Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A combined method for detecting compounds with antihypertensive and diuretic activity simultaneously in the same spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rat is described. The present method, utilizing the advantages of sequential probability test analysis, the spontaneously hypertensive rats and the direct measurement of arterial blood pressure, proves to be feasible and efficient in detecting both activities. This ia s 3-stage sequential test requires one to three rats per compound. One adult SH rat was dosed by gavage with compound at 100 mg/kg, p.o. and loaded with 0.9% NaCl at 25 ml/kg, p.o. at 0-hr. The rat was put in a metabolism
cage
. The 0-5 hr. urine was collected and urinary
Na+
, K+ and CL- were determined. A second identical dose was given without NaCl loading at 24-hr. Mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) of conscious rats was measured directly by fermoral-iliac artery puncture at 28-hr. The criteria to accept, retest or reject a compound were based on the testing of known antihypertensives and diuretics. A 2nd and 3rd rat may be needed for a test compound depending on the outcome of the MABP and urinary electrolytes of the 1st rat. Based on MABP, guancydine, hydralazine, clonidine, reserpine, alpha-methyldopa, guanethidine and parglyine were accepted as active. Based on urinary
sodium
excretion, furosemide, quinethazone, acetazolamide, hydrochlorothiazide, metolazone, triamterene and clonidine were accepted as active.
...
PMID:Sequential method for combined screening antihypertensive and diuretic agents in the same spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). 55 99
One of the critical issues confronting the evolving discipline of behavioral and neurological toxicology is the general lack of test validation in animal models. This paper seeks to provide a strategy aimed at resolving this important problem. It is proposed that test validation be accomplished by evaluating known neurotoxins in a battery of tests chosen to assess in animal models a wide range of effects on the basis of reported human toxicosis symptomatology. We propose to measure ongoing home
cage
motor activity, food consumption, water consumption, clay consumption (and the diurnal cycling of these), neurological/physiological indices (reflexes, autonomic signs, equilibrium/gait, balance, tremor, reactivity, and muscular strength), and aspects of cognitive and associative behavior involving both endogenous and exogenous (sensory) control of responding. An integrated, time-efficient scheme, covering 90 days of chemical treatment and 30 days of post-dosing recovery will be used. Chemical substances to be evaluated were chosen with the view of representing classes of neurotoxic effects. For initial study, triethyltin was chosen as an agent producing demyelination of nerves, acrylamide as an agent producing "dying-back" neuropathy, and methylmercury as an agent producing mixed central and peripheral neuropathies. Agents which attack specific loci in the nervous system and those producing anoxia will not be assessed in the first stages of this research due to lack of species generality of known effects, present lack of appropriate exposure facilities, or other problems. In addition, two drugs (amphetamine and
sodium
salicylate) will be investigated to support the generality of the testing procedures. By comparing the observed results of the neurotoxins in the animal models with the predicted effects based on reported human symptomatology, some decision concerning the validity of each procedure will be made. It is expected that the validation of tests to be used in behavioral and neurological toxicology will permit the meaningful assessment of more complex issues, such as the mechanisms by which neurotoxins act.
...
PMID:Strategy for the assessment of neurobehavioral consequences of environmental factors. 72 Mar 19
Double antibody radioimmunoassay of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), a
cancer-associated
antigen of the human digestive system, was subjected to certain modifications and critically evaluated. Modifications pertained to: (a) the production of a high titer goat anti-CEA antiserum that was rendered highly specific by solid phase immunoabsorption with cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose conjugates of normal plasma liver, and colon perchloric acid-soluble glycoprotein antigens: (b) the introduction of suitable alterations in the experimental conditions of radioiodination procedure to minimize and to prevent breakdown of the antigen, thus prolonging the storage of the labeled antigen; (c) the extended incubation period of CEA-anti-CEA immune reaction; and (d) the use of
sodium
acetate buffer, pH 6.1. Furthermore, the use of an automatic pipetting station for accurate and rapid reagent dispensation and statistical analysis of the radioimmunoassay data on a modern computer to ensure strict quality control of the assay provided some definite improvement over the existing assay.
...
PMID:Modifications and evaluation of double antibody radioimmunoassay of human carcinoembryonic antigen. 94 17
Four experiments were conducted to determine the feasibility of using fluoride to mitigate bone fragility (osteoporosis) that develops in
cage
-reared broilers. The treatments consisted of adding
sodium
fluoride to the drinking water at the levels of 100, 150, 200, and 200 p.p.m. of fluoride in the four experiments, respectively. Birds were transferred from starting batteries at four weeks of age into six coops. Birds in three coops served as controls; birds in the other three coops were provided the fluoridated water ad libitum from four to eight weeks of age. No significant differences were observed in the final body weights between treated and control birds in the four experiments. The percentage of bone ash was usually greater from the treated birds than from the controls. These differences were significant (P less than or equal to 0.01) in the 150 and 200 p.p.m. treatments. At all levels of fluoridation, the strengths of humeri were significantly (P less than or equal to 0.01) increased. However, at the lowest level of fluoridation, 100 p.p.m., the increase was significant only in the females. Tibia strength was significantly (P less than 0.01) increased only at the 200 p.p.m. level. The increase in bone strength from fluoridation may be sufficiently great enough to result in a decrease in the incidence of bone breakage during the processing of coop-reared boilers.
...
