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1.
As part of a programme of comparative measurements of P d (diffusional water permeability) the RBCs (red blood cells) from dingo (Canis familiaris dingo) and greyhound dog (Canis familiaris) were studied. The morphologies of the dingo and greyhound RBCs [examined by light and SEM (scanning electron microscopy)] were found to be very similar, with regard to aspect ratio and size; the mean diameters were estimated to be the same (~7.2 μm) for both dingo and greyhound RBCs. The water diffusional permeability was monitored by using an Mn2+‐doping 1H NMR technique at 400 MHz. The P d (cm/s) values of dingo and greyhound RBCs were similar: 6.5×10?3 at 25°C, 7.5×10?3 at 30°C, 10×10?3 at 37°C and 11.5×10?3 at 42°C. The inhibitory effect of a mercury‐containing SH (sulfhydryl)‐modifying reagent PCMBS (p‐chloromercuribenzene sulfonate) was investigated. The maximal inhibition of dingo and greyhound RBCs was reached in 15–30 min at 37°C with 2 mmol/l PCMBS. The values of maximal inhibition were in the range 72–74% when measured at 25°C and 30°C, and ~66% at 37°C. The lowest value of P d (corresponding to the basal permeability to water) was ~2–3×10?3 cm/s in the temperature range 25–37°C. The E a,d (activation energy of water diffusion) was 25 kJ/mol for dingo RBC and 23 kJ/mol for greyhound RBCs. After incubation with PCMBS, the values of E a,d increased, reaching 46–48 kJ/mol in the condition of maximal inhibition of water exchange. The electrophoretograms of membrane polypeptides of the dingo and greyhound RBCs were compared and seen to be very similar. We postulate that the RBC parameters reported in the present study are characteristic of all canine species and, in particular in the two cases presented here, these parameters have not been changed by the peculiar Australian habitat over the millennia (as in the case of the dingo) or over shorter time periods, decades or centuries (as in the case of the domestic greyhound).  相似文献   

2.
As part of a programme of comparative measurements of P d (diffusional water permeability) the RBCs (red blood cells) from an aquatic monotreme, platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus), and an aquatic reptile, saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) were studied. The mean diameter of platypus RBCs was estimated by light microscopy and found to be ~6.3 μm. P d was measured by using an Mn2+‐doping 1H NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) technique. The P d (cm/s) values were relatively low: ~2.1×10?3 at 25°C, 2.5×10?3 at 30°C, 3.4×10?3 at 37°C and 4.5 at 42°C for the platypus RBCs and ~2.8×10?3 at 25°C, 3.2×10?3 at 30°C, 4.5×10?3 at 37°C and 5.7×10?3 at 42°C for the crocodile RBCs. In parallel with the low water permeability, the E a,d (activation energy of water diffusion) was relatively high, ~35 kJ/mol. These results suggest that “conventional” WCPs (water channel proteins), or AQPs (aquaporins), are probably absent from the plasma membranes of RBCs from both the platypus and the saltwater crocodile.  相似文献   

3.
Quantitative measurements of intravascular microscopic dynamics, such as absolute blood flow velocity, shear stress and the diffusion coefficient of red blood cells (RBCs), are fundamental in understanding the blood flow behavior within the microcirculation, and for understanding why diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) measurements of blood flow are dominantly sensitive to the diffusive motion of RBCs. Dynamic light scattering‐optical coherence tomography (DLS‐OCT) takes the advantages of using DLS to measure particle flow and diffusion within an OCT resolution‐constrained three‐dimensional volume, enabling the simultaneous measurements of absolute RBC velocity and diffusion coefficient with high spatial resolution. In this work, we applied DLS‐OCT to measure both RBC velocity and the shear‐induced diffusion coefficient within penetrating venules of the somatosensory cortex of anesthetized mice. Blood flow laminar profile measurements indicate a blunted laminar flow profile and the degree of blunting decreases with increasing vessel diameter. The measured shear‐induced diffusion coefficient was proportional to the flow shear rate with a magnitude of ~0.1 to 0.5 × 10?6 mm2. These results provide important experimental support for the recent theoretical explanation for why DCS is dominantly sensitive to RBC diffusive motion.   相似文献   

