scholarly journals A RADIOAUTOGRAPHIC STUDY WITH H3-THYMIDINE ON ADRENAL MEDULLA NUCLEI OF RATS INTERMITTENTLY EXPOSED TO COLD

1966 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Pia Viola-Magni

A considerable decrease (24 to 40%) of DNA content per nucleus previously observed in the adrenal medulla of rats exposed intermittently to cold is followed by restoration to normal and supranormal values. This phenomenon has now been studied by use of H3-thymidine, which was given to normal rats, to rats exposed to cold, and to animals brought to room temperature after cold exposure. In the first two conditions, no significant labeling of nuclei was observed. In the third, labeling took place clearly in the 1st 3 days. The grain counts showed that the early labeled nuclei had more grains than those labeled later, indicating differences in the rate of DNA synthesis. A statistically significant correlation was found, on the same nuclei, between amount of Feulgen dye and number of grains. It is concluded that net synthesis of DNA takes place in the phase of recovery from cold. This fact is not related to cell division, as no mitoses could ever be detected, but rather to the cold-induced loss of DNA. Clear demonstration is thus given of a marked variation in the amount of DNA per nucleus in relation to the functional conditions of adrenal medulla cells.

1966 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Pia Viola-Magni

The peculiar changes previously observed in DNA content of rat adrenal medulla cell nuclei upon intermittent cold exposure (15 hr at +4°C followed by 9 hr at room temperature) have been further studied with the aid of Feulgen histophotometry and H3-thymidine radioautography. The amount of DNA decreases progressively with increasing length of cold exposure until 300 hr (-32%). Later a rapid change takes place, whereby DNA content per nucleus returns to values which are slightly, but consistently lower than normal. At termination of a period of cumulative exposure to cold, an analysis of a whole-day experimental cycle shows that the DNA decrease is due to loss of DNA during cold exposure and that DNA synthesis occurs upon return to room temperature. The balance between these two processes can be divided into three stages: (a) loss of DNA up to 300 hr of cumulative cold exposure; (b) marked increase in DNA by 350 hr; (c) oscillation around zero or slightly negative at 400 hr and beyond. These variations are due to: (1) the extension of DNA synthesis into the period of cold exposure as clearly demonstrated by radioautography (stage b), and (2) a later still greater DNA loss (stage c) which partly offsets the increased synthesis. A complex pattern of adaptation of the adrenal medulla cells, as regards DNA content, to the repetitive cold stimulus is thus demonstrated.


1980 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 375-394
Author(s):  
N.N. Bobyleva ◽  
B.N. Kudrjavtsev ◽  
I.B. Raikov

The DNA content of isolated micronuclei, differentiating macronuclei (macronuclear Anlagen), and adult macronuclei of Loxodes magnus was measured cytofluorimetrically in preparations stained with a Schiff-type reagent, auramine-SO2, following hydrochloric acid hydrolysis. The DNA content of the youngest macronuclear Anlagen proved to be the same as that of telophasic micronuclei (2 c). The Anlagen thus differentiate from micronuclei which are still in G1. The quantity of DNA in the macronuclear Anlagen thereafter rises to the 4-c level, simultaneously with DNA replication in the micronuclei which immediately follows mitosis. In non-dividing animals most micronuclei are already in G2. Adult macronuclei here contain on average 1.5 times more DNA than the micronuclei; their DNA content is about 5–6 c (in some individual nuclei, up to 10 c). These data are consistent with autoradiographic evidence indicating a weak DNA synthesis in the macronuclei of Loxodes and make likely the existence of partial DNA replication (e.g. gene amplification) in the macronuclei. The DNA content of adult macronuclei isolated from dividing animals proved to be significantly smaller than that of macronuclei isolated from non-dividing specimens of the same clone. In 3 clones studied, the former value amounted on average to 71–79, 78 and 95% of the latter, respectively. This drop of DNA content cannot be explained by ‘dilution’ of the old macronuclei with newly formed ones. The quantity of DNA in adult macronuclei thus seems to undergo cyclical changes correlated with cytokinesis, despite the fact that, in Loxodes magnus, the macronuclei themselves never divide and are simply segregated at every cell division. The macronuclei of Loxodes can be termed paradiploid or hyperdiploid.


