cells. 219
A thymocyte proliferative response assay was used to compare spontaneous and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced interleukin-1 (IL-1) release by alveolar macrophage (AM) in asthmatic patients and normal subjects. Twelve asthmatic patients and seven nonsmoking healthy subjects underwent a bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). All asthmatic patients had a reversible airway obstruction and 7/12 were allergic. BAL AM were separated by adherence on tissue culture plates in medium
RPMI
-1640 supplemented with antibiotics and fetal calf serum, and were incubated with or without 10 micrograms/ml LPS for 20 h. Free-cell supernatants were tested by C3H/HeJ mice thymocyte proliferative assay. Unstimulated AM supernatant IL-1 activity was significantly higher in asthmatic patients (mean +/-
SEM
: 47.8 +/- 11.9 units/10(6) AM) in comparison with healthy subjects (4.8 +/- 2.3 units/10(6) AM; p less than 0.05, Mann-Whitney U test) but did not significantly differ between allergic (42.2 +/- 15.5 units/10(6) AM) and intrinsic asthmatic patients (55.8 +/- 20.7 units/10(6) AM). For healthy subjects, IL-1 activity was significantly higher in LPS-stimulated AM supernatants (85 +/- 20 units/10(6) AM, p less than 0.05; Mann-Whitney U test) in comparison with unstimulated ones; for asthmatic patients, unstimulated and LPS-stimulated AM supernatant IL-1 activity did not significantly differ. This finding is in accordance with previous work suggesting that AM from asthmatic patients have a weak suppressive activity upon lymphocyte proliferation and emphasize the enhanced AM releasability in asthma.
...
PMID:Interleukin-1 release by alveolar macrophages in asthmatic patients and healthy subjects. 234 Dec 2
beta-Endorphin (beta-EP) and methionine-enkephalin (Met-Enk) have been detected in human follicular fluid in concentrations several times higher than those in plasma. These data stimulated us to study the possible physiological role of ovarian opioids. We, therefore, determined the effects of both beta-EP and Met-Enk, alone or in combination with naloxone, on FSH-induced progesterone (P) secretion by cultured granulosa cells. Granulosa cells were collected from follicular fluid recovered at laparoscopy in seven superovulated women. The cells were preincubated with
RPMI
-1640 medium containing 20% fetal calf serum in 5% CO2 for 48 h, followed by the addition of 100 mU purified FSH and the various test substances for 48 more h. beta-EP (10 nM to 1 pM) had no effect on P secretion either alone or in combination with FSH and/or naloxone. Micro- to picomolar amounts of Met-Enk increased FSH-induced P secretion up to 186.9 +/- 35.1% (+/-
SEM
). Met-Enk had no affect in the absence of FSH, and its action was significantly blunted by the concomitant addition of 10(-5) M naloxone. These data provide evidence for a dose-dependent naloxone-reversible synergistic action of Met-Enk and FSH on P secretion by cultured granulosa cells. This finding supports the hypothesis of the existence of an ovarian opioid system.
...
PMID:Met-enkephalin enhances follicle-stimulating hormone-dependent progesterone production from cultured granulosa cells. 294 12
Normodense human peripheral blood eosinophils were isolated under sterile conditions from the 22/23 and 23/24% interfaces and the cell pellet of metrizamide gradients. After culture for 7 d in
RPMI
media in the presence of 50 pM biosynthetic (recombinant) human granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rH GM-CSF), 43 +/- 7% (mean +/-
SEM
, n = 8) of the cells were viable; in the absence of rH GM-CSF, no eosinophils survived. The rH GM-CSF-mediated viability was concentration dependent; increased survival began at a concentration of 1 pM, a 50% maximal response was attained at approximately 3 pM, and a maximal effect was reached at concentrations of greater than or equal to 10 pM rH GM-CSF. In the presence of rH GM-CSF and mouse 3T3 fibroblasts, 67 +/- 6% (mean +/-
SEM
, n = 8) of the eosinophils survived for 7 d. In a comparative analysis, there was no difference in eosinophil viability after 7 and 14 d (n = 3) in the presence of 50 pM GM-CSF and fibroblasts. Culture with fibroblasts alone did not support eosinophil survival. The addition of fibroblast-conditioned media to rH GM-CSF did not further improve eosinophil viability, indicating a primary role for GM-CSF in supporting these eosinophil cell suspensions ex vivo and a supplementary role for 3T3 fibroblasts. Eosinophils cultured for 7 d localized on density gradient sedimentation at the medium/18, 18/20, and 20/21 interfaces of metrizamide gradients, indicating a change to the hypodense phenotype from their original normodense condition. In addition, the cultured eosinophils generated approximately 2.5-fold more LTC4 than freshly isolated cells when stimulated with the calcium ionophore A23187 and manifested sevenfold greater antibody-dependent killing of S. mansoni larvae than the freshly isolated, normodense cells from the same donor. Thus we demonstrate the rH GM-CSF dependent conversion in vitro of normodense human eosinophils to hypodense cells possessing the augmented biochemical and biological properties characteristic of the hypodense eosinophils associated with a variety of hypereosinophilic syndromes. In addition, these studies provide a culture model of at least 14 d suitable for the further characterization of hypodense eosinophils.
...
