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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The accumulation of bone-seeking radiopharmaceuticals in extraosseous lesions has been reported in patients with myocardial infarctions, cerebral infarctions, and some soft-tissue tumors. While the precise mechanisms involved remain uncertain, the spectrum of abnormalities exhibiting such accumulation increases. In our laboratory, 99mTc-diphosphonate concentrated in four hepatic tumors (one cholangiocarcinoma and three metastases from colon carcinoma). This property of
phosphate
-related radiopharmaceuticals has not been reported previously. Awareness of the possibility of focal diphosphonate accumulation in the liver should help avoid confusion with right lower rib-
cage
metastasis or pleural effusion.
...
PMID:Accumulation of 99mTc-diphosphonate in four patients with hepatic neoplasm: case reports. 18 68
The effect of dexamethasone
phosphate
(DEX) administered in rats' drinking water on running activity and open field behavior was investigated. In Experiment 1 males were given DEX continuously from either five days or one day prior to and throughout testing. Only 5 day treatment significantly increased running wheel activity. DEX had no significant effect on males' 4 day open field activity, but significantly reduced open field and home
cage
defecation. In Experiment 2 females given DEX defecated significantly more in the open field than controls. This effect on females does not appear to be due to a general metabolic change, since DEX females, like males, defecated significantly less than controls in the home
cage
. Females' open field activity was not significantly affected. Weight loss and plasma corticosterone analysis confirmed the effectiveness of the dosage used. There appears to be a sex difference in the effects of DEX on open field defecation, possibly due to interaction with gonadal hormones.
...
PMID:Sex differences in the effects of dexamethasone phosphate on behavior in rats. 115 33
In vivo 1H and 23Na magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) techniques were used to study CCl4-induced acute hepatotoxicity in rats in situ. One or two hours following exposure to CCl4, a localized edematous region was detected in the liver by 1H MRI. The CCl4-induced edema was localized in a region surrounding the hepatic portal vein. With the use of a 23Na/1H double frequency tuned bird-
cage
imaging coil an increase in Na+ ion flux was also observed in the same region as the edematous region detected by 1H-MRI. Pretreatment with alpha-phenyl-tert-butyl nitrone (PBN), a free radical spin trap, 30 min prior to CCl4 exposure, was found to reduce the CCl4-induced edematous response in the liver observed in either 1H or 23Na-NMR images. Inhibition of the CCl4-induced edematous response in rat liver by PBN demonstrates that free radical intermediates, arising from the metabolism of CCl4, are possibly the key causal agents in the initiation of the edematous response. In addition, with the use of a 31P/1H double frequency tuned bird-
cage
imaging/spectroscopy coil, localized 31P spectra (ISIS) were obtained from the regions of CCl4-induced "tissue damage" observed in the 1H-MRI images. The most notable changes observed from the 31P spectra were an increase in inorganic
phosphate
(Pi) and a decrease in hepatocytosolic pH in the CCl4-treated rat livers in comparison to saline-treated control livers.
...