PMID:Increased bone strength in coop-reared broilers provided flouridated water. 95 62
Experiments were performed to provide a quantitative description of the barbiturate withdrawal syndrome. Physical dependence was produced in 63 cats by 'maximally tolerable' dosing with
sodium
pentobarbital. After 5 weeks of chronic treatment each animal was placed in an activity monitoring
cage
and observed closely for signs of barbiturate abstinence. Electroencephalographic monitoring of sleep--wake cycles was performed in 5 of these cats. Most withdrawal signs appeared in 12-18 h and rapidly intensified. These included signs of neural hyper-excitability that involved motor, autoncidence, severity and time course of many withdrawal signs. 26 animals (41%) died during abstinence, usually during or immediately following grand mal type convulsions. The importance of quantitating withdrawal phenomena is discussed with respect to investigation of the requirements for physical dependency production, comparison of different drug dependencies, and pre-clinical evaluation of potential treatments of sedative-hypnotic dependence.
...
PMID:Withdrawal characteristics following chronic pentobarbital dosing. 103 70
The use of
cage
bedding prepared from pinewood shavings has been shown to be associated with an increase in the activity of sulphobromophthalein
sodium
(BSP) S-aryltransferase in the hepatic cytosol in rats houses on this substance. This increase was associated with enhanced secretion rates of dye into the bile due to an elevation in the biliary excretion rate of conjugated BSP. Analysis of the hepatic dye content at the time of maximal excretion of BSP into the bile indicated that this phenomenon was due to increased intrahepatic conjugation of BSP. This observation emphasizes the importance of considering environmental factors that may influence results when designing experiments on hepatic metabolism.
...
PMID:The influence of cage bedding on the metabolism of sulphobromophthalein sodium by an hepatic cytosol-located enzyme system. 116 55
The underlying principles of the kinetics and equilibrium of a solitary sodium channel in the steady state are examined. Both the open and closed kinetics are postulated to result from round-trip excursions from a transition region that separates the openable and closed forms. Exponential behavior of the kinetics can have origins different from small-molecule systems. These differences suggest that the probability density functions (PDFs) that describe the time dependences of the open and closed forms arise from a distribution of rate constants. The distribution is likely to arise from a thermal modulation of the channel structure, and this provides a physical basis for the following three-variable equation: [formula; see text] Here, A0 is a scaling term, k is the mean rate constant, and sigma quantifies the Gaussian spread for the contributions of a range of effective rate constants. The maximum contribution is made by k, with rates faster and slower contributing less. (When sigma, the standard deviation of the spread, goes to zero, then p(f) = A0 e-kt.) The equation is applied to the single-channel steady-state probability density functions for batrachotoxin-treated
sodium
channels (1986. Keller et al. J. Gen. Physiol. 88: 1-23). The following characteristics are found: (a) The data for both open and closed forms of the channel are fit well with the above equation, which represents a Gaussian distribution of first-order rate processes. (b) The simple relationship [formula; see text] holds for the mean effective rat constants. Or, equivalently stated, the values of P open calculated from the k values closely agree with the P open values found directly from the PDF data. (c) In agreement with the known behavior of voltage-dependent rate constants, the voltage dependences of the mean effective rate constants for the opening and closing of the channel are equal and opposite over the voltage range studied. That is, [formula; see text] "Bursts" are related to the well-known
cage
effect of solution chemistry.
...
PMID:Steady-state kinetics of solitary batrachotoxin-treated sodium channels. Kinetics on a bounded continuum of polymer conformations. 131 65
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
A new antigen associated with pancreatic cancer was prepared by immunoaffinity chromatography using Fab'-Sepharose beads. This antigen was a glycoprotein of large molecular weight (Mr greater than 8,000,000) in its native state, estimated by size exclusion chromatography on Sephacryl S400. After
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and blotting analysis, several
cancer-associated
glycoconjugates, including CA19-9, CA50, Span-1, Dupan-2, and sialyl SSEA-1, were detected on the antigenic moiety of Mr 90,000. By an enzyme immunoassay for the antigen, elevated levels were found in pooled sera obtained from patients with various malignant and non-malignant diseases and normal subjects. However, the enhanced expression of CA19-9, Lewisa, or Lewisb epitope on the antigen molecule was restricted to the pooled sera from patients with pancreatic cancer. Furthermore, antigens from pancreatic or gastric cancer expressed ligands with intense and specific reactivity for Bauhinia purpurea (BPA), peanut (PNA), and Vicia villosa (VVA) lectins. The present assay system of the antigen, using both monoclonal antibodies (CA19-9, Lewisa, and Lewisb) and lectins (BPA, VVA and PNA), will provide a useful approach to the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.
...
PMID:Preparation of pancreatic cancer-associated mucin expressing CA19-9, CA50, Span-1, sialyl SSEA-1, and Dupan-2. 168 94
Escherichia coli bacteremia was detected in a dog that had hypertrophic osteodystrophy. The dog improved after treatment with cephalothin
sodium
, iv fluid therapy, and
cage
rest. The cause of hypertrophic dystrophy has not been determined, although an infectious cause has been suggested. Dogs that are suspected of having hypertrophic osteodystrophy should be monitored closely for evidence of septicemia, and the administration of prophylactic antibiotics may be advisable.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli bacteremia associated with hypertrophic osteodystrophy in a dog. 175 68
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>