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1.
Cold preservation results in cell death via iron-dependent formation of reactive oxygen species, leading to apoptosis during rewarming. We aimed to study cold-induced damage (i.e., injury as a consequence of hypothermia itself and not cold ischemia) in proximal tubular cells (PTC) in various preservation solutions presently applied and to clarify the role of mitochondria in this injury. Primary cultures of rat PTC were incubated at 4 degrees C for 24 h in culture medium, UW, Euro-Collins or HTK solution with and without the iron chelator desferal and rewarmed at 37 degrees C in culture medium. Cell damage, morphology, and apoptosis were studied and mitochondrial membrane potential was assessed by fluorescence microscopy. Cold incubation of PTC in culture medium followed by rewarming caused marked cell damage compared to warm incubation alone (LDH release 39+/-10% vs. 1.6+/-0.3%). Cold-induced damage was aggravated in all preservation solutions (LDH release 85+/-2% for UW; similar in Euro-Collins and HTK). After rewarming, cells showed features suggestive for apoptosis. Desferal prevented cell injury in all solutions (e.g., 8+/-2% for UW). Mitochondrial membrane potential was lost during rewarming and this loss could also be inhibited by desferal. Trifluoperazine, which is known to inhibit mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT), was able to prevent cold-induced injury (LDH 85+/-5% vs. 12+/-2%). We conclude that cold-induced injury occurs in PTC and is aggravated by UW, Euro-Collins, and HTK solution. Iron-dependent MPT is suggested to play a role in this damage. Strategies to prevent cold-induced injury should aim at reducing the availability of "free" iron.  相似文献   

2.
U Rauen  F Petrat  T Li  H De Groot 《FASEB journal》2000,14(13):1953-1964
When incubated at 4 degrees C, cultured rat hepatocytes or liver endothelial cells exhibit pronounced injury and, during earlier rewarming, marked apoptosis. Both processes are mediated by reactive oxygen species, and marked protective effects of iron chelators as well as the protection provided by various other antioxidants suggest that hydroxyl radicals, formed by classical Fenton chemistry, are involved. However, when we measured the Fenton chemistry educt hydrogen peroxide and its precursor, the superoxide anion radical, formation of both had markedly decreased and steady-state levels of hydrogen peroxide did not alter during cold incubation of either liver endothelial cells or hepatocytes. Similarly, there was no evidence of an increase in O2-/H2O2 release contributing to cold-induced apoptosis occurring on rewarming. In contrast to the release/level of O2- and H2O2, cellular homeostasis of the transition metal iron is likely to play a key role during cold incubation of cultured hepatocytes: the hepatocellular pool of chelatable iron, measured on a single-cell level using laser scanning microscopy and the fluorescent indicator phen green, increased from 3.1 +/- 2.3 microM (before cold incubation) to 7.7 +/- 2.4 microM within 90 min after initiation of cold incubation. This increase in the cellular chelatable iron pool was reversible on rewarming after short periods of cold incubation. The cold-induced increase in the hepatocellular chelatable iron pool was confirmed using the calcein method. These data suggest that free radical-mediated hypothermia injury/cold-induced apoptosis is primarily evoked by alterations in the cellular iron homeostasis/a rapid increase in the cellular chelatable iron pool and not by increased formation of O2-/H2O2.  相似文献   

3.
Effects of bombesin on brown adipose tissue (BAT) thyroxine (T4) 5'-deiodinase (5'D) activity and rectal temperature were examined in male mice. Immediately following an intracerebroventricular (ICV) or intravenous (IV) injection of bombesin (0.1-100 ng/animal) or vehicle (20 mM bacitracin dissolved in 0.9% saline), the mice were placed in a room at 4 degrees C or 22 degrees C for 30, 60, 120 or 240 min. The ICV injection of bombesin dose-dependently lessened cold-induced increase in BAT 5'D activity and increased hypothermia determined at 120 min of cold exposure, whereas the IV injection of bombesin was without effect. Bombesin (ICV)-induced hypothermia preceded the inhibition of BAT 5'D activity by at least 30 min at 4 degrees C. BAT 5'D activity was not affected by ICV injection of bombesin in mice kept at 22 degrees C, although the rectal temperature was significantly decreased. Bombesin thus appears to prevent cold-induced increase in T4 5'D activity in mouse BAT by its central effect. Bombesin-induced excessive hypothermia itself and/or the decrease in sympathetic tone of BAT by bombesin might decrease cold-induced increase in BAT 5'D activity.  相似文献   

