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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
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58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Apoptosis plays a fundamental role in shaping normal hematopoiesis. We have investigated the relationship existing between susceptibility to apoptosis and lineage commitment in hemopoietic cells. The presence and degree of apoptosis were investigated in myeloid (HL-60 and K562), T (Jurkat and MOLT-4), and B (CESS and Raji)
lymphoid
cell lines by using a variety of techniques-transmission electron and light microscopy, flow cytometry and DNA gel electrophoresis. The major achievement of this study is that hematopoietic cells respond to different chemical (staurosporin, tiazofurin, camptothecin) and physical (hyperthermia or hypothermia) stimuli by apoptosis in a lineage-related way. Moreover, with respect to the methods used to detect apoptosis, a strong correlation was observed between the presence of the hypodiploid peak determined by flow cytometry and the DNA laddering evaluated by gel electrophoresis, but both techniques failed to demonstrate the presence of apoptosis in some cases. We conclude that cells of different hematopoietic lineages mostly show a lineage-related behaviour in their apoptotic response to different stimuli, suggesting that the lineage commitment and the stage of differentiation can confer different sensitivities to specific apoptotic stimuli. Moreover, morphological techniques still represent the most reliable approach to detect apoptosis in hemopoietic cells.
Anat
Rec
1999 01
PMID:Lineage-related susceptibility of human hemopoietic cell lines to apoptosis. 989 11
A complex lymphoepithelial gland is a constant feature in the larynx of Atlantic bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus, based on study of 56 animals. Larynges were removed from fresh, non-decomposed beach-stranded animals for gross examination and histological sampling. A large lymphoepithelial gland occurs in the rostro-ventral mucosa of the larynx, overlying the cricoid cartilage. It presents as a well-defined, elevated, and heavily trabeculated area. Histological examination reveals a pseudostratified columnar epithelium which branches into the underlying submucosa. The epithelial-lined folds and crypts thus formed are surrounded by aggregations of lymphocytes, which infiltrate this epithelium. Mucous glands are often associated with these
lymphoid
aggregations. The histological appearance of the laryngeal gland is remarkably similar to the palatine, or dorsal oropharyngeal tonsils, of T. truncatus. It may be analogous to the nasopharyngeal adenoid of terrestrial animals. Age-related involution of the laryngeal gland is not as obvious with increasing animal age (or length) as it is in other mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue. The distribution of this gland among cetaceans is not yet known. We have observed it in individuals of every species we have studied, including Lagenodelphis hosei, Stenella coeruleoalba, Stenella attenuata, Globicephala macrorhynchus, Steno bredanensis, Physeter catodon, Pseudorca crassidens, Mesoplodon europaeus, and Kogia breviceps.
Anat
Rec
1999 01
PMID:Morphology of the complex laryngeal gland in the Atlantic bottlenose dolphin, Tursiops truncatus. 989 23
This paper describes six cases of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) in which an abdominal tumour had been suspected clinically. Pathological changes were mainly restricted to the massive enlargement of a mesenteric lymph node due to necrogranulomatous lymphadenitis. FIP was diagnosed on the basis of the immunohistological demonstration of coronavirus antigen in intact macrophages within the necrogranulomatous lesions. In the affected lymph node
lymphoid
tissue was either almost completely effaced or restricted to follicles composed mainly of variable numbers of blasts. From one to many plasma cells positive for coronavirus-specific antibodies were present in the marginal sinuses or capsules. In addition, necrogranulomas were present in the gut-associated
lymphoid
tissue of the caecum of one cat, and adjacent to the affected lymph node of another.
Vet
Rec
1999 Jan 30
PMID:Feline infectious peritonitis presenting as a tumour in the abdominal cavity. 1007 Jul 1
Forty-seven common dolphins (Delphinus delphis ponticus) were stranded on the northern shores of the Black Sea between mid-July and early September 1994, more than in previous or subsequent years. Two of the 47 dolphins were examined in detail to try to determine the cause of the increased stranding rate. Their lesions included broncho-interstitial pneumonia with type II epithelial cell hyperplasia and multinucleate syncytial cells, neuronal necrosis, gliosis, and non-suppurative meningitis of the brain, necrotic stomatitis, gastroenteritis and cholangitis, and
lymphoid
depletion of the spleen and lymph nodes. The diseased tissues stained positive in an immunoperoxidase test, using a polyclonal antiserum to measles virus as the primary antibody, and electron microscopy showed that they contained regularly-shaped intranuclear particles about 22 nm in diameter. They were positive by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the nucleoprotein gene of morbillivirus. However, there was no evidence of morbillivirus in frozen tissues either by virus isolation or by antigen capture ELISA. The concentration of sigma DDTS in the blubber of both dolphins was about 50 to 100 times higher than the levels in toothed cetaceans from the North Sea, North Atlantic Ocean, and Baltic Sea. The lesions were consistent with those found in other species with morbilliviral disease, and the positive immunoperoxidase test, PCR and electron microscopical examination confirmed a morbillivirus as the primary cause of these lesions.