4.
Exposure to mercury is associated with numerous health problems, affecting different parts of the human body, including the nervous and cardiovascular systems in adults and children; however, the underlying mechanisms are yet to be fully elucidated. We investigated the role of membrane sulfatide on mercuric ion (Hg2+) mediated red blood cell (RBC) adhesion to a sub-endothelial matrix protein, laminin, using a microfluidic system that mimics microphysiological flow conditions. We exposed whole blood to mercury (HgCl2), at a range of concentrations to mimic acute (high dose) and chronic (low dose) exposure, and examined RBC adhesion to immobilized laminin in microchannels at physiological flow conditions. Exposure of RBCs to both acute and chronic levels of Hg2+ resulted in elevated adhesive interactions between RBCs and laminin depending on the concentration of HgCl2 and exposure duration. BCAM-Lu chimer significantly inhibited the adhesion of RBCs that had been treated with 50 μM of HgCl2 solution for 1 h at 37 °C, while it did not prevent the adhesion of 3 h and 24 h Hg2+-treated RBCs. Sulfatide significantly inhibited the adhesion of RBC that had been treated with 50 μM of HgCl2 solution for 1 h at 37 °C and 0.5 μM of HgCl2 solution for 24 h at room temperature (RT). We demonstrated that RBC BCAM-Lu and RBC sulfatides bind to immobilized laminin, following exposure of RBCs to mercuric ions. The results of this study are significant considering the potential associations between sulfatides, red blood cells, mercury exposure, and cardiovascular diseases.  相似文献   

5.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(21):4663-4671
Because of their compromised deformability, heat denatured erythrocytes have been used as labeled probes to visualize spleen tissue or to assess the ability of the spleen to retain stiff red blood cells (RBCs) for over three decades, e.g., see Looareesuwan et al. N. Engl. J. Med. (1987). Despite their good accessibility, it is still an open question how heated RBCs compare to certain diseased RBCs in terms of their biomechanical and biorheological responses, which may undermine their effective usage and even lead to misleading experimental observations. To help answering this question, we perform a systematic computational study of the hemorheological properties of heated RBCs with several physiologically relevant static and hemodynamic settings, including optical-tweezers test, relaxation of prestretched RBCs, RBC traversal through a capillary-like channel and a spleen-like slit, and a viscometric rheology test. We show that our in silico RBC models agree well with existing experiments. Moreover, under static tests, heated RBCs exhibit deformability deterioration comparable to certain disease-impaired RBCs such as those in malaria. For RBC traversal under confinement (through microchannel or slit), heated RBCs show prolonged transit time or retention depending on the level of confinement and heating procedure, suggesting that carefully heat-treated RBCs may be useful for studying splenic- or vaso-occlusion in vascular pathologies. For the rheology test, we expand the existing bulk viscosity data of heated RBCs to a wider range of shear rates (1–1000 s−1) to represent most pathophysiological conditions in macro- or microcirculation. Although heated RBC suspension shows elevated viscosity comparable to certain diseased RBC suspensions under relatively high shear rates (100–1000 s−1), they underestimate the elevated viscosity (e.g., in sickle cell anemia) at low shear rates (<10 s−1). Our work provides mechanistic rationale for selective usage of heated RBC as a potentially useful model for studying the abnormal traversal dynamics and hemorheology in certain blood disorders.  相似文献   

