Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (PBS)
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In previous studies we have induced TSH binding-inhibiting Igs and thyroiditis in BALB/c mice and thyroiditis alone in NOD mice immunized with the extracellular domain of the human TSH receptor produced as a maltose-binding protein fusion in bacteria (MBP-ECD). In this study, our aim was to determine whether thyroiditis can be transferred to syngeneic naive recipients with in vivo and in vitro primed spleen cells. Groups of 6-week-old female BALB/c and NOD mice were immunized ip with MBP-ECD in an adjuvant of alum plus attenuated Bordetella pertussis toxin, on days 0 (100 micrograms), 14, 28, and 35 (50 micrograms). These mice (in vivo primed) and nontreated age- and sex-matched controls were killed on day 43, and their spleens and thyroids were removed, the latter to verify the induction of thyroiditis in the antigen-treated mice. Splenocytes were disrupted mechanically and cultured at 3 x 10(6)/ml in RPMI supplemented with 20 micrograms/ml MBP-ECD for 48-64 h. After this in vitro priming, some of the splenocytes received no further treatment, but a portion was fractionated into a CD4+-enriched population. Groups of 6-week-old female BALB/c and NOD mice were immunized into the tail vein with 100-200 microliters PBS containing approximately 10(5)-10(7) unfractionated T cells (both in vivo primed and not) and CD4+-enriched (in vivo primed) splenocyte populations. The animals were killed 16 days later, and their thyroids were examined histologically and by immunohistochemistry. In addition, levels of antibody to the MBP-ECD priming antigen were assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in the antigen- and spleen-treated mice. In the donor animals, in vivo priming resulted in an extensive lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroids in both BALB/c and NOD mice and follicular destruction in the latter. There was no evidence of thyroiditis in all 9 BALB/c mice and all 4 NOD mice who received unfractionated T cells from mice that had not been primed in vivo. In contrast, transfer of MBP-ECD in vivo primed unfractionated T cells resulted in thyroiditis in 9 of 13 BALB/c mice and 5 of 6 NOD mice; similarly, the equivalent CD4+-enriched population produced extensive thyroiditis in 2 of 3 BALB/c mice and all three NOD mice. The most striking difference between the antigen- and spleen-treated mice was in the quantity of the infiltrate, which was much greater in the latter and extended throughout the thyroid glands of these animals. In common with mice treated directly with the MBP-ECD antigen, the infiltrates of both BALB/c and NOD recipient mice contained large numbers of activated T cells expressing the receptor for interleukin-2, and macrophages and dendritic cells were plentiful, particularly in the BALB/c mice, in which B cells and interleukin-10-positive T cells were also present. The most abundant infiltrates, containing numerous CD8+ T cells and follicular destruction, were observed in NOD mice receiving primed unfractionated T cells or CD4+-enriched T cells. In contrast to the donors, none of the recipient animals had circulating antibodies to the MBP-ECD antigen. In conclusion, we have shown that it is possible to transfer thyroiditis with spleen cells from mice primed in vivo with a human TSH receptor preparation. Furthermore, the thyroiditogenic activity appears to reside in the CD4+ population.
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PMID:Transfer of thyroiditis, with syngeneic spleen cells sensitized with the human thyrotropin receptor, to naive BALB/c and NOD mice. 889 27

The present study was carried out to evaluate the effects of different activation protocols, enucleation methods, and culture media on the development of parthenogenetic and nuclear transfer (NT) rabbit embryos. Electroporation of 25 mM inositol 1,4, 5-trisphosphate (IP3) in calcium- and magnesium-free PBS immediately induced a single intracellular calcium transient in 6 out of 14 metaphase II-stage rabbit oocytes evaluated during a 10-min recording period. The percentage of oocytes treated with IP3 followed by 6-dimethylaminopurine (IP3 + DMAP) that cleaved (83.9%) and reached the blastocyst stage (50%) was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than those activated with multiple pulses (61.6% and 30.1%, respectively) or treated with ionomycin + DMAP (52.9% and 5.7%, respectively). Development of IP3 + DMAP-activated rabbit oocytes and in vivo-fertilized zygotes in different culture media was studied. Development of activated oocytes to the blastocyst stage in Earle's balanced salt solution (EBSS) supplemented with MEM nonessential amino acids, basal medium Eagle amino acids, 1 mM L-glutamine, 0.4 mM sodium pyruvate, and 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (EBSS-complete) (40.6%) was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than those that developed in either Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's medium (DMEM)/RPMI + 10% FBS (15.5%) or CR1aa + 10% FBS (4%) medium. In addition, 100% of in vivo-fertilized rabbit zygotes developed to the blastocyst stage in EBSS-complete. A third set of experiments was carried out to study the efficiency of blind versus stained (Hoechst 33342) enucleation of oocytes. Twenty-nine of 48 blind enucleated and IP3 + DMAP-activated oocytes cleaved (60.4%), and 15 (31.2%) subsequently reached the blastocyst stage, whereas 9 of 52 oocytes enucleated using epifluorescence (17.3%) cleaved, and none of these reached the blastocyst stage. When the above parameters that yielded the highest blastocysts were combined in an NT experiment using adult rabbit fibroblast nuclei, 72.2% (39 of 54) of the fused nuclear transplant embryos cleaved and 29.6% (16 of 54) reached the blastocyst stage.
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PMID:Development of nuclear transfer and parthenogenetic rabbit embryos activated with inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate. 1008 54