Vet
Rec
1999 Jan 23
PMID:Epizootic of morbilliviral disease in common dolphins (Delphinus delphis ponticus) from the Black sea. 1009 12
We studied the absorbing lymphatic peripheral vessels of the Peyer's patches of the small and large intestine of the rabbit by means of light microscopy after injection of Neoprene latex and transmission electron microscopy in order to highlight their topographical distributions to blood vessels as well as the morphologic mechanism of transendothelial passage of the lymphocytes to the lymph. The distribution of absorbing lymphatic vessels originates from the lacteal vessels and the subepithelial mucosal lymphatic network, which continue without interruptions and dilations into the vessels of the interfollicular area which are woven into basket-like networks entwining the medio-basal portion of each
lymphoid
follicle. The interfollicular area vessels then drain into the large vessels of the tunica submucosa, which in turn drain into the valved precollector vessels of the subserosa by way of intramuscular vessels. TEM revealed the absorbing lymphatic vessels to have a continuous endothelial wall without open junctions, fenestrations, and continuous basal lamina. We observed many lymphocytes wedged in the lymphatic endothelial wall. This underlines the different phases of their migration from the
lymphoid
tissue in the lumen of the lymphatic vessel. Results of ultrathin serial sections and three dimensional reconstruction of lymphatic vessel segments with included lymphocyte showed the transendothelial passage of lymphocyte, through the "intraendothelial channels."
Anat
Rec
2000 01 01
PMID:Ultrastructural and three dimensional aspects of the lymphatic vessels of the absorbing peripheral lymphatic apparatus in Peyer's patches of the rabbit. 1060 50
Thirty-three pigs affected by porcine dermatitis and nephropathy syndrome, 30 from Spain and three from the USA, were investigated in order to detect porcine circovirus (PCV) in their tissues. A standard in situ hybridisation technique using a specific DNA 317-bp probe based on a well-conserved sequence of PCV (which recognises both PCV-1 and PCV-2) was applied to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. Twenty-eight of the 30 Spanish pigs and all three American pigs had PCV in at least one tissue. Viral nucleic acid was detected mainly in
lymphoid
organs, and especially the lymph nodes. The viral genome was also found, in order of decreasing quantity, in Peyer's patches, tonsil, lung, spleen, kidney, liver, and skin. Viral nucleic acid was located mainly within the cytoplasm of monocyte/macrophage lineage cells, including follicular dendritic cells, macrophages, histiocytes and Kupffer cells. No viral nucleic acid was found in damaged glomeruli or arteriolar walls. In frozen samples available from three Spanish pigs, the virus was identified as type 2 by using the polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism. Most of the pigs from which serum was available were seropositive against porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus (PRRSV), and PRRSV antigen was detected in the lung of two of the Spanish pigs. These results suggested that PCV is present in tissues of almost all pigs affected by PDNS, and PCV has to be considered as a possible agent involved in the pathogenesis of the syndrome.
Vet
Rec
2000 Jan 08
PMID:Identification of porcine circovirus in tissues of pigs with porcine dermatitis and nephropathy syndrome. 1067 9
Denervation of skeletal muscle is followed by the progressive loss of tissue mass and impairment of its functional properties. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the occurrence of cell death and its mechanism in rat skeletal muscle undergoing post-denervation atrophy. We studied the expression of specific markers of apoptosis and necrosis in experimentally denervated tibialis anterior, extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles of adult rats. Fluorescent staining of nuclear DNA with propidium iodide revealed the presence of nuclei with hypercondensed chromatin and fragmented nuclei typical of apoptotic cells in the muscle tissue 2, 4 and to a lesser extent 7 months after denervation. This finding was supported by electron microscopy of the denervated muscle. We found clear morphological manifestations of muscle cell death, with ultrastructural characteristics very similar if not identical to those considered as nuclear and cytoplasmic markers of apoptosis. With increasing time of denervation, progressive destabilization of the differentiated phenotype of muscle cells was observed. It included disalignment and spatial disorganization of myofibrils as well as their resorption and formation of myofibril-free zones. These changes initially appeared in subsarcolemmal areas around myonuclei, and by 4 months following nerve transection they were spread throughout the sarcoplasm. Despite an increased number of residual bodies and secondary lysosomes in denervated muscle, we did not find any evidence of involvement of autophagocytosis in the resorption of the contractile system. Dead muscle fibers were usually surrounded by a folded intact basal lamina; they had an intact sarcolemma and highly condensed chromatin and sarcoplasm. Folds of the basal lamina around the dead cells resulted from significant shrinkage of cell volume. Macrophages were occasionally found in close proximity to dead myocytes. We detected no manifestations of inflammation in the denervated tissue. Single myocytes expressing traits of the necrotic phenotype were very rare. A search for another marker of apoptosis, nuclear DNA fragmentation, using terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase mediated dUTP nick