REPORT ON THE WORKSHOP: “PRIMARY AND SECONDARY STIMULATION IN MLR AND CML”

Author(s):  
E. Thorsby
1980 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 519-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. N. KURL ◽  
N. M. BORTHWICK

The antioestrogens clomiphene and tamoxifen exhibit both agonistic and antagonistic properties in the rat uterus. The effect of these antioestrogens on RNA polymerase activities in the rat uterus was investigated. Both compounds stimulated an early increase in the activity of endogenous RNA polymerase B similar to that observed after oestradiol treatment. A secondary stimulation of activity of RNA polymerase B was observed after treatment with oestradiol and both antioestrogens. In addition, the activity of endogenous RNA polymerase A was increased initially at 1 h by all three compounds but this activity was maintained at 24 h only by oestradiol.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Belen Lopez-Rodriguez ◽  
Edel Hennessy ◽  
Carol Murray ◽  
Anouchka Lewis ◽  
Niamh de Barra ◽  
...  

AbstractAlzheimer’s disease (AD) causes devastating cognitive decline and has no disease-modifying therapies. Neuroinflammation is a significant contributor to disease progression but its precise contribution remains unclear. An emerging literature indicates that secondary inflammatory insults including acute trauma and infection alter the trajectory of chronic neurodegenerative diseases and the roles of microglia and astrocytes require elucidation. The current study, using the APP/PS1 mouse model of AD, demonstrates that microglia are primed by β-amyloid pathology to induce exaggerated IL-1β responses to acute stimulation with LPS or IL-1β. Despite disease-associated NLRP3 inflammasome activation, evidenced by ASC speck formation, APP/PS1 microglial cells show neither IL-1β induction nor NFκB p65 nuclear localisation. Upon secondary stimulation with LPS or IL-1β, NFκB-p65 nuclear localisation and exaggerated pro-IL-1 induction occur. Microglial priming was also unmasked by secondary stimulation with systemic LPS leading to significant cognitive impairment in APP/PS1 mice compared to WT LPS-treated mice. Astrocytes have also recently emerged as displaying significant phenotypic heterogeneity. Here, by-passing microglial priming, and acutely challenging mice with intra-hippocampal IL-1β we demonstrate that astrocytes proximal to Aβ-plaques are also primed to produce exaggerated CCL2, CXCL1 and CXCL10 responses. Many astrocytosis-associated genes in APP/PS1 mice share these exaggerated responses to IL-1β, while others are equally induced in both strains. Collectively the data show that the amyloid-laden brain shows multiple vulnerabilities to secondary inflammatory challenge: both microglia and astrocytes are primed to produce exaggerated secondary inflammation and systemic LPS is sufficient to cause cognitive impairments relevant to delirium, selectively in animals with prior amyloid pathology.


Vox Sanguinis ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 524-527
Author(s):  
D.W. Huestis ◽  
C.F. Zukoski III

1964 ◽  
Vol 119 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben W. Papermaster ◽  
Richard M. Condie ◽  
Joanne Finstad ◽  
Robert A. Good

1. The California hagfish, Eptatretus stoutii, seems to be completely lacking in adaptive immunity: it forms no detectable circulating antibody despite intensive stimulation with a range of antigens; it does not show reactivity to old tuberculin following sensitization with BCG; and gives no evidence of homograft immunity. 2. Studies on the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, have been limited to the response to bacteriophage T2 and hemocyanin in small groups of spawning animals. They suggest that the lamprey may have a low degree of immunologic reactivity. 3. One holostean, the bowfin (Amia calva) and the guitarfish (Rhinobatos productus), an elasmobranch, showed a low level of primary response to phage and hemocyanin. The response is slow and antibody levels low. Both the bowfin and the guitarfish showed a vigorous secondary response to phage, but neither showed much enhancement of reactivity to hemocyanin in the secondary response. The bowfin formed precipitating antibody to hemocyanin, but the guitarfish did not. Both hemagglutinating and precipitating antibody to hemocyanin were also observed in the primary response of the black bass. 4. The bowfin was successfully sensitized to Ascaris antigen, and lesions of the delayed type developed after challenge at varying intervals following sensitization. 5. The horned shark (Heterodontus franciscii) regularly cleared hemocyanin from the circulation after both primary and secondary antigenic stimulation, and regularly formed hemagglutinating antibody, but not precipitating antibody, after both primary and secondary stimulation with this antigen. These animals regularly cleared bacteriophage from the circulation after both the primary and secondary stimulation with bacteriophage T2. Significant but small amounts of antibody were produced in a few animals in the primary response, and larger amounts in the responding animals after secondary antigenic stimulation. 6. Studies by starch gel and immunoelectrophoresis show that the hagfish has no bands with mobilities of mammalian gamma globulins; that the lamprey has a single, relatively faint band of this type; and that multiple gamma bands are characteristic of the holostean, elasmobranchs, and teleosts studied. By this method of study, the bowfin appeared to have substantial amounts of gamma2 globulin. 7. We conclude that adaptive immunity and its cellular and humoral correlates developed in the lowest vertebrates, and that a rising level of immunologic reactivity and an increasingly differentiated and complex immunologic mechanism are observed going up the phylogenetic scale from the hagfish, to the lamprey, to the elasmobranchs, to the holosteans, and finally the teleosts.


1932 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 477-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARGARET E. SAWYER

A study has been made of the anatomical relations and function of a large sheet of smooth muscle lying in the anterior mesentery of elasmobranchs. This muscle acts on the spiral intestine, pulling it anteriorly and at the same time causing a marked rotation of the intestine towards the right. Its contraction is produced by direct mechanical or electrical stimulation, by stretching and by sympathetic and parasympathetic drugs. It is doubtful whether the mesenteric muscle is under the control of extrinsic sympathetic or parasympathetic nerves since stimulation of these produces a contraction only when there is simultaneous activity in the stomach or intestine. The contraction in this latter case could be due to a secondary stimulation produced by mechanical or tension effects. It is thought that this muscle acts as a mechanism for regulating the position of the spiral intestine during digestion.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document