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The effect of various freezing rates on the extent of hemolysis in human, bovine and ovine erythrocytes, which are known to have different cell volumes, water contents and permeabilities, was investigated. Blood in stainless steel capillary tubes was frozen at various rates by abrupt immersion of the capillaries into cooling baths at temperatures ranging from ?20° to ?130°C. Minimum lysis values were obtained at freezing temperatures of ?40°, ?50° and ?70°C with, respectively, human, bovine and ovine blood. The smallest, highly permeable sheep erythrocytes were the least damaged at the highest freezing rates; the largest human cells with the highest water content, suffered the greatest damage; intermediate values were obtained with ox blood. At the lower freezing rates, the largest, human cells were the least damaged; the highest hemolysis values were obtained with the smallest, highly permeable sheep erythrocytes; ox blood again gave intermediate values. These results are in agreement with current views that, (1) very rapid freezing results in the formation of damaging intracellular ice; (2) injury associated with slow freezing is related to the extent of dehydration or to the increase in electrolyte concentration which accompanies ice formation; (3) minimum hemolysis is obtained under those freezing conditions in which osmotic dehydration has been sufficient to prevent the formation of intracellular ice, but has left enough water in the cells to prevent the damaging effects of dehydration and high electrolyte concentrations. 相似文献
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Human erythrocytes suspended in a sodium-free buffered salt solution containing glycerol in 1 m concentration (1 part of packed cells to 4 parts buffered salt solution) were frozen by slow, moderately rapid, or very rapid cooling to various subzero C temperatures. The frozen specimens, after a 5-min storage period at a given temperature, were thawed at low, moderately high, or very high rates. The hemolysis in the frozen and thawed samples was measured by a colorimetric determination of the hemoglobin released from the damaged cells. At ?10 °C, the highest freezing temperature employed, nearly 100% recovery of intact erythrocytes was obtained irrespective of the cooling and rewarming conditions. The extent of the hemolysis after exposure to lower freezing temperatures depended upon the cooling and rewarming conditions. Moderately rapid and very rapid freezing to, and thawing from temperatures below ?40 °C permitted significantly higher recoveries of intact cells than the other freezing/ thawing combinations. In the temperature range ?15 to ?30 °C the combination slow cooling and slow rewarming afforded maximum protection. Very rapid freezing/ slow thawing was the most damaging combination throughout the entire freezing range. The results were interpreted in part by a conventional two-factor analysis, lower cooling rates allowing concentrated salts to determine hemolysis, higher cooling rates destroying the cells by intracellular freezing. Apparent anomalies were explained in terms of a generalized “thermal/osmotic” shock according to which the erythrocytes were subject to greater hemolysis the higher the rates of cooling and/or warming. 相似文献
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Gold salts and phenylbutazone selectively inhibit the synthesis of PGF2α and PGE2 respectively. Lowered production of one prostaglandin species is accompanied by an increased production of the other. Selective inhibition by these drugs was observed in the presence of adrenaline, reduced glutathione and copper sulphate under conditions when most anti-inflammatory compounds inhibited PGE2 and PGF2α syntheses equally. It is postulated that selective inhibitors may have a different mode of action
and beneficial effects may be related to the endogenous ratio of PGE to PGF required for normal function. 相似文献
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Summary Cylindrical shells of potato tissue were slid around the bulb of a thermometer and subcooled. Attempt was then made to induce crystallization by tapping the upper end of the thermometer. Out of 122 trials 52 were successful. In a few experiments, 15 repeated taps were ineffective. There is absolute evidence of the efficacy of tapping in some cases and of its inefficacy in others.The percentage of successful tappings increases at lower temperatures but since the percentage of spontaneous crystallizations also increases, a much larger number of determinations would be necessary to derive a relation between degree of subcooling and efficacy of tapping.No evidence was found in these experiments of the existence of discontinuous zones of lability at various degrees of subcooling. 相似文献
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Maria E Manetti Magdalena Rossi Ana PP Costa Andrea M Clausen Marie-Anne Van Sluys 《BMC evolutionary biology》2007,7(1):34
Background
Tnt1 was the first active plant retrotransposon identified in tobacco after nitrate reductase gene disruption. The Tnt1 superfamily comprises elements from Nicotiana (Tnt1 and Tto1) and Lycopersicon (Retrolyc1 and Tlc1) species. The study presented here was conducted to characterise Tnt1-related sequences in 20 wild species of Solanum and five cultivars of Solanum tuberosum. 相似文献9.
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Endosome-to-cytosol transport of viral nucleocapsids 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Le Blanc I Luyet PP Pons V Ferguson C Emans N Petiot A Mayran N Demaurex N Fauré J Sadoul R Parton RG Gruenberg J 《Nature cell biology》2005,7(7):653-664
During viral infection, fusion of the viral envelope with endosomal membranes and nucleocapsid release were thought to be concomitant events. We show here that for the vesicular stomatitis virus they occur sequentially, at two successive steps of the endocytic pathway. Fusion already occurs in transport intermediates between early and late endosomes, presumably releasing the nucleocapsid within the lumen of intra-endosomal vesicles, where it remains hidden. Transport to late endosomes is then required for the nucleocapsid to be delivered to the cytoplasm. This last step, which initiates infection, depends on the late endosomal lipid lysobisphosphatidic acid (LBPA) and its putative effector Alix/AIP1, and is regulated by phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate (PtdIns3P) signalling via the PtdIns3P-binding protein Snx16. We conclude that the nucleocapsid is exported into the cytoplasm after the back-fusion of internal vesicles with the limiting membrane of late endosomes, and that this process is controlled by the phospholipids LBPA and PtdIns3P and their effectors. 相似文献