6.
Blood platelets when activated are involved in the mechanisms of hemostasis and thrombosis, and their migration toward injured vascular endothelium necessitates interaction with red blood cells (RBCs). Rheology co-factors such as a high hematocrit and a high shear rate are known to promote platelet mass transport toward the vessel wall. Hemodynamic conditions promoting RBC aggregation may also favor platelet migration, particularly in the venous system at low shear rates. The aim of this study was to confirm experimentally the impact of RBC aggregation on platelet-sized micro particle migration in a Couette flow apparatus. Biotin coated micro particles were mixed with saline or blood with different aggregation tendencies, at two shear rates of 2 and 10 s−1 and three hematocrits ranging from 20 to 60%. Streptavidin membranes were respectively positioned on the Couette static and rotating cylinders upon which the number of adhered fluorescent particles was quantified. The platelet-sized particle adhesion on both walls was progressively enhanced by increasing the hematocrit (p < 0.001), reducing the shear rate (p < 0.001), and rising the aggregation of RBCs (p < 0.001). Particle count was minimum on the stationary cylinder when suspended in saline at 2 s−1 (57 ± 33), and maximum on the rotating cylinder at 60% hematocrit, 2 s−1 and the maximum dextran-induced RBC aggregation (2840 ± 152). This fundamental study is confirming recent hypotheses on the role of RBC aggregation on venous thrombosis, and may guide molecular imaging protocols requiring injecting active labeled micro particles in the venous flow system to probe human diseases.  相似文献   

7.
The endothelial cell barrier is tightly regulated, and disruption or the leaky behavior of the barrier leads to pathology. Disturbance of blood-brain barrier is observed during viral infection, cerebral malaria, and acute hemorrhagic encephalitis. Red blood cells (RBCs) bind to the endothelial cells (ECs) and their affinity towards ECs enhances in the presence of Plasmodium falciparum infection. ECs stimulated with methemoglobin (MetHb; 20 µM) for 1 hour exhibit high levels of cyto-adherence receptors CD36 and ICAM-1 on their cell surface compared with unstimulated cells. These ECs have acquired affinity towards uninfected RBCs in flow at arterial shear stress. SEM analysis indicates that EC–RBC cyto-adherence involved multiple attachment points. Initially, ECs bind single layer of RBCs and the number of RBCs increases over time to give high-order cyto-adherence with more than 30 RBCs adhered to each endothelial cell. The cyto-adherence complexes are stable to high shear stress and can withstand shear stress up to 450 dyne/cm 2. MetHb-treated ECs exhibited high reactive oxygen species level, and preincubation of ECs with antioxidant (NAC or mannitol) abolished the formation of EC–RBC cyto-adherence complexes. In addition, gallic acid (present in red wine) and green tea extract has inhibited the formation of EC–RBC cyto-adherence complex. A better understanding of gallic acid and tea polyphenol targeting pathological cyto-adherence may allow us to develop a better adjuvant therapy for cerebral malaria and other noninfectious diseases.  相似文献   

8.
《Cytotherapy》2019,21(7):793-800
BackgroundRed blood cells (RBCs) can be labeled with N-hydroxysuccinimidobiotin (sulfo-NHS-biotin), which binds to cell surface proteins under aqueous conditions. Biotinylated RBCs can be safely infused and detected in peripheral blood samples using flow cytometry, using a fluorochrome-conjugated streptavidin (SA) detection reagent. Biotinylated RBCs have been used to track survival of transfused RBCs, and have applications in optimizing RBC storage and in understanding donor genetic, environmental and disease factors affecting RBC products.MethodsWe have developed a closed-system, current good manufacturing practices (cGMP)–compliant procedure for biotinylation of RBCs and a quantitative flow cytometric assay to estimate the dose of cell-bound biotin delivered to the patient. Resulting products were characterized for variability, sterility, endotoxin, hemolysis, total dose of cell-bound biotin and stability.ResultsThe density of biotin-labeling increased as a log-linear function of sulfo-NHS-biotin–labeling concentration, with greater variability at lower concentrations. The upper estimates of biotin doses in the average product (mean RBC content = 5.55 × 1011) were 9.8 and 73.0 µg for products labeled at 3 and 15 µg sulfo-NHS-biotin/mL of total reaction mixture (27 and 135 nmol/mL packed RBCs), respectively. All products were negative for bacterial and fungal growth at 14 days and were below the limit of endotoxin detection. Biotinylated RBCs were stable in vitro for up to 50 days after labeling.DiscussionWe have validated a closed-system procedure for biotinylating RBCs for investigational use. A standard operating procedure is presented in sufficient detail for implementation in a cGMP-compliant cell-processing facility.  相似文献   

