scholarly journals Effects of Adrenergic Agonists on Glycogenolysis in Primary Cultures of Glycogen Body Cells and Telencephalon Astrocytes of the Chick

2001 ◽  
Vol 80 (12) ◽  
pp. 1736-1742 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Lee ◽  
S. Makino ◽  
T. Imagawa ◽  
M. Kim ◽  
M. Uehara
1995 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 1373-1376 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuhiko MIMURA ◽  
Shinjiro KOBAYASHI ◽  
Kouhei NOTOYA ◽  
Motonori OKABE ◽  
Ikuko KIMURA ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 536 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 220-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kala V. Subbarao ◽  
Leif Hertz

1994 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 313-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Klaus ◽  
L. Choy ◽  
O. Champigny ◽  
A.M. Cassard-Doulcier ◽  
S. Ross ◽  
...  

The HIB 1B cell line, derived from a brown fat tumor of a transgenic mouse, is the first established brown adipocyte cell line capable of expressing the brown fat-specific mitochondrial uncoupling protein (UCP). UCP gene expression, which was virtually undetectable under basic conditions, was stimulated by acute catecholamine or cyclic AMP treatment to levels comparable to primary cultures of brown adipocytes. Elevation of UCP mRNA levels following stimulation was very rapid but transient, decreasing after about 4 hours with a half-life between 9 and 13 hours. Immunoblotting showed the presence of UCP in HIB 1B mitochondria, but expression was much lower than observed in BAT or primary cultures of brown adipocytes. Upon transfection of HIB 1B cells with a reporter gene containing the UCP promoter, the activity of the transgene was regulatable by cAMP and norepinephrine. Investigation of the possible adrenergic receptors involved in UCP stimulation showed that specific beta 3-adrenergic agonists were much less effective than nonspecific beta-adrenergic agonists and that mRNA levels of the atypical, fat-specific beta 3-adrenoceptor were lower than those observed in brown adipocytes differentiated in primary culture. From pharmacological evidence we conclude that beta 3-adrenergic receptors account for approximately 30–40% of catecholamine induced UCP gene stimulation, whereas about 60–70% is stimulated via the classical beta 1/2 adrenergic pathway. We conclude that HIB 1B cells represent a functional system for the study of mechanisms related to brown adipose thermogenesis.


Author(s):  
B. G. Uzman ◽  
M. M. Kasac ◽  
H. Saito ◽  
A. Krishan

In conjunction with the cultivation and transplantation of cells from human tumors by the Programs of Microbiology and Immunogenetics, virus surveillance by electron microscopy has been routinely employed. Of particular interest in this regard have been 3 cell lines cultured from lymph nodes or spleen of 2 patients with Hodgkin's disease and 1 patient with Letterer-Siwe's disease. Each of these cell lines when transplanted in Syrian hamster neonates conditioned with anti-lymphocyte serum grew as serially transplantable tumors; from such transplants of the 3 cell lines cell cultures were retrieved.Herpes type virus particles (Figs. 1, 2, 3) were found in the primary cultures of all three lines, in frozen thawed aliquots of same, and in cultures retrieved from their tumors growing by serial transplantation in hamsters. No virus was detected in sections of 25 of the serially transplanted tumors. However, in 10 such tumors there were repeated instances of tubular arrays in the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum (Fig. 4). On serologic examination the herpes virus was shown to be the Epstein-Barr virus.


Author(s):  
Robert Hard ◽  
Gerald Rupp ◽  
Matthew L. Withiam-Leitch ◽  
Lisa Cardamone

In a coordinated field of beating cilia, the direction of the power stroke is correlated with the orientation of basal body appendages, called basal feet. In newt lung ciliated cells, adjacent basal feet are interconnected by cold-stable microtubules (basal MTs). In the present study, we investigate the hypothesis that these basal MTs stabilize ciliary distribution and alignment. To accomplish this, newt lung primary cultures were treated with the microtubule disrupting agent, Colcemid. In newt lung cultures, cilia normally disperse in a characteristic fashion as the mucociliary epithelium migrates from the tissue explant. Four arbitrary, but progressive stages of dispersion were defined and used to monitor this redistribution process. Ciliaiy beat frequency, coordination, and dispersion were assessed for 91 hrs in untreated (control) and treated cultures. When compared to controls, cilia dispersed more rapidly and ciliary coordination decreased markedly in cultures treated with Colcemid (2 mM). Correlative LM/EM was used to assess whether these effects of Colcemid were coupled to ultrastructural changes. Living cells were defined as having coordinated or uncoordinated cilia and then were processed for transmission EM.


1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (01) ◽  
pp. 101-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bonnie J Warn-Cramer ◽  
Fanny E Almus ◽  
Samuel I Rapaport

SummaryCultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) have been reported to produce extrinsic pathway inhibitor (EPI), the factor Xa-dependent inhibitor of factor VHa/tissue factor (TF). We examined the release of this inhibitor from HUVEC as a function of their growth state and in response to the induction of endothelial cell TF activity. HUVEC constitutively produced significant amounts of EPI at all stages of their growth in culture including the post-confluent state. Rate of release varied over a 3-fold range for primary cultures from 12 different batches of pooled umbilical cord cells. Constitutive EPI release was unaltered during a 6 hour period of induction of TF activity with thrombin or phorbol ester but slowed during longer incubation of the cells with phorbol ester. Whereas plasma contains two molecular weight forms of EPI, only the higher of these two molecular weight forms was demonstrable by Western analysis of HUVEC supernatants with 125I-factor Xa as the ligand.


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