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Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (
PBS
)
9,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A method of separating lymphoid cells from solid mouse mammary tumors was developed and evaluated. In this method the tumors are digested with 0.01% collagenase, 0.01% DNAase, and 0.025% trypsin in Dulbecco's
PBS
into suspensions of cells with a viability of 90%. The suspensions are fractionated on a continuous gradient of Ficoll in tissue culture medium. In model experiments this gradient was found to separate, cleanly, admixed cells of an established mammary tumor cell line and dissociated
thymus
glands. Recovery rates were 50% for the tumor cells and 80% for the thymocytes. The preparation of the cell suspensions and the gradient separation procedure are not harmful to the cells as indicated by trypan blue exclusion and the ability to grow in cell culture.
...
PMID:In situ lymphoid cells of mouse mammary tumors. I. Development and evaluation of a method for the separation of lymphoid cells from mouse mammary tumors. 65 81
When mice, previously given oral inoculation with viable oncospheres of the heterologous cestode species (Hymenolepis diminuta, H. microstoma, Taenia taeniaeformis) and the homologous one (H. nana), were challenged with oncospheres of H. nana 4 days after the primary inoculation, they showed strong and complete resistance to H. nana challenge, respectively. However, the resistance was not evoked in mice given either infective eggs of Toxocara canis or non-viable oncospheres of all cestode species examined. Congenitally athymic nude mice given viable oncospheres did not show any resistance to H. nana either. Eosinophil infiltration around cysticercoids of H. nana in the intestinal villi appeared to be more prominent in mice previously given viable oncospheres of H. diminuta than in mice given non-viable oncospheres or
PBS
only. Some of the eosinophils in the villus harboring cysticercoid(s) of H. nana invaded the epithelia in the former, whereas all eosinophils remained in the lamina propria in the latter. There was almost no eosinophil infiltration in nude mice. Microscopic observations revealed that oncospheres of H. diminuta, which require beetles as the intermediate host like H. microstoma, could invade the mouse intestinal tissue. Therefore, it is strongly suggested that the strong cross resistance to H. nana in mice, induced by oncospheres of all heterologous cestode species, is
thymus
-dependent and due to oncospheral invasion into the intestinal tissue of mice.
...
PMID:Hymenolepis nana: immunity against oncosphere challenge in mice previously given viable or non-viable oncospheres of H. nana, H. diminuta, H. microstoma and Taenia taeniaeformis. 186 58
The developing immune system of late stage embryos and neonates may be particularly susceptible to the toxicity of drugs and environmental contaminants due to high rates of cell proliferation and ongoing processes of differentiation. We have developed a cytogenetic assay to study the mechanisms of the selective targeting of cyclophosphamide (CP) to B lymphocytes compared to T lymphocytes in chicken embryos at days 18-19 of incubation. 5-Bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU; 3 mg/200 microliters
PBS
; two doses; 3-h interval) was pipetted onto the inner shell membrane in order to label DNA of replicating lymphoid cells. CP (1.25-40 mg/kg) was injected 1 h after the initial BrdU dose, and the embryos were exposed to colcemid (10 micrograms/100 microliters H2O) at hour 17. Three hours later, the bursa and
thymus
were removed, and the lymphocytes were swollen in hypotonic solution, fixed, and processed through a fluorescence-plus-Giemsa technique to differentiate sister chromatids. Based on reductions in mitotic indices, B cells were approximately 213 times more susceptible than T cells to the cytotoxicity of CP. Because the mitotic indices of B and T cells were comparable (21.3 +/- 3.7%, vs. 25.5 +/- 6.9%), the differential toxicity cannot be ascribed to greater numbers of B cells being in mitosis. CP induced a dose-related increase in the sister-chromatid exchange frequency in B cells of up to 10.4-fold above controls, representing one of the most sensitive vertebrate systems for detecting the genotoxicity of CP. The average generation time was slowed from 9.8 +/- 0.3 h in control B cells to 19.4 +/- 0.9 h in embryos exposed to 10 mg CP/kg. Furthermore, an analysis of control SCE data from 56 embryos indicated that there was a significant overdispersion of B cells exhibiting relatively high SCE frequencies compared to a Poisson distribution. Our data indicate that the chicken embryo in the late developmental stage is a good model for detecting the presence and selective toxicity of drugs and environmental toxins in differentiating B and T lymphocytes in vivo.
...