PMID:Use of 1H/23Na and 1H/31P double frequency tuned birdcage coils to study in vivo carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatotoxicity in rats. 150 38
Pamidronate has been demonstrated to be an effective agent in the treatment of
cancer-associated
hypercalcaemia. The dose regime, however, remains controversial. In this study 16 patients with
cancer-associated
hypercalcaemia were given 30 mg pamidronate by intravenous infusion and 16 were given 90 mg also by infusion. Groups were well-matched in terms of tumour types, bone metastases, pre-treatment serum calcium and creatinine, fasting urinary calcium/creatinine ratio, nephrogenous cAMP and the renal tubular threshold for
phosphate
reabsorption (TmPO4). The calcium lowering effect was similar in both treatment groups with nadir at day 6 of mean (+/- SEM) 2.48 mmol/l (+/- 0.06) in the 30 mg group and at day 9 in the 90 mg group of 2.51 mmol/l (+/- 0.03) (P less than 0.01). 10 patients in the 30 mg group and 8 in the 90 mg group were normocalcaemic at this point. Similarly when those patients with more severe hypercalcaemia (greater than 3.30 mmol/l, n = 7 in each group) were analysed separately, no significant difference was evident between the two groups. Urinary calcium/creatinine ratios fell to a nadir at day 6 in both groups of 0.33 (+/- 0.05) (30 mg group) and 0.37 (+/- 0.10) (90 mg group) (P less than 0.01). Follow-up results after the initial 9 days showed the mean time to relapse to be 38 days (range 18-90) in the 30 mg group and 34 days (11-105) in the 90 mg group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A comparison of low versus high dose pamidronate in cancer-associated hypercalcaemia. 177 37
1. In a 6 x 7 factorial experiment using 2688 22-week-old laying hens of the Lohmann-SL strain kept in cages (4 birds/
cage
), diets containing six calcium (20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45 g calcium/kg) and seven phosphorus concentrations (3.2, 4.2, 5.2, 6.2, 7.2, 8.2, 16.2 g total phosphorus/kg (Pt)) were combined orthogonally. The resulting 42 treatments were replicated 8 times so that a replicate consisted of a double
cage
of 2 x 4 hens. The experiment lasted 40 weeks (10 x 28 days). 2. The experimental diets, based on maize and soyabean meals contained 11.5 MJ metabolisable energy/kg and 175 g/kg protein. Different dietary calcium and phosphorus contents were obtained by substituting oat hulls with limestone and dicalcium
phosphate
. 3. Mortality, egg production, egg weight, egg mass, food intake and food conversion efficiency were determined as well as the breaking strength, thickness of shells and the percentage of eggs with defective shells. 4. All responses measured were significantly influenced by the variance sources (calcium, phosphorus, interaction). Most of the production traits responded asymptotically to increasing dietary phosphorus concentration, the greatest increases or decreases generally being seen between 3.2 and 5.2 g Pt/kg. Further but weaker increases were seen between 5.2 and 8.2 or 16.2 g Pt/kg. 5. Increases in dietary calcium content always resulted in curvilinear responses. In all cases optimal effects were obtained with diets containing 25 g calcium/kg and the worst values at 45 g calcium/kg. The interaction between calcium and phosphorus was recognised by strong performance depressions and a high mortality at combinations of the lowest phosphorus concentration (3.2 g/kg) with high calcium contents (35 to 45 g/kg). These were largely offset by increasing dietary phosphorus. Thus, between 7.2 and 16.2 g Pt/kg and 25 and 45 g Ca/kg a plateau was formed where only small differences in egg production were observed. 6. From the three egg shell characteristics measured, breaking strength and shell thickness responded differently to the percentage of eggs with defective shells. While breaking strength and shell thickness were respectively negatively and positively influenced by increasing dietary phosphorus and calcium contents, both elements affected the proportion of eggs with defective shells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Evaluation of the dietary interaction of calcium and phosphorus in the high producing laying hen. 224 45
Experiments are described in which the feasibility of using caged dideoxy and other nucleoside triphosphate analogues for trapping breaks induced by u.v. radiation damage to mammalian cell DNA is evaluated. These nucleotide analogues that have a photolabile 1-(2-nitrophenyl)ethyl-protecting group attached to the gamma-
phosphate
are placed in situ by permeabilizing cells by exposure to hypo-osmotic medium. The nucleoside triphosphate is released from the
cage
by a 351 nm u.v. laser pulse whence it may incorporate in the growing chain of DNA induced by the excision-repair process and terminate chain elongation. If the photoreleased dideoxynucleoside triphosphate is isotopically labelled in the alpha-
phosphate
position the break is trapped and labelled. Incorporation of radioactivity into trichloroacetic acid insoluble material in these experiments confirms their potential for use in studies of the kinetics of mammalian cell DNA repair.
...
