Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The impact of the combined effects of exposure time and hydrostatic pressure on pressure reduction is explored in this study. In Phase I of the study, excursion dives were made to 10, 20, and 30 ATA for 5, 10, 20, 40, or 80 min. In Phase II, the animals were saturated at 1.3, 10, or 20 ATA for 60 min; each saturation exposure was followed by a 10-atm excursion dive of either 1, 5, 10, 20, or 40 min. The chamber gas mixture during all pressure exposures was 0.51 ATA oxygen, 0.79 ATA nitrogen, and the remainder helium. The subjects were 655 rats; during each pressure exposure 5 rats were exercised in a rotating cage. After each exposure, the rats were abruptly decompressed to a lesser pressure for observation and tabulation of the decompression sickness incidence. Results suggest that neither the starting saturation pressure nor the differential excursion pressure alters the time required for an animal to reach equilibrium with the surrounding environment. Pressure-reduction values, however, vary with both the exposure pressure and exposure time. These results will have a direct impact on the formulation of future decompression models.
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PMID:Pressure reduction limits for rats subjected to various time/pressure exposures. 73

Two groups of compounds, identifiable by structural similarity, have been found to interfere with the in vitro replication of arenaviruses. All 4 members of the benzimidazole group contain dipolar fused benzene and 5-membered nitrogen-containing rings and share potential chelating ability through the different bidentate structures formed with their side-chains. The biological activity of one of these compounds, metisazone, has been shown to depend on the presence of divalent metals of the first transition series, Cu(++) being the most effective. Furthermore, whereas metisazone inactivates cell-free virus, two other members of the group, HBB and 1,2-bis(5-methoxy-1H-benzimidazol-2-yl)-1,2-ethanediol, act intracellularly. The site of action of the fourth member, SKF 30097, is not known. Using murine lymphocytic choriomeningitis infections as an in vivo model, the bisbenzimidazole derivative has been found to increase life-span without interfering with virus replication. Medication with SKF 30097 or metisazone and copper (2(+)) sulfate did not significantly or reproducibly change the expected day of death of the animals. The amantadine compounds of the second group have unusual symmetric structures with a 10-carbon cage. The parent compound acts intracellularly, while the site of action of an octachloro derivative is not known. Medication with the parent compound, but not the derivative, shortened the interval between LCM infection and death of the mouse. Tissue culture and animal screening of the many available derivatives in these two groups may uncover compounds more efficacious than those already examined.
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PMID:Arenavirus chemotherapy--retrospect and prospect. 108 27

Chest cage restriction was produced in 13 normal male subjects. We could not detect trapped air during restriction by comparing lung volumes determined by nitrogen washout with those determined by plethysmography. However, 3 subjects did have definite evidence of trapping because they released small amounts of air (mean, 61 ml) when the restriction was removed. Two subjects had suggestive evidence of trapping. Yet there was no correlation between trapping and the degree of increase in static lung recoil associated with restriction. Seven subjects had chest restriction produced while they were breathing air and again while they were breathing 100 per cent oxygen, in an attempt to reveal the presence of airway closure. In only one subject was oxygen breathing clearly associated with a greater then expected increase in lung recoil after restriction; suggestive changes were seen in 2 other subjects. However, there was no definite correlation between unusual increases in lung recoil induced by restriction while breathing oxygen and the presence of air trapping. We conclude that trapping, hence airway closure, is not required for the increase in static lung recoil that occurs with chest cage restriction.
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PMID:Relationship of air trapping to increased lung recoil pressure induced by chest cage restriction. 111 96