PMID:A cytogenetic approach for detecting the selective toxicity of drugs in avian embryonic B and T lymphocytes. 192 42
Osteocalcin or bone GLA protein (BGP) is found at high levels in only two tissues, the extracellular matrix of bone and dentine. Tissue culture experiments have demonstrated that BGP is synthesized by two osteoblastic osteosarcoma cell lines (ROS 2/3 and 17/2) and by normal osteoblastic cells in primary culture. BGP was not found in rat cartilage nor in liver, kidney, lung, spleen, brain, heart,
thymus
, skeletal muscle. In this study secretion of BGP was assayed by RIA in the supernatants of 48-hour cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes or monocytes. Lymphocyte cultures were carried out using RPMI-1640 supplemented with L-glutamine and antibiotics at the concentration of 1 x 10(6) cells/ml and activated by PHA (10 ng/ml). Peripheral blood monocytes were purified by adherence to plastic Petri dishes and treated with cold
PBS
supplemented with EDTA. Monocytes were cultured as previously described and stimulated with LPS (50 micrograms/ml). Cell-free supernatants were obtained by centrifugation and stored at -20 degrees C, until the BGP assay was performed. The authors did not observe secretion of detectable amounts of BGP in the supernatants of short-term lymphocyte or monocyte cultures. These data indicate that circulating mononuclear cells are not involved in BGP synthesis and secretion.
...
PMID:Mononuclear cells are not involved in BGP synthesis and secretion. 206 4
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), also called cyclin, was purified from
PBS
extract of rabbit
thymus
by using a combination of ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-Sephacel, HPLC ion exchange, and HPLC gel filtration column chromatography. PCNA was purified more than 600 times and was analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblotting. SDS-PAGE showed that a 36 kD protein was selectively isolated in this purification process, and this protein was identified as PCNA by immunoblotting. Other previously identified nuclear antigens, Sm, nRNP, SS-A/Ro, SS-B/La, histone, and DNA, were not detected in this preparation by counterimmunoelectrophoresis and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Purified PCNA was used as an antigen to develop ELISA for rapid and specific detection of anti-PCNA in human sera. For further purification, the 36 kD band was electrophoretically eluted from SDS gel slices. The amino acid composition and the first 25 residues from the N-terminus of the protein were determined by using electroeluted PCNA. This amino acid sequence was found to be unique and showed little sequence homology with existent proteins in the protein identification resources databank.
...
PMID:Purification and N-terminal amino acid sequence of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)/cyclin and development of ELISA for anti-PCNA antibodies. 286 7
Four groups of three C57/BL6J mice were each given a single i.p. injection of Cyclosporine A (CYA) 3 mg/kg, containing 3H-CYA with 10 microCi activity. The groups were sacrificed after 5 minutes and at 6, 12 and 24 hours after dosing, respectively. They were immediately flushed with
PBS
to clear the organs of blood, and the CYA content of blood, kidney, liver, brain,
thymus
, spleen, heart, lung, muscle and femur were measured by scintillation counting. Hemoglobin concentration in each tissue was negligible. Tissue uptake was expressed as the ratio of activity per gm tissue/activity per ml blood. Organs susceptible to CYA toxicity, e.g., brain, kidney and liver demonstrated retention of CYA relative to blood, as did
thymus
and spleen. Resistant organs, i.e., heart, lung and muscle did not. The pattern of CYA distribution and clearance corresponded with the known susceptibility of organs to CYA toxicity. CYA kinetics could therefore contribute to its toxicity by means of increased retention and/or accumulation in susceptible organs.
...
PMID:Tissue distribution of cyclosporine A in the mouse: a clue to toxicity? 370 33
The effect of cytokine treatment on the in vivo maturation and Ig isotype switching of human B cells was studied in a modified SCID-hu mouse model. SCID mice, subcutaneously cotransplanted with small fragments of fetal human
thymus
and bone (SCID-hu BM/T mice) generated all human leukocyte lineages including T and B lymphocytes, macrophages, and granulocytes. All SCID-hu BM/T mice spontaneously produced human IgM and IgG, whereas IgE and IgA were detected in 37 and 80% of the mice, respectively, indicating that productive human T-B cell interactions resulting in Ig isotype switching occur in these mice. Administration of IL-4 to SCID-hu BM/T mice enhanced human B cell maturation, as judged by the increase in the percentages of CD45+, CD19+ bone marrow B cells expressing CD20, CD23, CD40, sIgM, and sIgD. Furthermore, these cells were also functionally more mature because they spontaneously produced human IgG/IgG4 in vitro and could be induced to secrete human IgE by addition of anti-CD40 mAb alone. In contrast, B cells isolated from
PBS
-treated mice only produced significant Ig levels after stimulation with anti-CD40 mAb in the presence of exogenous IL-4. IL-4 administration also induced human IgE synthesis in 44% of the mice, which had no serum IgE before treatment. More importantly, ongoing human IgE synthesis in SCID-hu BM/T mice was suppressed by > 90% following administration of an IL-4 mutant protein, which acts as an IL-4 and IL-13 receptor antagonist. These results suggest that IL-4/IL-13 receptor antagonists have potential clinical utility in treating human atopic diseases associated with enhanced IgE production.
...