In the current work, we evaluated the effect of extracellular acidification on neutrophil physiology. Neutrophils suspended in bicarbonate-buffered RPMI 1640 medium adjusted to acidic pH values (pH 6.5-7.0) underwent: 1) a rapid transient increase in intracellular free calcium concentration levels; 2) an increase in the forward light scattering properties; and 3) the up-regulation of surface expression of CD18. By contrast, extracellular acidosis was unable to induce neither the production of H2O2 nor the release of myeloperoxidase. Acidic extracellular pH also modulated the functional profile of neutrophils in response to conventional agonists such as FMLP, precipiting immune complexes, and opsonized zymosan. It was found that not only calcium mobilization, shape change response, and up-regulation of CD18 expression but also production of H2O2 and release of myeloperoxidase were markedly enhanced in neutrophils stimulated in acidic pH medium. Moreover, extracellular acidosis significantly delayed neutrophil apoptosis and concomitantly extended neutrophil functional lifespan. Extracellular acidification induced an immediate and abrupt fall in the intracellular pH, which persisted over the 240-s analyzed. A similar abrupt drop in the intracellular pH was detected in cells suspended in bicarbonate-supplemented PBS but not in those suspended in bicarbonate-free PBS. A role for intracellular acidification in neutrophil activation is suggested by the fact that only neutrophils suspended in bicarbonate-buffered media (i.e., RPMI 1640 and bicarbonate-supplemented PBS) underwent significant shape changes in response to extracellular acidification. Together, our results support the notion that extracellular acidosis may intensify acute inflammatory responses by inducing neutrophil activation as well as by delaying spontaneous apoptosis and extending neutrophil functional lifespan.
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PMID:Extracellular acidification induces human neutrophil activation. 1020 29

Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) stimulates the proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells of the neutrophil lineage. Measurement of murine G-CSF levels will allow examination of its role in host defense using murine models. Therefore, we developed a sensitive sandwich enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay (ELISA) for murine G-CSF. A polyclonal antibody to recombinant murine G-CSF was produced in rabbits and isolated using a protein A column. This purified native IgG served as the capture antibody and a portion of the IgG was biotinylated to serve as the developing antibody. Specificity was verified by lack of reactivity to GM-CSF, IL-6, IL-3, prolactin, and growth hormone. The lower limit of sensitivity routinely extended to 16 pg/ml in multiple ELISAs. Intra-assay coefficient of variation (CV) ranged from 3.4 to 21.5% across the detection limits of the assay, with the greatest variance occurring near the standard curve maximum. Interassay CV ranged from 11.5 to 23.3%. The ability of the ELISA to detect G-CSF in different sample preparations was examined in RPMI 1640 with 10% FCS, Hanks balanced salt solution, PBS/Tween-20/2% FCS, and the dilution media for ELISA (10% BLOTTO/PBS/0.05% Tween-20). Average recovery in these media ranged from 98 to 107%. Heparin anti-coagulated normal mouse plasma had a suppressive effect on the ELISA that varied between individual mice. Recovery was also determined from liver, spleen, and lung homogenate suspensions at dilutions of 1:5, 1:10, and 1:20 in dilution buffer. Recovery from liver was optimal at the 1:10 and 1:20 dilutions at 105%, with that of the 1:5 dilution at 135%. Recovery from spleen ranged from 94 to 96%. Lung homogenate displayed enhanced recovery (139% or greater) across all dilutions. The ability of the assay to detect G-CSF was explored by measurement of G-CSF levels in peritoneal lavage following polymicrobial intra-abdominal infection. Peak levels of G-CSF production occurred at 16 h after cecal ligation and puncture surgery with 18- and 21-guage needles (75.7 ng/ml and 111.4 ng/ml, respectively) as compared to the sham animals (0.61 ng/ml). The assay was found to be specific, sensitive, and accurate for measurement of murine G-CSF in a variety of sample types.
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PMID:A sandwich enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay for measurement of picogram quantities of murine granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. 1036 91