PMID:Regulation of human eosinophil viability, density, and function by granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor in the presence of 3T3 fibroblasts. 311 Mar 47
In the animal model of tyrosinemia II only corneas from tyrosine(tyr)-fed rats produce chemoattractants in organ culture. To study the role of neutrophils (PMNs) in production of these chemoattractants, leukocytes (WBCs) were depleted using i.p. cyclophosphamide (CP). Saline (SAL)-treated rats maintained 18,375 +/- 894 WBC/mm3 (mean +/-
SEM
) with 4168 +/- 424 PMNs. Rats receiving CP (150 mg/kg day 0, 75 mg/kg day 4) has 1565 +/- 170 WBC (565 +/- 129 PMN) on day 3, and 398 +/- 68 WBC (19 +/- 5 PMN) on day 8. Rats ate a low-protein +/- 5% tyr diet on days 4-8. Only SAL-treated tyr-fed rats developed plaque-like gray epithelial lesions; histopathology showed corneal epithelial necrosis, stromal edema, and epithelial and stromal PMN infiltration. Control and CP-treated tyr-fed rat corneas showed no inflammation. On day 8 corneas were cultured in
RPMI
1640 + 5% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum. After 3 days, supernatants were assayed for chemotactic activity (leading front method); data were expressed as the percentage of peritoneal PMN migration relative to 5% zymosan-activated rat serum. The mean total migration toward 75% supernatant from SAL-treated, tyr-fed rat corneas was 79%, whereas migration toward corneal supernatants from controls and CP-treated tyr-fed rats ranged from 42-48%. Corneal extracts were assayed for proteolytic activity. WBC depletion prevented the increase in cathepsin B- and D-like activities present in tyr-fed corneas, suggesting that PMNs were a major source of these enzymes. The data suggest that WBC depletion reduces both corneal inflammation in vivo and the production of chemotactic activity by tyr-fed corneas in culture.
...
PMID:Role of leukocytes in ocular inflammation of tyrosinemia II. 351 21
In vitro organ culture of the hamster's trachea was improved and applied to a carcinogenesis research. The rotary culture enabled explants of tracheal epithelium to survive more than 8 weeks. The study was composed of 2 kinds of culture; untreated and treated with carcinogens. In the untreated culture, Eagle MEM medium had the same culture effect as
RPMI
1640 medium. With prolongation of culture time (particularly longer than 5 weeks), irreversible degenerative changes appeared in epithelial cells. Culture for 4 weeks was usually thought to be appropriate for experimental research. In the treated culture, the effect of benzo-(a) pyrene (B(a)P) and B(a)P + cigarette smoking condensate-neutral fraction (CSC-NF) on tracheal epithelium was investigated with light and electron microscopies (TEM and
SEM
) and autoradiography. Atypical hyperplasia with or without lesions suggesting carcinoma in situ was induced by B(a)P + CSC-NF more evidently and frequently than by B(a)P alone. The present findings corroborated the cocarcinogenetic effect of CSC-NF.
...
PMID:In vitro alterations of tracheal epithelium of hamsters by carcinogens in organ culture. 361 62
A protein fraction (60-F), obtained from cell-free extract of living hemolytic streptococcus, Su-strain, by 50-60% saturation with ammonium sulfate, inhibited the de novo synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins in Ehrlich ascites carcinoma (EAC) cells. 60-F released RNA but not DNA from EAC cells. This cytotoxic or cytolytic effect of 60-F was substantiated morphologically by scanning and transmission electron microscopic (
SEM
and TEM) observations, showing that 60-F induced cellular changes such as a loss of microvilli, bleb formation, cell deformity and partial gap of cell membrane in EAC cells. In addition, it was found that 60-F was more stable in
RPMI
-1640 medium supplemented with fetal calf serum than in other various media examined and was sensitive to temperature, pH changes and trypsin digestion.
...
PMID:Biochemical and electron microscopic observations of cytotoxic effect of a fraction from hemolytic streptococcus on Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells. 618 69
We studied insulin degradation in human cultured lymphocytes (
RPMI
-1788 line) with a small but significant number of lysosomes under the electron microscope. Insulin degradation determined by the TCA solubility method was 64.6 +/- 1.2% (mean +/-
SEM
) at a trace concentration after the incubation with 2.0 x 10(7) cells (4.0 x 10(7) cells/ml) for 60 min at 37 degrees C. Because insulin degradation was 54.6 +/- 7.0% in the cell-free buffer in which 2.0 x 10(7) cells were previously incubated, most of the insulin was degraded outside of the cells. Gel filtration of the radioactive materials also revealed that most of the labeled insulin in the medium was degraded, and the main peak of the cell-associated radioactivities was intact labeled insulin. Chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent, failed not only to increase insulin binding but also to decrease the insulin degradation. Other lysosomal protease inhibitors, antipain and leupeptin had also no effect on insulin degradation. In contrast, bacitracin (500 micrograms/ml) significantly decreased the insulin degradation analyzed by TCA solubility, receptor-rebinding, and the gel filtration method. These results suggest that insulin molecules are degraded by the enzymes leaked from the cells. The non-receptor mediated process, which is the bacitracin sensitive pathway, might be a general mechanism of insulin degradation in human cultured lymphocytes in vitro.
...
PMID:Evidence of the lack of receptor-mediated insulin degradation in human cultured lymphocytes (RPMI-1788 line). 636 12
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