9.
  • 1.1. The diffusional water permeability (Pd) of rabbit red blood cell (RBC) membrane has been monitored by a doping nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique on control cells and following inhibition with p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (PCMBS).
  • 2.2. The values of Pd were around 6.3 × 10−3 cm/sec at 15°C, 7.0 × 10−3cm/sec at 20°C, 8.0 × 10−3 cm/sec at 25°C, 9.1 × 10−3 cm/sec at 30°C and10.7 × 10−3 cm/sec at 37°C.
  • 3.3. Systematic studies on the effects of PCMBS on water diffusion indicated that the maximal inhibition was reached in 15 min at 37°C with 0.5 mM PCMBS.
  • 4.4. The values of maximal inhibition were around 71–74% at all temperatures.
  • 5.5. The basal permeability to water was estimated as 1.6 × 10−3cm/sec at 15°C, 2.0 × 10−3cm/sec at 20°C, 2.4 × 10−3cm/sec at 25°C, 2.6 × 10−3cm/sec at 30°C, and 3.1× 10−3 cm/secat 37°C.
  • 6.6. The activation energy of water diffusion was around 18 kJ/mol and increased to 27 kcal/mol after incubation with PCMBS in conditions of maximal inhibition of water diffusion.
  • 7.7. The membrane polypeptide electrophoretic pattern of rabbit RBCs has been compared with its human counterpart.
  • 8.8. The rabbit membrane contained a higher amount of spectrin (bands 1 and 2), while the band 6 (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) was markedly less intense.
  • 9.9. Considerable differences in the electrophoretic patterns of the two sources of RBC membranes appeared in the bands migrating in the band 4.5 region and in front of band 7, where some polypeptides were apparent in higher amounts in the rabbit RBC membrane.
  相似文献   

10.
Light scattering and viscometric studies have been carried out on two preparations, A and B, of rooster comb hyaluronate. Sedimentation rate studies have also been performed with A. Light scattering measurements in 0.2 m KCl for preparation A gave a molecular weight of 3.3 × 106 and for B, 1.0 × 106. In (0.1–0.3) M NaCl similar measurements gave a particle weight for A of (4.4–6.4 × 106 and for B (1.7–2.8 × 106. In 0.066 m CaCl2 molecular weight values of 9.5 × 106 for A and 1.7 × 106 for B were obtained. Thus in the presence of Na+ and Ca2+ ions aggregates of chains persisted into dilute solution. Measurements by light scattering on A and B in 4 m guanidinium chloride gave values in the same range as those obtained in 0.2 m KCl. Sedimentation rate studies on A gave values of 10.3 Svedbergs in 0.2 m KCl and 12.2 Svedbergs in 0.2 m NaCl and 0.066m CaCl2. The shear dependence of the viscosity was studied using a conicylindrical viscometer at shear rates between 0.5 and 20 s?1. Preparation A in 0.2 m KCl and NaCl yielded values for (νsp/cc→0 of 5000 and 7100 ml g?1 respectively in keeping with the tendency to aggregate. The behaviour for preparation B was similar. In 0.066 m CaCl2 there was a marked dependence of viscosity on shear speed below 10 s?1 for all concentrations and the value of (νsp/c)→0 at 0 s?1 for preparation A was 7700 ml g?1 while at a shear rate of 8 s?1 (νsp/c)c→0 ? 5000 ml g ?1. Similar effects were found for preparation B and the data suggest associations of chains disruptable by weak shear forces. The increase in viscosity with concentration in the presence of 0.066 m CaCl2 was much less than in the presence of KCl or NaCl, suggesting that the Ca2+ had a marked effect on the ”rigidity’ of the molecules in solution. A viscometric titration experiment with Ca2? showed that a level of 0.02 m CaCl2 in 0.2 m NaCl was sufficient to produce the change in viscosity presented above and that significant perturbations of the viscosity were present at 0.005?0.01 m CaCl2.  相似文献   