1969 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 460-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. R. Pelc ◽  
Maria Pia Viola-Magni

Italico rats were injected with thymidine-3H 6 hr after the end of 300 hr of intermittent cold treatment. This plan of experiment ensured replacement in the adrenal medulla of lost DNA which is specifically sensitive to cold treatment and has a labeling index sufficiently high for statistical evaluation. The labeling index in the adrenal medulla decreases to one-half of the initial value within 10 days in animals subjected to further intermittent cold treatment and within 32 days in animals kept at room temperature. The very low mitotic index and the absence of doubling of the labeling index show that the observed labeling cannot be ascribed to pre-mitotic DNA synthesis. The concept of metabolic DNA adequately explains the findings.


1982 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 179 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.L Setter ◽  
H Greenway ◽  
J Kuo

Effects of high external NaCl concentrations on growth were examined in the unicellular freshwater alga Cldorella emevsonii during different phases of cell development, using synchronized cultures obtained by alternating light-dark cycles. Growth of cultures synchronized at 1 mM NaCl [external osmotic pressure (next=) 0.08 MPa] was compared with (i) cultures synchronized at 200 mM NaCl (n,,, = 1.01 MPa) and (ii) cultures synchronized at 1 mM NaCl from which the daughter cells were suddenly transferred to 100, 150 or 200 mM NaCl. The effects of these two treatments on synthesis of protein, RNA and DNA during cell cycles were similar, and are attributed to the high nexta nd not to specific effects of Na+ and C1-. Growth inhibitions in cells at 200 mM NaCl relative to 1 mM NaCl occurred mainly via effects on cell division; this was confirmed by electron microscopy. There was a lag before net DNA synthesis commenced, and there were reductions in rates of net DNA synthesis in cells at 200 mM NaCl relative to 1 mM NaC1. Rates of increase in cell volume and in protein and RNA content per cell were little affected by high external NaCl concentrations. Consequently, daughter cells at 200 mM NaCl were approximately twice the volume and contained twice as much protein and RNA as daughter cells at 1 mM NaCl, while DNA content was equal in daughter cells at 1 and 200 mM NaCl.


1955 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 399-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Setterfield ◽  
Robert E. Duncan

At a concentration of 9.6 x 10–5 M, 2,6-diaminopurine (DAP) completely inhibited cell enlargement, cell division, and DNA synthesis (determined by microphotometric measurement of Feulgen dye) in Vicia faba roots. Inhibition of cell enlargement was partially reversed by adenine, guanine, xanthine, adenosine, and desoxyadenosine. Guanine and the nucleosides gave the greatest reversal, suggesting that one point of DAP action upon cell enlargement is a disruption of nucleoside or nucleotide metabolism, possibly during pentosenucleic acid synthesis. DAP inhibited cell division by preventing onset of prophase. At the concentrations used it had no significant effect on the rate or appearance of mitoses in progress. Inhibition of entrance into prophase was not directly due to inhibition of DNA synthesis since approximately half of the inhibited nuclei had the doubled (4C) amount of DNA. Adenine competitively reversed DAP inhibition of cell division, giving an inhibition index of about 0.5. Guanine gave a slight reversal while xanthine, hypoxanthine, adenosine, and desoxyadenosine were inactive. A basic need for free adenine for the onset of mitosis was suggested by this reversal pattern. Meristems treated with DAP contained almost no nuclei with intermediate amounts of DNA, indicating that DAP prevented the onset of DNA synthesis while allowing that underway to reach completion. The inhibition of DNA synthesis was reversed by adenine, adenosine, and desoxyadenosine although synthesis appeared to proceed at a slower rate in reversals than in controls. Inhibition of DNA synthesis by DAP is probably through nucleoside or nucleotide metabolism. A small general depression of DNA content of nuclei in the reversal treatments was observed. This deviation from DNA "constancy" cannot be adequately explained at present although it may be a result of direct incorporation of DAP into DNA. The possible purine precursor, 4-amino-5-imidazolecarboxamide gave no reversal of DAP inhibition of cell elongation and cell division and only a slight possible reversal of inhibition of DNA synthesis.