The cause of cancer cachexia is unclear. Tumors may be competing with the host for ingested nutrients or may be releasing some factor that actively inhibits energy utilization. To explore these questions, plasma was sterilely collected and pooled from 103 terminally cachectic Fischer 344 rats implanted with an experimental sarcoma. Control plasma was collected in similar fashion from 138 nontumor-bearing rats (NTBP). Plasma from tumor-bearing rats (TBP) or NTBP was continuously infused in a randomized, blinded fashion for 4 days into 20 normal rats. During infusion, food intake and nitrogen excretion were measured daily. At sacrifice, body weight and organ masses were determined. Rats receiving TBP demonstrated an immediate and profound anorexia compared with those receiving NTBP. Total food intake during treatment was 31.2 +/- 3.3 (g +/- SEM) in the TBP group versus 48.2 +/- 2.8 in the NTBP group (P less than 0.001 by t test). Likewise, the total decline in body weight was greater in the TBP group as compared with the NTBP group (-35.2 +/- 3.4 versus -14.6 +/- 4.0, P less than 0.001). Mean daily nitrogen balance during treatment was negative in the rats receiving TBP (-14.5 +/- 20.1 mg +/- SEM) while remaining highly positive in the rats receiving NTBP (110.7 +/- 19.3, P less than 0.002). Finally, cardiac and gastrocnemius muscle masses were decreased, while hepatic mass was unaffected. These data demonstrate that the syndrome of cancer-associated cachexia is transmissible in plasma and therefore may be mediated by a circulating molecule or molecules. Identification and purification of the molecule(s) responsible for this effect would have obvious clinical benefits.
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PMID:Cancer cachexia is transmissible in plasma. 159 73

Argon, nitrogen, nitrous oxide were administered hyperbarically in doses (atmosphere) that caused loss of righting reflex (LORR). Nitrous oxide requires pressure somewhat less than two atmospheres, eighteen atmospheres were required for argon and thirty-six atmospheres roughly for nitrogen all in 0.5 atmospheres oxygen. Loss of righting reflex was assessed by using a rolling cage method of Wilson and Miller. Since nitrogen is the least liposoluble and nitrous oxide the most liposoluble of these three gases, greater pressures were needed for nitrogen to attain sufficient concentration in the membrane for anesthesia. Due to the low lipid solubility (1.4), nitrous oxide was administered hyperbarically at a compression rate of less than 0.5 atm/min at chamber temperature of 86 degrees plus or minus 2 degrees. Body temperatures were measured by minimitter transmitters. Two types of transmitters: an AM frequency and an FM frequency were used; a comparison of the two systems were made. The ED50 (atmospheres) required to produce a given score on the LORR were determined for each strain or line of mice. This ED50 value was determined for the Hot and Cold selection lines which have been specifically bred to differ as much as possible in a hypothermic response to acute doses of ethanol. These experiments demonstrate quite clearly a degree of commonality exists among CNS depressants with regard to anesthesia, loss of righting reflex and hypothermia.
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PMID:Commonalities between gas anesthetics (nitrous oxide, nitrogen and/or argon) and ethanol intoxication in hot and cold selection line mice. 206 46

The Cosmos 1887 biosatellite carried 10 male rats and 2 rhesus monkeys on its 12.5-day mission. Upon re-entry the Vostok vehicle overshot the designated landing site, which resulted in fasting of the animals for 42 h, exposure to cage temperatures of 12-15 degrees C, and 2 days delay in death of the rats. No overt untoward effects of the delayed recovery were apparent. Tissues from the rats were harvested by Soviet scientists, appropriately preserved, and provided to U.S. investigators. Flight rats grew more slowly and had larger adrenal glands than earth gravity controls. Analysis of plasma revealed increased concentrations of hepatic alkaline phosphatase, glucose, urea nitrogen, and creatinine in flight rats. In contrast, electrolytes, total protein, albumin, corticosterone, prolactin, and immunoreactive growth hormone levels were unchanged. However, testosterone concentration was marginally decreased after flight and thyroid hormone levels were suggestive of reduced thyroid function. Due to the possible effects of reentry and the delay in recovery of the animals, it is not clear what relationship postflight levels of plasma constituents bear to their concentrations in flight.
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PMID:Cosmos 1887 mission overview: effects of microgravity on rat body and adrenal weights and plasma constituents. 229 71