4.
Ultraprofound hypothermia (< 5 degrees C) induces changes to cell membranes such as liquid-to-gel lipid transitions and oxidative stress that have a negative effect on membrane function and cell survival. We hypothesized that fatty acid substitution of endothelial cell lipids and alterations in their unsaturation would modify cell survival at 0 degrees C, a temperature commonly used during storage and transportation of isolated cells or tissues and organs used in transplantation. Confluent bovine aortic endothelial cells were treated with 18-carbon fatty acids (C18:0, C18:1n-9, C18:2n-6, or C18:3n-3), C20:5n-3 or C22:6n-3 (DHA), and then stored at 0 degrees C without fatty acid supplements. Storage of control cells caused the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and a threefold increase in lipid peroxidation (LPO) when compared to control cells not exposed to cold. Pre-treating cells with C18:0 decreased the unsaturation of cell lipids and reduced LDH release at 0 degrees C by 50%, but all mono- or poly-unsaturated fatty acids increased injury in a concentration-dependent manner and as the extent of fatty acid unsaturation increased. DHA-treatment increased cell fatty acid unsaturation and caused maximal injury at 0 degrees C, which was prevented by lipophilic antioxidants BHT or vitamin E, the iron chelator deferoxamine, and to a lesser extent by vitamin C. Furthermore, the cold-induced increase in LPO was reduced by C18:0, vitamin E, or DFO but enhanced by DHA. In conclusion, the findings implicate iron catalyzed free radicals and LPO as a predominant mechanism of endothelial cell injury at 0 degrees C, which may be reduced by increasing lipid saturation or treating cells with antioxidants.  相似文献   

5.
Near the end of life, old F344 rats undergo a transition, marked by spontaneous and rapidly declining function. Food intake and body weight decrease, and these rats, which we call senescent, develop severe hypothermia in the cold due in part to blunted brown fat [brown adipose tissue (BAT)] thermogenesis. We tested the hypothesis that this attenuation may involve diminished sympathetic signaling by measuring cold-induced BAT norepinephrine release in freely moving rats using linear microdialysis probes surgically implanted into interscapular BAT 24 and 48 h previously. In response to 2 h at 15 degrees C, senescent rats increased BAT norepinephrine release 6- to 10-fold but did not maintain homeothermy. This increase was comparable to that of old presenescent (weight stable) rats that did maintain homeothermy during even greater cold exposure (2 h at 15 degrees C followed by 1.5 h at 8 degrees C). Tail temperatures, an index of vasoconstrictor responsiveness to cold, exhibited similar cooling curves in presenescent and senescent rats. Thus cold-induced sympathetic signaling to BAT and tail vasoconstrictor responsiveness remain robust in senescent rats and cannot explain their cold-induced hypothermia.  相似文献   

6.
Ohtsubo, T., Igawa, H., Saito, T., Matsumoto, H., Park, H. J., Song, C. W., Kano, E. and Saito, H. Enhancement of Cell Killing by Induction of Apoptosis after Treatment with Mild Hyperthermia at 42 degrees C and Cisplatin. Radiat. Res. 156, 103-109 (2001).We examined the interactive effects of cisplatin (1.0 microg/ml) combined with hyperthermia on cell killing and on the induction of apoptosis in IMC-3 human maxillary carcinoma cells. The cytotoxic effects of hyperthermia on IMC-3 cells at 44 degrees C were greater than at 42 degrees C, as has been reported for many other cells. The induction of apoptosis, DNA fragmentation and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage were greater after hyperthermia at 44 degrees C for 30 min compared with treatment at 42 degrees C for 105 min, even though both of these heat doses were isoeffective in reducing cell survival to 50%. Treatment with cisplatin at 37 degrees C for up to 120 min did not result in cytotoxicity or the induction of apoptosis. The enhancement ratio for treatment with cisplatin at 42 degrees C was greater than that at 44 degrees C. More apoptosis was induced after the treatment with cisplatin at 42 degrees C compared to treatment with cisplatin at 44 degrees C. Taking these findings together, the combination of cisplatin and hyperthermia at 42 degrees C appeared to be more effective than cisplatin with hyperthermia at 44 degrees C for the induction of apoptosis in IMC-3 cells.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of morphine perfusion into the median eminence on cold-induced TRH secretion was studied in unanesthetized rats by push-pull cannulation. Perfusion with 10(-6)M morphine blocked the cold-induced TRH peak occurring about 40 min after the transfer of rats from 24 degrees C to 4 degrees C. This inhibition by morphine was blunted by concomitant administration of naloxone (10(-6)M or 10(-5)M), but naloxone alone had no effect on either basal or cold-induced TRH release. We conclude that specific opiate receptors may be located on TRH nerve endings in the ME, and that endogenous opiates may not have any physiological role in the cold-induced TRH response, at least during the two hours that follow cold exposure.  相似文献   