PMID:Kinetics and mechanism of DNA repair. Evaluation of caged compounds for use in studies of u.v.-induced DNA repair. 232 73
ATP and AMP exhibit significant anticancer activities against established footpad
CT26
colon adenocarcinoma in CB6F1 mice. Adenosine, inorganic
phosphate
, and inorganic pyrophosphate were without such effects under identical conditions. Daily intraperitoneal injections of adenine nucleotides in large volumes of saline, starting after the tumors became palpable, resulted in inhibition of tumor growth and a few "cures." The treatment was not toxic to the host as determined by changes in body weights. Weight loss observed in animals upon progression of the fast-growing
CT26
tumors was slowed markedly in adenine nucleotide-treated mice. The inhibition of weight loss in tumor-bearing mice was shown to be neither the cause nor the effect of the inhibition of tumor growth. Intraperitoneal injections of AMP or ATP but not of adenosine yielded expansions of erythrocyte ATP pools in host animals. The expanded erythrocyte ATP pools are stable over a period of hours, while slowly releasing micromolar amounts of ATP into the blood plasma compartment, leading to several-fold increases in plasma (extracellular) ATP levels. Based on previous studies in which 1-5 microM extracellular ATP effectively inhibited the growth of a variety of tumor cells in several in vitro systems, it is suggested that similar levels of ATP in blood plasma account for the anticancer activities observed in a murine host.
...
PMID:Anticancer activities of adenine nucleotides in mice are mediated through expansion of erythrocyte ATP pools. 292 3
Washed and permeabilized human erythrocyte ghosts were found to discharge calcium on treatment with ATP. Concomitantly, there was a decrease in phosphatidylinositol (PI) and an increase in phosphatidylinositol-4-
phosphate
(PIP) and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). These results support the hypothesis that an inositide shuttle, PI in equilibrium PIP in equilibrium PIP2, operates to maintain intracellular Ca2+ levels. The cation is thought to be sequestered in a
cage
formed by the head groups of two acidic phospholipid molecules, e.g., phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol, with participation of both PO and fatty acid ester CO groups. These cages are stabilized by inter-headgroup hydrogen bonding. When the inositol group is phosphorylated in positions 4 and 5, inter-lipid hydrogen bonding is disrupted and the
cage
opens to release its Ca2+.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of erythrocyte membrane liberates calcium. 301 Sep 66
Prepubescent male rats with an amygdaloid electrode in place were administered kainic acid (KA) intraperitoneally (i.p.) while controls received
phosphate
-buffered saline (PBS). All KA-treated animals developed status epilepticus with bilateral forelimb clonus and ictal discharges on the EEG. The rats were then tested as adults for learning, memory, emotionality, social interaction, and activity level using the T maze, water maze, handling test, home
cage
intruder test, and open field test. KA-treated rats learned at a slower rate in the water maze and T maze than the controls. In addition, KA-treated rats had evidence of impaired memory during spatial bias testing in the water maze. In the home
cage
intruder test, KA-treated animals were more submissive and less aggressive than control animals. Finally, KA-treated animals were significantly more active than control animals in the open field test. This study demonstrates that KA administration to the immature brain, in a convulsant dose, results in permanent changes in behavior, learning, and memory.
...
PMID:Behavioral effects of kainic acid administration on the immature brain. 319 87
1. We have previously reported reduced blood pH and plasma bicarbonate in young Okamoto-Aoki spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) compared with normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). Acid loading with 1.5% (w/v) NH4Cl as the sole drinking fluid produced identical falls in blood pH, the difference remaining significant. 2. The ability of SHR to excrete acid and alkaline loads was compared with that of WKY under metabolic
cage
conditions. The effects of such manipulations on urinary sodium, potassium, calcium and
phosphate
excretion were also determined. 3. No difference was found in the ability to excrete an acid load or to reduce urine pH. Neither total urinary ammonium ion nor titratable acid differed significantly between the strains under either baseline or acid-loading conditions. 4. Baseline urinary bicarbonate excretion was not significantly different between strains but intraperitoneal administration of NaHCO3 at 2.0 mmol/kg body weight resulted in enhanced excretion in the SHR (SHR vs WKY: 625.2 +/- 71.5 vs 381.8 +/- 40.6 mumol 24 h-1 kg-1 body weight, P less than 0.01, mean +/- SEM). 5. No difference in urinary sodium or potassium excretion was observed between SHR and WKY, but basal calcium and
phosphate
excretion were reduced in SHR (P less than 0.05). 6. Increased urinary bicarbonate excretion in the presence of significantly reduced plasma bicarbonate suggests reduced tubular reabsorption of bicarbonate, which may contribute to the mild metabolic acidosis in young SHR.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of abnormal acid-base balance in the young spontaneously hypertensive rat. 340 22
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