1965 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 415-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Pia Viola-Magni

In the adrenal medulla of rats exposed intermittently to cold (+4°C) for 100 and 300 hours, a considerable decrease (24 to 40 per cent) of the DNA content per nucleus was observed, followed by restoration to normal or above normal values within 10 days after the withdrawal of the stimulus. The findings were obtained with a scanning integrating histophotometer, and confirmed by microinterferometric investigations (on the basis of the measurement of total dry mass of nuclei isolated in aqueous medium before and after treatment with DNase) and by microchemical determinations, combined with the count of the nuclei in the homogenates. The observed decrease of DNA content cannot be attributed to errors of the methods used, nor to consequences of cellular degeneration. The available evidence seems to indicate a real decrease rather than a change in the state of a part of DNA in the nucleus in vivo whereby it becomes extractable by aqueous solutions. The restoration cannot be due to mitotic processes, which were actually never detected even with the use of colchicine, since the adrenal medulla cells in the adult rat are known to be irreversible, postmitotic cells. A correlation between the functional activity of the adrenal medulla cells and the content or state of DNA in their nuclei is demonstrated.


1967 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Ogilvie

The effects, on the body temperature of white mice, of repeated short exposures to cold were investigated using two methods of restraint. Animals held in a flattened posture became hypothermic at room temperature, cooled more than five times as fast at −10 °C as mice that could adopt a heat-conserving posture, and continued to cool for some time after they were removed from the cold. With repeated tests, cooling at room temperature decreased, and an improvement in re warming ability was observed. In addition, with lightly restrained mice, the fall in rectal temperature during cold exposure showed a progressive decrease, a phenomenon not observed with severely restrained animals.


1995 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 929 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Krausz ◽  
H Riesen ◽  
AD Rae

[Zn( bpy )3] (ClO4)2 and [ Ru ( bpy )3] (ClO4)2 are isomorphous in both their racemic and resolved crystal forms. The resolved materials are monohydrates and have a C 2, Z = 8, structure with two independent formula units on general sites in the asymmetric unit. The cations have the same chirality. The inherent threefold axis of each cation lies approximately parallel to the c axis. The unrelated racemic form has a C2/c, Z = 4, structure which is a commensurate modulation of a P3c1, Z = 2, parent structure, typified by the room-temperature structure of [ Ru ( bpy )3] (PF6)2. A primary, secondary and tertiary axis of P3c1 become the c, b and a axes respectively of C2/c, retaining a third of the symmetry elements of P3c1. The crystals grow as multiply contacted twins. This structure bas just one spectroscopic site with the cation lying on a twofold axis that passes through the metal and one of the bidendate ligands and relates the other two ligands to each other. This feature is particularly useful in the study of the optical spectroscopy of the metal-to- ligand charge transfer excitations of [ Ru ( bpy )3]2+ and related systems. A comparison of structural and spectral data indicates that the positions of the anions have a dominant influence on the relative energies of the metal-to- ligand excitations. An energy difference between excitations involving the two (lower-energy) equivalent ligands and the third ligand of the order of 800 cm-1 is indicated in both singlet and triplet regions for the racemic perchlorate. The absorption spectra of [ Ru ( bpy )3]2+and [Os( bpy )3]2+ in a number of crystalline hosts are compared and discussed.


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