8.
We previously described the entity of cold-induced apoptosis to rat hepatocytes and characterized its major, iron-dependent pathway. However, after cold incubation in some solutions, e.g. cell culture medium, hepatocytes show an additional, yet uncharacterized component of cold-induced injury. We here assessed the effects of organ preservation solutions on both components of cold-induced injury and tried to further characterize the iron-independent component. None of the preservation solutions (University of Wisconsin, histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate, Euro-Collins, histidine-lactobionate, sodium-lactobionate-sucrose and Celsior solutions) provided significant protection against cold-induced cell injury (LDH release after 24-h cold incubation/3h rewarming >65% for all solutions); three solutions even enhanced cold-induced injury. However, when the predominant iron-dependent mechanism was eliminated by the addition of iron chelators, all preservation solutions yielded hepatocyte protection that was clearly superior to the one obtainable in cell culture medium or Krebs-Henseleit buffer with iron chelators (LDH release after 24-h cold incubation/3h rewarming 相似文献   

9.
Palmitoleate is not present in lipid A isolated from Escherichia coli grown at 30 degrees C or higher, but it comprises approximately 11% of the fatty acyl chains of lipid A in cells grown at 12 degrees C. The appearance of palmitoleate at 12 degrees C is accompanied by a decline in laurate from approximately 18% to approximately 5.5%. We now report that wild-type E. coli shifted from 30 degrees C to 12 degrees C acquire a novel palmitoleoyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP)-dependent acyltransferase that acts on the key lipid A precursor Kdo2-lipid IVA. The palmitoleoyl transferase is induced more than 30-fold upon cold shock, as judged by assaying extracts of cells shifted to 12 degrees C. The induced activity is maximal after 2 h of cold shock, and then gradually declines but does not disappear. Strains harboring an insertion mutation in the lpxL(htrB) gene, which encodes the enzyme that normally transfers laurate from lauroyl-ACP to Kdo2-lipid IVA (Clementz, T., Bednarski, J. J., and Raetz, C. R. H. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 12095-12102) are not defective in the cold-induced palmitoleoyl transferase. Recently, a gene displaying 54% identity and 73% similarity at the protein level to lpxL was found in the genome of E. coli. This lpxL homologue, designated lpxP, encodes the cold shock-induced palmitoleoyl transferase. Extracts of cells containing lpxP on the multicopy plasmid pSK57 exhibit a 10-fold increase in the specific activity of the cold-induced palmitoleoyl transferase compared with cells lacking the plasmid. The elevated specific activity of the palmitoleoyl transferase under conditions of cold shock is attributed to greatly increased levels of lpxP mRNA. The replacement of laurate with palmitoleate in lipid A may reflect the desirability of maintaining the optimal outer membrane fluidity at 12 degrees C.  相似文献   