PMID:IL-4 induces human B cell maturation and IgE synthesis in SCID-hu mice. Inhibition of ongoing IgE production by in vivo treatment with an IL-4/IL-13 receptor antagonist. 759 71
Based on previous studies showing that allogeneic islets transplanted into the
thymus
can induce donor-specific unresponsiveness, we investigated in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse the effect of intrathymic islet isografts on preventing autoimmunity directed against pancreatic islet antigens. Islets prepared from newborn NOD pancreata were injected into one lobe of the
thymus
of 10- to 11-day-old female NOD mice (experimental group) with no immunosuppression.
PBS
alone was used for injection into age- and sex-matched litter mates (control group). Thirty of 32 (94%) experimental mice remained normoglycemic for over 30 weeks. Well-formed islets with no indication of insulitis were found in the
thymus
of these 30 mice, whereas no grafted islets were found in the 2 mice that became diabetic at 17 and 19 weeks, respectively (technical failures). In the control group, 10 of 32 (31%) mice became diabetic between 20 and 29 weeks. This diabetic incidence was, however, lower than that in our colony female mice. In the pancreas of experimental mice, 90.9% of islets were free of infiltrates, whereas only 13.1% of islets were intact in control mice. The spleens of 30-week-old experimental mice contained a slightly higher percentage of CD8+ T cells (P < 0.05) than those of control mice. Cyclophosphamide injections at 30 weeks induced diabetes in 4 of 9 experimental mice. The 2 lines of evidence, (1) marked reduction in insulitis of intrathymic islet-grafted mice and (2) induction of diabetes after treatment with cyclophosphamide, suggest that both thymic clonal deletion and peripheral tolerance may play a role in preventing diabetes.
...
PMID:Prevention of overt diabetes and insulitis by intrathymic injection of syngeneic islets in newborn nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. 821 62
Anti-SSB antibodies were measured by ELISA in patients with various kinds of connective tissue diseases using SSB antigen purified from fresh rabbit
thymus
. The SSB antigen reacted with anti-SSB standard serum, and the positive rates in SS, SLE, RA,
PBS
and MCTD were 55.1%, 48.3%, 32.8%, 30.8% and 26.3%, respectively. The titers of anti-SSB antibodies were higher in SS and SLE patients than in other connective tissue disease patients. However, 10% of normal individuals were found to have anti-SSB antibodies with low titers. The anti-SSB antibodies detected were mainly of IgG isotype. Preliminary analysis of clinical data showed no relationship between anti-SSB and systemic involvement in SS.
...
PMID:Detection of anti-SSB antibodies in patients with rheumatic diseases. 827 26
Inflammatory cytokines play a key role in the myocardial injury produced by viral myocarditis. Although interleukin-6 (IL-6) reportedly possesses antiviral properties, its effect in viral myocarditis is unclear. To investigate the role of IL-6 in viral myocarditis induced by encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV) in mice, we evaluated (1) the survival rate following IL-6 administration, (2) the viral titer in the heart, (3) viral replication in the heart by in situ hybridization, (4) histopathological changes using immunohistochemical staining, (5) neutralizing antibody against EMCV, (6) circulating interferon and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), (7) viral suppression in vitro by IL-6, and (8) natural killer (NK)-cell activity. Eight-week-old C3H/HeJ mice were injected intraperitoneally with EMCV (day 0) and were also injected subcutaneously twice daily for 4 consecutive days with 10 micrograms/0.1 mL of human IL-6 on day -4 (group A), day 0 (group B), or day +4 (group D) for 4 days. As a control, 0.1 mL
PBS
instead of IL-6 was injected on day 0 for 4 days (group C). Certain mice were killed on day 4. The myocardial virus titers, viral replication in situ, and NK-cell activity in the spleen were determined. Decreased viral titer and viral replication in the heart reduced the titer of circulating TNF-alpha, and lower NK-cell activity was observed in group B versus group C (control group). The titer of neutralizing antibodies against EMCV was significantly (P < .05) increased in group B compared with group C. The remaining mice were killed on days 10 and 30 after infection. The ratio of heart weight (HW) to body weight (BW) and myocardial injury in group B were reduced versus group C on days 10 and 30. The HW of group B on day 30 did not differ from the normal control group. The ratio of splenic weight to BW and the ratio of thymic weight to BW of group B increased on day 10, with expanded follicles observed in the spleen and enlargement of the medulla observed in the
thymus
. Immunohistochemical study revealed an increased percentage of macrophages in the heart and spleen of group B. In summary, IL-6 reduces myocardial damage in mice with viral myocarditis. Modification of immune responses together with reduction in viral replication appears to be the mechanism of the IL-6 effect. Although IL-6 is likely important in the process of viral antigen presentation, early activation of immune responses and attenuation of viral replication appear most significant, as reflected in the limited time window during which IL-6 is effective in myocarditis.
...
PMID:Modification of viral myocarditis in mice by interleukin-6. 862 Jun 5
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