11.
NMR measurements of the diffusional permeability of the human adult red blood cell (RBC) membrane to water (P d) and of the activation energy (E a,d) of the process furnished values of P d ~ 4 × 10?3 cm/s at 25 °C and ~6.1 × 10?3 cm/s at 37 °C, and E a,d ~ 26 kJ/mol. Comparative NMR measurements for other species showed: (1) monotremes (echidna and platypus), chicken, little penguin, and saltwater crocodile have the lowest P d values; (2) sheep, cow, and elephant have P d values lower than human P d values; (3) cat, horse, alpaca, and camel have P d values close to those of humans; (4) guinea pig, dog, dingo, agile wallaby, red-necked wallaby, Eastern grey kangaroo, and red kangaroo have P d values higher than those of humans; (5) mouse, rat, rabbit, and “small and medium size” marsupials have the highest values of P d (>8.0 × 10?3 cm/s at 25 °C and >10.0 × 10?3 cm/s at 37 °C). There are peculiarities of E a,d values for the RBCs from different species. The maximum inhibition of diffusional permeability of RBCs induced by incubation with p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate varied between 0 % (for the chicken and little penguin) to ~50 % (for human, mouse, cat, sheep, horse, camel, and Indian elephant), and ~60–75 % (for rat, guinea pig, rabbit, dog, alpaca, and all marsupials). These results indicate that no water channel proteins (WCPs) or aquaporins are present in the membrane of RBCs from monotremes (echidna, platypus), chicken, little penguin and saltwater crocodile whereas WCPs from the membranes of RBCs from marsupials have peculiarities.  相似文献   

12.
In this paper we apply a novel JAVA version of a model on the homeostasis of human red blood cells (RBCs) to investigate the changes RBCs experience during single capillary transits. In the companion paper we apply a model extension to investigate the changes in RBC homeostasis over the approximately 200000 capillary transits during the ~120 days lifespan of the cells. These are topics inaccessible to direct experimentation but rendered mature for a computational modelling approach by the large body of recent and early experimental results which robustly constrain the range of parameter values and model outcomes, offering a unique opportunity for an in depth study of the mechanisms involved. Capillary transit times vary between 0.5 and 1.5s during which the red blood cells squeeze and deform in the capillary stream transiently opening stress-gated PIEZO1 channels allowing ion gradient dissipation and creating minuscule quantal changes in RBC ion contents and volume. Widely accepted views, based on the effects of experimental shear stress on human RBCs, suggested that quantal changes generated during capillary transits add up over time to develop the documented changes in RBC density and composition during their long circulatory lifespan, the quantal hypothesis. Applying the new red cell model (RCM) we investigated here the changes in homeostatic variables that may be expected during single capillary transits resulting from transient PIEZO1 channel activation. The predicted quantal volume changes were infinitesimal in magnitude, biphasic in nature, and essentially irreversible within inter-transit periods. A sub-second transient PIEZO1 activation triggered a sharp swelling peak followed by a much slower recovery period towards lower-than-baseline volumes. The peak response was caused by net CaCl2 and fluid gain via PIEZO1 channels driven by the steep electrochemical inward Ca2+ gradient. The ensuing dehydration followed a complex time-course with sequential, but partially overlapping contributions by KCl loss via Ca2+-activated Gardos channels, restorative Ca2+ extrusion by the plasma membrane calcium pump, and chloride efflux by the Jacobs-Steward mechanism. The change in relative cell volume predicted for single capillary transits was around 10−5, an infinitesimal volume change incompatible with a functional role in capillary flow. The biphasic response predicted by the RCM appears to conform to the quantal hypothesis, but whether its cumulative effects could account for the documented changes in density during RBC senescence required an investigation of the effects of myriad transits over the full four months circulatory lifespan of the cells, the subject of the next paper.  相似文献   