10.
Liu XH  Zhang T  Rawson DM 《Theriogenology》2001,55(8):1719-1731
High chilling sensitivity is one of the main obstacles to successful cryopreservation of zebrafish embryos. So far the nature of the chilling injury in fish embryos has not been clear. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of cooling rate and partial removal of yolk on chilling injury in zebrafish embryos. Zebrafish embryos at 64-cell, 50%-epiboly, 6-somite and prim-6 stages were cooled to either 0 degrees C or -5 degrees C at three different cooling rates: slow (0.3 degrees C/min or 1 degree C/min), moderate (30 degrees C/min), and rapid (approximately 300 degrees C/min). After chilling, embryos were warmed in a 26 degrees C water bath, followed by 3-day culturing in EM at 26 +/- 1 degrees C for survival assessment. When embryos were cooled to 0 degrees C for up to 30 min, 64-cell embryos had higher survival after rapid cooling than when they were cooled at a slower rate. When 64-cell embryos were held at -5 degrees C for 1 min, their survival decreased greatly after both slow and rapid cooling. The effect of cooling rate on the survival of 50%-epiboly and 6-somite embryos was not significant after 1 h exposure at 0 degrees C and 1 min exposure at -5 degrees C. However, rapid cooling resulted in significantly lower embryo survival than a cooling rate of 30 degrees C/min or 1 degree C/min after 1 h exposure to 0 degrees C for prim-6 stage or 1 h exposure to -5 degrees C for all stages. Chilling injury in 64-cell embryos appears to be a consequence of exposure time at low temperatures rather than a consequence of rapid cooling. Results also indicate that chilling injury in later stage embryos (50%-epiboly, 6-somite and prim-6) is a consequence of the combination of rapid cooling and exposure time at low temperatures. Dechorionated prim-6 embryos were punctured and about half of yolk was removed. After 24 h culture at 26 +/- 1 degrees C after removal of yolk, the yolk-reduced embryos showed higher embryo survival than did control embryos after rapid cooling to -5 degrees C for 10 to 60 min. Results suggest that cold shock injury after rapid cooling can be mitigated after partial removal of yolk at the prim-6 stage. These findings help us to understand the nature of chilling sensitivity of fish embryos and to develop protocols for their cryopreservation.  相似文献   

11.
Myocardial dysfunction after hypothermic protection has been linked to various mechanisms. Coronary vasospasm in particular may be responsible for ischemic injury during reperfusion. Herein we hypothesized that coronary arteries (CA) sustain a cold-induced contraction during hypothermia mediated by a protein tyrosine kinase (PTK)-/protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)-dependent pathway. Isolated newborn lamb CA rings were studied in a tissue bath for isometric contraction during 2-h profound (17 degrees C) or ultra-profound (7 degrees C) hypothermia. In parallel, protein tyrosine phosphorylation was evaluated by use of the Western blot technique. Na-orthovanadate (SOV) and genestein (GEN) were used separately and in combination to evaluate the effect of PTK/PTP activation on CA contraction and tyrosine phosphorylation during cooling (17 or 7 degrees C) vs 37 degrees C. Cooling from 37 to 7 degrees C induced transient contraction at approximately 17 degrees C (29% KCl response), which was more prominent during rewarming to 37 degrees C (36% KCl). Cooling to 17 degrees C resulted in sustained contraction (7-10% KCl), which was reversible upon rewarming. Cold-induced contraction was significantly enhanced by SOV (7- to 10-fold at 17 degrees C; 2-fold at 7 degrees C) and abolished by GEN. Concurrently, tyrosine phosphorylation of 33-, 45-, and 104-kDa proteins increased during cooling (35-100% at 17 degrees C; 46-66% at 7 degrees C). Tyrosine phosphorylation was similarly enhanced by SOV (1.7- to 2.3-fold at 17 degrees C; 2.9- to 3.9-fold at 7 degrees C) and abolished by GEN in the presence or absence of SOV. These results support a prominent role for the PTK/PTP signal transduction pathway in the coronary artery cold-induced contraction. This information provides one possible biomolecular mechanism linked to ischemia/reperfusion pathophysiology of CA in neonatal hearts exposed to hypothermic myocardial protection.  相似文献   