end labeling (the TUNEL method) in situ, revealed the presence of multiple DNA fragments in cell nuclei in only a very small number of cell nuclei in 2 and 4 month denervated muscle and to less extent in 7 month denervated muscle. Virtually no TUNEL reactivity was found in normal muscle. Double labeling of tissue denervated for 2 and 4 months for genome fragmentation with the TUNEL method and for total nuclear DNA with propidium iodide demonstrated co-localization of the TUNEL-positive fragmented DNA in some of the nuclei containing condensed chromatin and in fragmented nuclei. However, the numbers of nuclei of abnormal morphology containing condensed and/or irregular patterns of chromatin distribution, as revealed by DNA staining and electron microscopy, exceeded by 33-38 times the numbers of nuclei positive for the TUNEL reaction. Thus, we found a discrepancy between the frequences of expression of morphological markers of apoptosis and DNA fragmentation in denervated muscle. This provides evidence that fragmentation of the genomic DNA is not an obligatory event during atrophy and death of muscle cells, or, alternatively, it may occur only for a short period of time during this process. Unlike classical apoptosis described in mammalian thymocytes and
lymphoid
cells, non-inflammatory death of muscle fibers in denervated muscle occurs a long time after the removal of myotrophic influence of the nerve and is preceded by the progressive imbalance of the state of terminal differentiation. Our results indicate that apoptosis appears to be represented by a number of distinct isotypes in animals belonging to different taxonomic groups and in different cell lineages of the same organism.
Anat
Rec
2000 03 01
PMID:Cell death in denervated skeletal muscle is distinct from classical apoptosis. 1070 51
The presence of a vermiform appendix is often cited as a shared, derived character uniting the Hominoidea (apes and humans). However, appendix-like structures have been reported for many other primate taxa. A review of the literature reveals that the confusion arises because several different, and sometimes contradictory, criteria are enlisted to distinguish an appendix. The measures most frequently used to define this structure are gross shape and certain aspects of histology (e.g.,
lymphoid
concentration). Unfortunately, descriptions of shape lack quantification, and histological thin-sections have not been studied for many primate taxa. In addition, although
lymphoid
concentration in the human appendix is known to vary considerably with age, this information is rarely reported in the primate literature. Given these complications, additional studies on the morphology and ontogeny of this region are warranted. This research will lead to a more accurate definition of the vermiform appendix. Most authors currently describe this feature as a narrow diverticulum of the cecum with thick walls and concentrated
lymphoid
tissue. However, the presence of thick mucosal layers and appreciable
lymphoid
tissue in taxa lacking appendices (e. g., Saguinus, Cercocebus) suggests that these features may be primitive primate traits. If so, wall thickness and
lymphoid
concentration cannot be used to define the vermiform appendix. These results suggest that a more rigorous definition of the appendix is requisite for this feature to be used in primate systematics.
Anat
Rec
2000 12 15
PMID:The primate appendix: a reassessment. 1113 84
A matched case-control study was made of 100 thoroughbred horses which were coughing and 148 control horses which were free of clinical signs of respiratory tract disease. The variables identified by multivariable conditional logistic regression as being significantly associated with coughing included age (the risk decreased with age), the stage of training (horses in early training were at greatest risk), the time since the last race (horses that had never raced were at greatest risk) and the time since they were last transported (horses transported more than 14 days previously were more likely to cough than those transported within the last week). The coughing horses were significantly more likely to have high scores for upper and lower tracheal mucus and pharyngeal
lymphoid
hyperplasia. In addition, the tracheal aspirates of the coughing horses had increased odds of neutrophilia and were more likely to have intracellular bacteria than the control horses. However, a considerable proportion of the control horses had cytological and/or endoscopic evidence of airway inflammation.
Vet
Rec
2001 Jan 27
PMID:Coughing in thoroughbred racehorses: risk factors and tracheal endoscopic and cytological findings. 1123 40
Feline spongiform encephalopathy (FSE), a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy or prion disease of cats, first reported in Great Britain in 1990, is believed to result from the consumption of food contaminated by the agent of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). The accumulation of PrP in non-neural tissues of cats diagnosed as suffering from FSE was investigated by immunohistochemistry. In the majority of the cats no disease-specific PrP was detected in
lymphoid
tissues. Small amounts of PrP were detected in the spleen of only two of 13 samples examined, in Peyer's patches of one of the two cases for which suitable material was available, but in the myenteric plexus of all four cats in which sections of intestine were examined. In addition PrP immunostaining was found in the kidney of all the cats with FSE whose kidneys were examined.
Vet
Rec
2001 Apr 07
PMID:Inconsistent detection of PrP in extraneural tissues of cats with feline spongiform encephalopathy. 1133 13
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