13.
Aoyagi H 《Biotechnology letters》2006,28(20):1687-1694
An index [kv: average isolation rate of viable protoplast (number/ml min)] was established to evaluate the optimal conditions for protoplast isolation from cultured plant cells. The optimal conditions for protoplasts isolation from Nicotiana tabacum BY2 cultured cells could be determined on the basis of the kv [31.7 × 103 (number/ml min)]. The colony-forming efficiency of the protoplasts was about 46%. The optimal conditions for protoplasts isolation from Catharanthus roseus [kv = 38.1 × 103 (number/ml min)] and Wasabia japonica [kv = 14.2 × 103 (number/ml min)] cultured cells could also be determined. Furthermore, a method for rapid regenerating cell wall of protoplast in liquid culture using alginate gel containing locust bean gum was developed.  相似文献   

14.
《Cytotherapy》2023,25(4):442-450
Background aimsHematopoietic stem cell transplantation using bone marrow as the graft source is a common treatment for hematopoietic malignancies and disorders. For allogeneic transplants, processing of bone marrow requires the depletion of ABO-mismatched red blood cells (RBCs) to avoid transfusion reactions. Here the authors tested the use of an automated closed system for depleting RBCs from bone marrow and compared the results to a semi-automated platform that is more commonly used in transplant centers today. The authors found that fully automated processing using the Sepax instrument (Cytiva, Marlborough, MA, USA) resulted in depletion of RBCs and total mononuclear cell recovery that were comparable to that achieved with the COBE 2991 (Terumo BCT, Lakewood, CO, USA) semi-automated process.MethodsThe authors optimized the fully automated and closed Sepax SmartRedux (Cytiva) protocol. Three reduction folds (10×, 12× and 15×) were tested on the Sepax. Each run was compared with the standard processing performed in the authors’ center on the COBE 2991. Given that bone marrow is difficult to acquire for these purposes, the authors opted to create a surrogate that is more easily obtainable, which consisted of cryopreserved peripheral blood stem cells that were thawed and mixed with RBCs and supplemented with Plasma-Lyte A (Baxter, Deerfield, IL, USA) and 4% human serum albumin (Baxalta, Westlake Village, CA, USA). This “bone marrow-like” product was split into two starting products of approximately 600 mL, and these were loaded onto the COBE and Sepax for direct comparison testing. Samples were taken from the final products for cell counts and flow cytometry. The authors also tested a 10× Sepax reduction using human bone marrow supplemented with human liquid plasma and RBCs.ResultsRBC reduction increased as the Sepax reduction rate increased, with an average of 86.06% (range of 70.85–96.39%) in the 10×, 98.80% (range of 98.1–99.5%) in the 12× and 98.89% (range of 98.80–98.89%) in the 15×. The reduction rate on the COBE ranged an average of 69.0–93.15%. However, white blood cell (WBC) recovery decreased as the Sepax reduction rate increased, with an average of 47.65% (range of 38.9–62.35%) in the 10×, 14.56% (range of 14.34–14.78%) in the 12× and 27.97% (range of 24.7–31.23%) in the 15×. COBE WBC recovery ranged an average of 53.17–76.12%. Testing a supplemented human bone marrow sample using a 10× Sepax reduction resulted in an average RBC reduction of 84.22% (range of 84.0–84.36%) and WBC recovery of 43.37% (range of 37.48–49.26%). Flow cytometry analysis also showed that 10× Sepax reduction resulted in higher purity and better recovery of CD34+, CD3+ and CD19+ cells compared with 12× and 15× reduction. Therefore, a 10× reduction rate was selected for the Sepax process.ConclusionsThe fully automated and closed SmartRedux program on the Sepax was shown to be effective at reducing RBCs from “bone marrow-like” products and a supplemented bone marrow product using a 10× reduction rate.  相似文献   