11-Azapentacyclo[6.2.1.0.0.0]decane (6a) as well as its 6,7-dimethyl derivative 6b was synthesized by a novel, four-step sequence that holds promise for the construction of a variety of cage compounds with bridging nitrogen atoms. The hydrochloride salt of 6a was shown to possess no antiviral activity against either the influenza virus A/Victoria/3/75 or the herpes simplex viruses HSV-1 and HSV-2.
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PMID:Synthesis and antiviral activity of 11-azapentacyclo[6.2.1.0.0.0]decane. 298 19

A new apparatus incorporating a unique type of swivel device was devised for chronic intravenous infusion in unrestrained rats. The swivel requires very little torque for rotation, ie, one-fourth that of the standard swivel, yet is 1/30 as expensive. A coil spring tube, located between the swivel and the catheter, allows the rat unhampered movement within the metabolic cage. Because the catheter follows the rats' movements freely, only two silk sutures are required to secure it to the animal. No statistically significant differences between experimental and control rats were observed in terms of body weight gain, food intake, nitrogen balance, or caloric efficiency. This apparatus should prove useful in many areas of research.
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PMID:A new apparatus for chronic intravenous infusion in unrestrained rats. 312 65

With synchrotron radiation from the Bonn 2.5 GeV synchrotron, high-resolution absorption spectra have been measured at the vanadium K-edge of bromoperoxidase from the marine brown alga Ascophyllum nodosum and several model compounds. The near-edge structure (XANES) of these spectra was used to determine the charge state and the coordination geometry around the vanadium atom. For the active enzyme a coordination charge of 2.7 was found which is compatible with a formal valence of +5, assuming coordination by atoms with a high electronegativity such as oxygen or nitrogen. For the reduced enzyme the coordination charge value of 2.15 indicates the reduction of the valency by 1 unit. Our results suggest that the coordination sphere of the vanadium atom in the native enzyme consists of at least seven oxygen atoms in a distorted octahedral environment with an average bond length of about 2 A. Through the reduction process, the coordination sphere of the vanadium atom changes with a simultaneous decrease of the coordination cage. These results agree with those deduced from previous EPR and 51V-NMR measurements.
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PMID:Vanadium K-edge absorption spectrum of bromoperoxidase from Ascophyllum nodosum. 316 74

Four experiments were made with adult, Single Comb White Leghorn cockerels to investigate aspects of the bioassay for true metabolizable energy adjusted to zero nitrogen balance (TMEn). Collection of excreta in plastic bags held in place by harnesses (H) doubled the potential bird capacity of a standard cage arrangement relative to that wherein excreta are collected on trays (T). Housing H-birds in adjacent cages had no effect on fecal (F) and urinary (U) energy adjusted to zero nitrogen balance (FEn + UEn) irrespective of whether neighboring birds were fed or fasted. Extension of the preassay fast to 48 h did not prevent the reduction in FEn + UEn, seen in previous experiments, of H-birds relative to that of T-birds. Extension of the preassay fast to 48 h, provision of supplemental glucose, and the variation of test material inputs from 30 to 50 g did not substantially effect TMEn estimates or their precision: supplemental glucose reduced body weight loss, but the appearance of glucose in an excreta sample was a cause for concern. Provision of supplemental water by intubation during fasting and excreta-collection periods had little effect on the variance of FEn + UEn values of fed or fasted birds, and no effect on TMEn estimates. Although excreta collection with H has several advantages, there can be a high incidence of sample loss due to H slippage: 21, 2, 0, and 22% in Experiments 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The reduced FEn + UEn of H-birds is a problem requiring explanation. In terms of data quality, none of the assay modifications was beneficial.
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PMID:Comparisons of bioassays for true metabolizable energy adjusted to zero nitrogen balance. 321 10


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