Excreted/secreted products from Taenia solium metacestodes cultured in vitro were analyzed for peptidase activity using peptide substrates Z-Phe-Arg-AFC, Arg-AFC, and Z-Gly-Gly-Arg-AFC and zymography studies. Specific inhibitor profiles revealed mainly cysteine and metalloprotease activities. Hydrolysis of substrate Z-Phe-Arg-AFC was augmented by the addition of L-cysteine and acid pH, consistent with cysteine protease activity. Cysteine protease activity was more prominent in supernatants from living metacestodes cultured in PBS than in either RPMI or RPMI plus fetal calf serum and was proportional to the number of metacestodes. Flow cytometry analysis showed depletion of human T lymphocytes cultured with living T. solium metacestodes. CD4(+) expression was significantly decreased when metacestode E/S products and L-cysteine were added to lymphocyte cultures (P = 0.027). This peptidase activity was inhibited by E-64 indicating that the depletion of CD4(+) cells was due to cysteine protease activity. Thus, T. solium metacestodes produce excretory/secretory proteases. These enzymes may cleave molecules critical for the host immune response allowing the parasites to survive in the host tissues.
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PMID:Taenia solium: a cysteine protease secreted by metacestodes depletes human CD4 lymphocytes in vitro. 1083 77

The effect of high-frequency ultrasound on doxorubicin (DOX) release from Pluronic micelles and intracellular DOX uptake was studied for promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 cells, ovarian carcinoma drug-sensitive and multidrug-resistant (MDR) cells (A2780 and A2780/ADR, respectively), and breast cancer MCF-7 cells. Cavitation events initiated by high-frequency ultrasound were recorded by radical trapping. The onset of transient cavitation and DOX release from micelles were observed at much higher power densities than at low-frequency ultrasound (20-100 kHz). Even a short (15-30 s) exposure to high-frequency ultrasound significantly enhanced the intracellular DOX uptake from PBS, RPMI 1640, and Pluronic micelles. The mechanisms of the observed effects are discussed.
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PMID:Drug delivery in pluronic micelles: effect of high-frequency ultrasound on drug release from micelles and intracellular uptake. 1239 66

Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation is indicated in several haematologic and genetic diseases, the most notable being aplastic anemia and leukemias. Bone marrow has been the traditional source of these cells. Human umbilical cord blood (UCB) has recently become an alternative source of haematopoietic stem cells for transplants. The advantages of cord blood include noninvasive collection without risk to mother and neonate, low risk of viral infection, and immunologic immaturity of cord cells. Single umbilical cord blood donation is usually sufficient for transplantation to adult recipients. Additionally, banking of HLA-typed UCB appears valuable in patients lacking a family donor. This study has focused on basic "perinatological" parameters of umbilical cord blood: average volume of single donation UCB and initial storage conditions before isolation of haematopoietic stem cells. Additionally, the mean content of CD34+ haematopoietic stem cells in leukocyte, lymphocyte and mononuclear cell fractions was established. Correlations between levels of so-called pro-inflammatory cytokines (present in cord blood serum) and number, viability and clonogenicity of cord blood mononuclear cells were checked. UCB samples were obtained by "open" collection during vaginal deliveries and cesarean sections. The collected blood was stored in solutions of anticoagulants (ACD, CPDA-1, heparin) and culture media (PBS, Iscove medium, RPMI), during several time intervals (0-1 h, 1-6 h, 6-12 h, 12-24 h) and at two temperatures (+4 degrees C, ambient). UCB volumes, as well as MNC counts, correlated with delivery type, placental weight, neonatal body weight and duration of pregnancy. The concentration, viability and clonogenicity of MNCs were assessed after collection and storage. The subpopulation of CD34+ haematopoietic stem cells was isolated from MNCs using monoclonal antibodies and magnetic-based separation. The number, viability and clonogenicity of CD34+ cells were evaluated. Subsequently in some samples, the concentration of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-alpha), number of mononuclear cells and in vitro clonogenicity of myeloid progenitors (CFU-GM) were determined. It was found that the collected blood volume depended on neonatal body weight (Fig. 1). Umbilical blood could be stored either at ambient temperature (Fig. 4) or +4 degrees C (recommended because of reduced risk of infection) for up to 24 hours in RPMI solution (Fig. 5) with heparin (Fig. 2, 3). CD34+ cell count correlated with mononuclear cell count only (Fig. 6). A negative correlation between the number of mononuclear cells and concentration of TNF-alpha was revealed (Fig. 7), as well as between the number of detectable CFU-GM and concentration of IL-1 beta (Fig. 8). In conclusion, UCB collection and short-term storage is a safe and simple method for graftable haematopoietic stem cell recovery. Save for IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha, cytokine levels did not correlate with the studied parameters of umbilical cord blood.
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PMID:[Improved method for delivery room collection and storage of human cord blood cells for grafting]. 1251 5