15.
Colony formation by variant Chinese hamster cells highly resistant to adenine analogs and deficient in adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) activity was measured after co-cultivation with APRT+, CHO-K1 cells in medium containing one of three different adenine analogs. Depending upon the density of APRT+ cells and the specific adenine analog, large differences in the recovery of APRT? colonies were observed. The particular adenine analog and APRT+ cell density were more significant factors in the recovery of APRT? colonies than the concentration of the analog or the level of APRT activity. The number of wild-type cells (CHO-K1) required to inhibit formation of APRT? colonies by 50% (mean lethal density; MLD50) with 65 μg/ml 8-aza-adenine (AzA) as the selective drug was 8.0 × 105 cells/100 mm dish (1.5 × 104/cm2). With 100 μg/ml 2,6-diaminopurine (DAP) the MLD50 for CHO-K1 was 4.0 × 105 cells/100 mm dish (7.3 × 103/cm2). The MLD50 for CHO-K1 when the DAP concentration was decreased to 50 μg/ml was only slightly higher, 5 × 105 cells/100 mm dish (9.1 × 103/cm2). The most toxic effect was observed with 2-fluoroadenine (FA). The MLD50 for CHO-K1 in 2 μg/ml FA was 4.5 × 104 cells/100 mm dish (8.2 × 102/cm2), a cell density which permits minimal direct contact between APRT+ and APRT? cells. The toxic effects of FA on individually resistant, APRT? cells were found to be mediated by metabolites released into the medium by dying APRT+ cells. This metabolite toxicity to APRT? cells was also demonstrated in mixtures with cells having only 8% of wild-type APRT activity. The MLD50 for these APRT+ (8%) cells in 2 μg/ml FA was 7.5 × 104 cells/100 dish (1.4 × 103/cm2), a small difference from the MLD50 for cells with wild-type levels of APRT activity. The differences in the recovery of APRT? colonies from mixtures with APRT+ cells in these three adenine analogs are critical to the design of procedures for the selection of APRT? cells from populations of APRT+ cells and emphasize the importance of establishing the parameters of metabolic cooperation, not only in terms of cell density but also with regard to the particular selective agent, in any experiment designed to determine precise mutation rates or to test putative mutagens upon mammalian cells in culture.  相似文献   

16.
Tank-treading (TT) motion is established in optically trapped, live red blood cells (RBCs) held in shear flow and is systematically investigated under varying shear rates, temperature (affecting membrane viscosity), osmolarity (resulting in changes in RBC shape and cytoplasmic viscosity), and viscosity of the suspending medium. TT frequency is measured as a function of membrane and cytoplasmic viscosity, the former being four times more effective in altering TT frequency. TT frequency increases as membrane viscosity decreases, by as much as 10% over temperature changes of only 4°C at a shear rate of ∼43 s−1. A threshold shear rate (1.5 ± 0.3 s−1) is observed below which the TT frequency drops to zero. TT motion is also observed in shape-engineered (spherical) RBCs and those with cholesterol-depleted membranes. The TT threshold is less evident in both cases but the TT frequency increases in the latter cells. Our findings indicate that TT motion is pervasive even in folded and deformed erythrocytes, conditions that occur when such erythrocytes flow through narrow capillaries.  相似文献   

17.
We describe the isolation and characterization of a Chinese hamster ovary cell line selected for resistance to N-carbamoyloxyurea. Using the mammalian cell permeabilization assay developed in our laboratory, a detailed analysis of the target enzyme, ribonucleotide reductase (EC 1.17.4.1), was carried out. Both drug-resistant and parental wild-type cells required the same optimum conditions for enzyme activity. The Ki values for N-carbamoyloxyurea inhibition of CDP reduction were 2.0 mM for NCR-30A cells and 2.3 mM for wild-type cells, while the Ki value for ADP reduction was 2.3 mM for both cell lines. Although the Ki values remained essentially unchanged, the Vmax values for NCR-30A cells were 1.01 nmoles dCDP formed/5 × 106 cells/hour and 1.83 nmoles dADP/5 × 106 cells/hour, while those for the wild-type cells were 0.49 nmoles dCDP produced/5 × 106 cells/hour and 1.00 nmoles dADP/5 × 106 cells/hour. This approximate twofold increase in reductase activity at least partially accounts for a 2.6-fold increase in D10 value for cellular resistance to N-carbamoyloxyurea exhibited by NCR-30A cells. The NCR-30A cell line was also cross-resistant to the antitumor agents, hydroxyurea and guanazole. No differences in Ki values for inhibition of CDP and ADP reduction by these two drugs were detected and cellular resistance could be entirely accounted for by the elevation in activity of the reductase in the NCR-30A cell line. The properties of N-carbamoyloxyurea-resistance cells indicate they should be useful for further investigations into the regulation of mammalian enzyme activity.  相似文献   