12.
Hypothermia before and/or during no-flow ischemia promotes cardiac functional recovery and maintains mRNA expression for stress proteins and mitochondrial membrane proteins (MMP) during reperfusion. Adaptation and protection may occur through cold-induced change in anaerobic metabolism. Accordingly, the principal objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that hypothermia preserves myocardial function during hypoxia and reoxygenation. Hypoxic conditions in these experiments were created by reducing O2 concentration in perfusate, thereby maintaining or elevating coronary flow (CF). Isolated Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts were subjected to perfusate (Po2 = 38 mmHg) with glucose (11.5 mM) and perfusion pressure (90 mmHg). The control (C) group was at 37 degrees C for 30 min before and 45 min during hypoxia, whereas the hypothermia (H) group was at 29.5 degrees C for 30 min before and 45 min during hypoxia. Reoxygenation occurred at 37 degrees C for 45 min for both groups. CF increased during hypoxia. The H group markedly improved functional recovery during reoxygenation, including left ventricular developed pressure (DP), the product of DP and heart rate, dP/dtmax, and O2 consumption (MVo2) (P < 0.05 vs. control). MVo2 decreased during hypothermia. Lactate and CO2 gradients across the coronary bed were the same in C and H groups during hypoxia, implying similar anaerobic metabolic rates. Hypothermia preserved MMP betaF1-ATPase mRNA levels but did not alter adenine nucleotide translocator-1 or heat shock protein-70 mRNA levels. In conclusion, hypothermia preserves cardiac function after hypoxia in the hypoxic high-CF model. Thus hypothermic protection does not occur exclusively through cold-induced alterations in anaerobic metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) deficient (-/-) mice develop mature onset obesity. Pharmacological studies have shown that IL-6 has direct lipolytic effects and when administered centrally increases sympathetic outflow. However, the metabolic functions of endogenous IL-6 are not fully elucidated. We aimed to investigate the effect of IL-6 deficiency with respect to cold exposure and cage-switch stress, that is, situations that normally increase sympathetic outflow. Energy metabolism, core temperature, heart rate, and activity were investigated in young preobese IL-6-/- mice by indirect calorimetry together with telemetry. Baseline measurements and the effect of cage-switch stress were investigated at thermoneutrality (30 degrees C) and at room temperature (20 degrees C). The effect of cold exposure was investigated at 4 degrees C. At 30 degrees C, the basal core temperature was 0.6 +/- 0.24 degrees C lower in IL-6-/- compared with wild-type mice, whereas the oxygen consumption did not differ significantly. The respiratory exchange ratio at 20 degrees C was significantly higher and the calculated fat utilization rate was lower in IL-6-/- mice. In response to cage-switch stress, the increase in oxygen consumption at both 30 and 20 degrees C was lower in IL-6-/- than in wild-type mice. The increase in heart rate was lower in IL-6-/- mice at 30 degrees C. At 4 degrees C, both the oxygen consumption and core temperature were lower in IL-6-/- compared with wild-type mice, suggesting a lower cold-induced thermogenesis in IL-6-/- mice. The present results indicate that endogenous IL-6 is of importance for stress- and cold-induced energy expenditure in mice.  相似文献   

14.
Cell killing by ionizing radiation has been shown to be caused by hydroxyl free radicals formed by water radiolysis. We have previously suggested that the killing is not caused by individual OH free radicals but by the interaction of volumes of high radical density with DNA to cause locally multiply damaged sites (LMDS) (J. F. Ward, Radiat. Res. 86, 185-195, 1985). Here we test this hypothesis using hydrogen peroxide as an alternate source of OH radicals. The route to OH production from H2O2 is expected to cause singly damaged sites rather than LMDS. Chinese hamster V79-171 cells were treated with H2O2 at varying concentrations for varying times at 0 degree C. DNA damage produced intracellularly was measured by alkaline elution and quantitated in terms of Gray-equivalent damage by comparing the rate of its elution with that of DNA from gamma-irradiated cells. The yield of DNA damage produced increases with increasing concentration of H2O2 and with time of exposure. H2O2 is efficient in producing single-strand breaks; treatment with 50 microM for 30 min produces damage equivalent to that formed by 10 Gy of gamma irradiation. In the presence of a hydroxyl radical scavenger, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), the yield of damage decreases with increasing DMSO concentration consistent with the scavenging of hydroxyl radicals traveling an average of 15 A prior to reacting with the DNA. In contrast to DNA damage production, cell killing by H2O2 treatment at 0 degree C is inefficient. Concentrations of 5 X 10(-2) M H2O2 for 10 min are required to produce significant cell killing; the DNA damage yield from this treatment can be calculated to be equivalent to 6000 Gy of gamma irradiation. The conclusion drawn is that individual DNA damage sites are ineffectual in killing cells. Mechanisms are suggested for killing at 0 degree C at high concentrations and for the efficient cell killing by H2O2 at 37 degrees C at much lower concentrations.  相似文献   

