Schisandrin B enhances the glutathione redox cycling and protects against oxidant injury in different types of cultured cells

BioFactors ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 439-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Y. Lam ◽  
Pou Kuan Leong ◽  
Na Chen ◽  
Kam Ming Ko
2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 6753-6760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ling Li ◽  
Qiangrong Pan ◽  
Weidong Han ◽  
Zhen Liu ◽  
Ling Li ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Laia Tolosa ◽  
Teresa Martínez-Sena ◽  
Johannes P. Schimming ◽  
Erika Moro ◽  
Sylvia E. Escher ◽  
...  

AbstractPhenols are regarded as highly toxic chemicals. Their effects are difficult to study in in vitro systems because of their ambiguous fate (degradation, auto-oxidation and volatility). In the course of in vitro studies of a series of redox-cycling phenols, we found evidences of cross-contamination in several in vitro high-throughput test systems, in particular by trimethylbenzene-1, 4-diol/trimethylhydroquinone (TMHQ) and 2,6-di-tertbutyl-4-ethylphenol (DTBEP), and investigated in detail the physicochemical basis for such phenomenon and how to prevent it. TMHQ has fast degradation kinetics followed by significant diffusion rates of the resulting quinone to adjacent wells, other degradation products being able to air-diffuse as well. DTBEP showed lower degradation kinetics, but a higher diffusion rate. In both cases the in vitro toxicity was underestimated because of a decrease in concentration, in addition to cross-contamination to neighbouring wells. We identified four degradation products for TMHQ and five for DTBEP indicating that the current effects measured on cells are not only attributable to the parent phenolic compound. To overcome these drawbacks, we investigated in detail the physicochemical changes occurring in the course of the incubation and made use of gas-permeable and non-permeable plastic seals to prevent it. Diffusion was greatly prevented by the use of both plastic seals, as revealed by GC–MS analysis. Gas non-permeable plastic seals, reduced to a minimum compounds diffusion as well oxidation and did not affect the biological performance of cultured cells. Hence, no toxicological cross-contamination was observed in neighbouring wells, thus allowing a more reliable in vitro assessment of phenol-induced toxicity.


1977 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 584-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
J D Zeligs ◽  
S H Wollman

In addition to pseudopods, somewhat pleomorphic blebs were consistently found protruding from the apical surfaces of hyperplastic rat thyroid epithelial cells into the follicular lumens in vivo. Many blebs were knobby, roughly hemispherical protrusions, with a diameter of 2-3 mum. Such blebs had a densely packed microfilamentous core and contained numerous apparent ribosomes. They were morphologically similar to blebs that have been observed in a variety of cultured cells. Other blebs were larger, more elongate, and less knobby, but had a similar ultrastructural organization. Blebs of all sizes appeared to be phagocytosed on some occasions by nearby epithelial cells. The phagocytic process involved partial engulfment of the bleb by a typical epithelial pseudopod, followed by an apparent pinching-off process, presumably resulting in the separation of the bleb from its cells or origin. The pinching-off process was associated with a band of approx. 6-nm diameter microfilaments that developed within the pseudopod cytoplasm surrounding the base of the bleb and is postulated to function as a contractile ring. The finding of blebbing is an intact tissue in vivo indicates that this phenomenon is not restricted to cultured cells, and thus tends to extend the significance of in vitro observations of the process. In relation to their occurrence in the hyperplastic thyroid gland in vivo, possible interconversions are considered between different types of blebs, and between blebs and pseudopods.


1965 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 647-656 ◽  
Author(s):  
EDWARD ESSNER ◽  
JØRGEN FOGH ◽  
PATRICIA FABRIZIO

Adenosine triphosphatase activity has been localized by light microscopy in the mitochondria of four different types of cultured cells using the Wachstein-Meisel lead method after brief fixation in formol-calcium. The resolutions of the method permits the study of mitochondrial size, form, number and distributions in these cultured cells. Electron microscopy shows enzyme reaction product within the mitochondrion but not on the outer mitochondrial membrane. Reaction product is also localized to the plasma membrane and its infoldings.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document