18.
BHK-21 cells were cultured under various shear stress conditions in an Integrated Rotating-Wall Vessel (IRWV). Shear ranged from 0.5 dyn/cm2 (simulated microgravity) to 0.92 dyn/cm2. Under simulated microgravity conditions, BHK-21 cells complexed into three-dimensional cellular aggregates attaining 6 × 106 cells/ml as compared to growth under 0.92 dyn cm2 conditions. Glucose utilization in simulated microgravity was reduced significantly, and cellular damage at the microcarrier surface was kept to a minimum. Thus, the integrated rotating wall vessel provides a quiescent environment for the culture of mammalian cells. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Experimental evidence is provided that selenomethionine oxide (MetSeO) is more readily reducible than its sulfur analogue, methionine sulfoxide (MetSO). Pulse radiolysis experiments reveal an efficient reaction of MetSeO with one-electron reductants, such as e-aq (k = 1.2 × 1010M-1s-1), CO·-2 (k = 5.9 × 108 M-1s-1) and (CH3)2) C·OH (k = 3.5 × 107M-1s-1), forming an intermediate selenium-nitrogen coupled zwitterionic radical with the positive charge at an intramolecularly formed Se N 2σ/1σ* three-electron bond, which is characterized by an optical absorption with λmax at 375 nm, and a half-life of about 70 μs. The same transient is generated upon HO· radical-induced one-electron oxidation of selenomethionine (MetSe). This radical thus constitutes the redox intermediate between the two oxidation states, MetSeO and MetSe. Time-resolved optical data further indicate sulfur-selenium interactions between the Se N transient and GSH. The Se N transient appears to play a key role in the reduction of selenomethionine oxide by glutathione.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of weak magnetic fields of extremely low frequency (ELF) on E. coli K12 AB1157 cells were studied by the method of anomalous viscosity time dependencies (AVTD). E. coli cells at different densities within a range of 5 × 105–109 cell/ml were exposed to ELF (sinusoidal, 30 μT peak, 15 min) at a frequency of 9 Hz. A transient effect with maximum 40–120 min after exposure was observed. Kinetics of the per-cell-normalised ELF effects fitted well to a Gaussian distribution for all densities during exposure. A maximum value of these kinetics and a time for this maximum were strongly dependent on the cell density during exposure. These data suggest a cell-to-cell interaction during response to ELF. Both dependencies had three regions close to a plateau within the ranges of 3 × 105 − 2 × 107 cell/ml, 4 × 107 − 2 × 108 cell/ml and 4 × 108–109 cell/ml and two rather sharp transitions between these plateaus. The effect reached a maximum value at a density of 4 × 108 cell/ml. Practically no effect was observed at the lowest density of 3 × 105 cell/ml. The data suggested that the ELF effect was mainly caused by a secondary rather than a primary reaction. The filtrates from exposed cells neither induced significant AVTD changes in unexposed cells nor increased the ELF effect when were added to cells before exposure. The data did not provide evidence for significant contribution of stable chemical messengers, but some unstable compounds such as radicals could be involved in the mechanism of cell-to-cell interaction during response to ELF. The results obtained were also in accordance with a model based on an re-emission of secondary photons during resonance fluorescence. Bioelectromagnetics 19:300–309, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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