15.
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress has been implicated in the pathology of cerebral ischemia. Apoptotic cell death occurs during prolonged period of stress or when the adaptive response fails. Hypothermia blocked the TNF or Fas-mediated extrinsic apoptosis pathway and the mitochondria pathway of apoptosis, however, whether hypothermia can block endoplasmic reticulum mediated apoptosis is never known. This study aimed to elucidate whether hypothermia attenuates brain cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) damage by suppressing ER stress-induced apoptosis. A 15 min global cerebral ischemia rat model was used in this study. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) positive cells in hippocampus CA1 were assessed after reperfusion of the brain. The expressions of C/EBP-homolo gous protein (CHOP) and glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78) in ischemic hippocampus CA1 were measured at 6, 12, 24 and 48 h after reperfusion. The results showed that hypothermia significantly attenuated brain I/R injury, as shown by reduction in cell apoptosis, CHOP expression, and increase in GRP78 expression. These results suggest that hypothermia could protect brain from I/R injury by suppressing ER stress-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

16.
Ultra profound hypothermia (4 to 10 degrees C) is an experimental method aiming at safely prolonging organ and total body preservation. For this purpose, Hypothermosol (HTS), an investigational acellular solution for blood substitution, was demonstrated to be beneficial in animal models undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. We investigated the beneficial versus deleterious effects of cold preservation and the role of HTS on isolated coronary arteries (CA) during cold exposure, rewarming, and post-rewarming exposure to anoxia. Newborn lamb CA rings were studied using a tissue bath technique. CA were subjected to cold (7 degrees C for 3 h) and treated with either Krebs' buffer (Krebs/hypothermia) or HTS (HTS/hypothermia) (n = 15 each). A third group maintained at 37 degrees C (Krebs/normothermia) (n = 18) served as a time control. After rewarming (37 degrees C), precontracted CA were exposed to anoxia. In Krebs/hypothermia a substantial hypercontraction (g) occurred during rewarming (1.21+/-0.07) (mean +/- SEM) but not in HTS/hypothermia (0.79+/-0.03); P<0.05. Precontraction force generated by indomethacin/U46619 was identical in all three groups. However, Krebs/hypothermia vessels demonstrated a significantly higher relative vasoconstriction (percentage) in the early (approximately 10 min) and late (30 min) anoxia exposure than the HTS/hypothermia and time control (119.5%+/- 3.7 vs. 109.5%+/-4.4 and 101.5%+/-3, and 71%+/-7.6 vs. 38.9%+/-7 and 51.5%+/-5.9, respectively; P<0.05). In conclusion, Ultra profound hypothermia promotes coronary vasoconstriction upon rewarming, which is detrimental to relaxant response to hypoxia. Both phenomena are alleviated by performing ultra profound hypothermia under HTS protection.  相似文献   