A procedure for separation of leukemic T-cells from normal lymphocytes, using lectin-affinity column chromatography, is described. CNBr-activated Sepharose 6MB was used as a non-mobile phase. The gel was covalently coupled with soybean agglutinin (SBA), then served as an affinity probe for fractionation of mixture of normal lymphocytes and leukemic cells. Leukemic cell lines, derived from acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Jurkat, MOLT-4, RPMI-8402), were tested. The elution of normal lymphocytes was carried out by PBS(-). The leukemic T-cells, interacting with SBA, were removed by N-acetyl-D-galactosamine or low-concentration acetic acid. The type and viability of the separated cell fractions were analyzed by flow cytometry and fluorescent microscopy, using adequate fluorescent antibodies. The interaction of leukemic T-cells with free SBA, as well as with SBA-conjugated Sepharose beads, was examined fluorimetrically and visualized by fluorescent microscopy, using FITC-SBA as a marker. The rate of cell elution on SBA-affinity column decreased in order: normal > leukemic T-cells. Both normal lymphocytes and leukemic T-cells were removed in a mixture from SBA-free Sepharose 6MB by PBS(-) and were not fractionated discretely. The leukemic T-cells specifically interacted with SBA as well as with SBA-affinity adsorbent. In contrast, the normal lymphocytes did not interact with free SBA as well as with SBA-conjugated Sepharose beads in the concentrations applied. The method potentially combines a discrete cell fractionation with manifestation of a specific target cytotoxicity of SBA against leukemic T-cells, without any influence on normal lymphocytes.
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PMID:Interaction of soybean agglutinin with leukemic T-cells and its use for their in vitro separation from normal lymphocytes by lectin-affinity chromatography. 1283 89

A series of graft copolymers consisting of either poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNiPAAm) or poly(N,N-diethylacrylamide) (PDEAAm) as a thermo-responsive component in the polymer backbone and poly(ethyleneglycol) (PEG) were immobilized as thin films and cross-linked on a fluoropolymer substrate using low-pressure argon plasma treatment. The surface-immobilized hydrogels exhibit a transition from partially collapsed to completely swollen, which is in the range of 32-35 degrees C and corresponds to the lower critical solution temperature of the soluble polymers. The hydrogels were used as cell carriers in culture experiments with L929 mouse fibroblast cells to probe for cell adhesion, proliferation, and temperature-dependent detachment of cell layers. The fibroblast cells adhere, spread, and proliferate on the hydrogel layers at 37 degrees C and become completely detached after reducing the temperature by 3 K. The cell release characteristics were further correlated to the swelling and collapsing behavior of the hydrogel films and the polymer solutions as measured in PBS solution and RPMI cell cultivation medium. It could be shown that, long before the swelling has completed upon temperature reduction, the cells detach. This can be attributed to the large content of PEG present in the hydrogel, which weaken the cell adhesion strength to the hydrogel layers.
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PMID:Thermo-responsive PNiPAAm-g-PEG films for controlled cell detachment. 1460 3

Experimental hepatic metastasis of colorectal tumors is frequently studied by local intrahepatic tumor cell implantation. However, although a variety of factors of the implantation procedure may markedly influence tumor growth characteristics, standards are not defined yet. Herein, we studied the effect of different modes of cell implantation on tumor growth and angiogenesis by in vivo fluorescence microscopy and histology seven days after grafting colorectal CT26.WT tumor cells into the left liver lobe of syngeneic BALB/c mice. We demonstrate that (i) radial growth of cells implanted within the central area of the lobe is inhibited by a regularly observed fissura which crosses at midline the surface of the lobe; (ii) cells suspended during implantation in RPMI show an uncontrolled overwhelming growth 40-fold of those suspended in PBS; (iii) cell implantation in 100 microl and 20 microl suspension medium is significantly more complicated by rupture of the liver capsule, uncontrolled intraparenchymal cell spread and recoil of the cells through the injection canal compared to cells suspended in 10 microl; (iv) the frequency of metastasis within the injection canal and at the puncture site is significantly reduced using 32G compared to 27G or 29G needles; (v) occlusion of the puncture site by acrylic glue or electric coagulation completely abolishes peritoneal tumor spread compared to no treatment or gentle compression by cotton gauze. We conclude that a standardized growth of isolated metastases is best achieved by implanting CT26.WT cells in a 10 microl PBS blister subcapsularly into the paramedian area of the lower surface of the left liver lobe, using a 32-gauge needle and closing the puncture site with acrylic glue.
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PMID:Experimental liver metastasis: standards for local cell implantation to study isolated tumor growth in mice. 1567 70


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