17.
SYNOPSIS. Tetrahymena pyriformis syngen 1, mating type II, (optimal growth temperature ∼ 37 C) ordinarily dies out in 5-14 days at 0-5 C. Dying cells were lumpy, suggesting membrane damage. By supplying crude soy lecithin, survival at 0-5 C was prolonged (after growth in peptone-yeast-dextrin) to at least 22 weeks. Crude soy sterols or sitosterol or stigmasterol, and antioxidant, e.g., Ionox 330 or ascorbylpalmitate, permitted survival of cells in suspension or in growth media for at least 16-22 weeks. These sterols are known to protect against triparanol toxicity, which suggested that triparanol, which blocks cholesterol synthesis in higher animals, might enhance cold-induced injury. Triparanol was more toxic at 0–5 than at 28 C for cell suspensions and cells in growth medium; this toxicity was annulled by crude soy lecithin or β-sitosterol, the only phytosterol tested. The synthetic medium intended as a control on the crude media became toxic at 0–5 C. Protection against cold damage is discussed as a means of elucidating the role of sterols—especially phytosterols—and other lipids in maintaining the integrity of the ciliate cell membrane.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of mild hypothermia (MH; 34 degrees C) to protect against postischemic endothelial injury and decrease reactive oxygen species' (ROS) formation was studied using lucigenin and luminol enhanced chemiluminescence (CL). Lucigenin CL is largely specific for superoxide, while luminol reacts with many ROS. Isolated rat livers perfused under constant flow in a non-recirculating system were exposed to 2.5 h of ischemia after 0.5 h perfusion with Krebs-Henseleit buffer at either normothermia (38 degrees C) or mild hypothermia (34 degrees C) (n = 5, all groups). CL (cps), vascular resistance (Woods units), O2 consumption, and potassium efflux were measured at the end of perfusion, and at 0 min reperfusion, and every 30 min during reperfusion. For both the lucigenin and luminol groups, CL and vascular resistance increased significantly (repeat measures ANOVA, P <0.05) for normothermia (NT, 38 degrees C) but not mild hypothermia. Potassium efflux did not change significantly for the mild hypothermia groups. In the luminol enhanced group, oxygen consumption was greater in the mildly hypothermic group at 1 h and 1.5 h of reperfusion. Mild hypothermia decreased postischemic ROS production. Increased vascular resistance in the normothermia group may indicate an endothelial injury. Mild hypothermia appears to protect against this injury.  相似文献   

19.
Over a decade ago it was hypothesized that the rapid cold hardening process allows an organism's overall cold tolerance to track changes in environmental temperature, as would occur in nature during diurnal thermal cycles. Although a number of studies have since focused on characterizing the rapid cold hardening process and on elucidating the physiological mechanisms upon which it is based, the ecological relevance of this phenomenon has received little attention. We present evidence that in Drosophila melanogaster rapid cold hardening can be induced during cooling at rates which occur naturally, and that the protection afforded in such a manner benefits the organism at ecologically relevant temperatures. Drosophila melanogaster cooled at natural rates (0.05 and 0.1 degrees C min(-1)) exhibited significantly higher survival after one hour of exposure to -7 and -8 degrees C than did those directly transferred to these temperatures or those cooled at 0.5, or 1.0 degrees C min(-1). Protection accrued throughout the cooling process (e.g., flies cooled to 0 degrees C were more cold tolerant than those cooled to 11 degrees C). Whereas D. melanogaster cooled at 1.0 degrees C min(-1) had a critical thermal minimum (i.e., the temperature at which torpor occurred) of 6.5+/-0.6 degrees C, those cooled at an ecologically relevant rate of 0.1 degrees C min(-1) had a significantly lower value of 3.9+/-0.9 degrees C.  相似文献   

20.
One widely accepted explanation of injury from slow freezing is that damage results when the concentration of electrolyte reaches a critical level in partly frozen solutions during freezing. We have conducted experiments on human red cells to further test this hypothesis. Cells were suspended in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0-3 M glycerol, held for 30 min at 20 degrees C to permit solute permeation, and frozen at 0.5 or 1.7 degrees C/min to various temperatures between -2 and -100 degrees C. Upon reaching the desired minimum temperature, the samples were warmed at rates ranging from 1 to 550 degrees C/min and the percent hemolysis was determined. The results for a cooling rate of 1.7 degrees C/min indicate the following: (a) Between 0.5 and 1.85 M glycerol, the temperature yielding 50% hemolysis (LT50) drops slowly from -18 to -35 degrees C. (b) The LT50's over this range of concentrations are relatively independent of warming rate. (c) With glycerol concentrations of 1.95 and 2.0 M, the LT50 drops abruptly to -60 degrees C and to below -100 degrees C, respectively, and becomes dependent on warming rate. The LT50 is lower with slow warming at 1 degree C/min than with rapid. With still higher concentrations (2.5 and 3.0 M), there is no LT50, i.e., more than 50% of the cells survive freezing to-100 degrees C. Results for cooling at 0.5 degrees C/min in 2 M glycerol were similar except that the LT50s were some 10-20 degrees C higher. A companion paper (Rall et al., Biophys. J. 23:101-120, 1978) examines the relation between survival and the concentrations of salts produced during freezing.  相似文献   

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