Effect of pure erythropoietin on DNA-synthesis by human marrow day 15 erythroid burst forming units in short-term liquid culture

1984 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 295-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel N. Dessypris ◽  
Sanford B. Krantz
1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (18) ◽  
pp. 895-898 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Heit ◽  
K. P. Hellriegel ◽  
H. Heimpel ◽  
R. Gross

Development ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 112 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-42
Author(s):  
P.A. Eccleston ◽  
R. Mirsky ◽  
K.R. Jessen

In the developing peripheral nerve, Schwann cells proliferate rapidly and then become quiescent, an essential step in control of Schwann cell differentiation. Cell proliferation is controlled by growth factors that can exert positive or inhibitory influences on DNA synthesis. It has been well established that neonatal Schwann cells divide very slowly in culture when separated from neurons but here we show that when culture was continued for several months some cells began to proliferate rapidly and non-clonal lines of immortalised Schwann cells were established which could be passaged for over two years. These cells had a similar molecular phenotype to short-term cultured Schwann cells, except that they expressed intracellular and cell surface fibronectin. The difference in proliferation rates between short- and long-term cultured Schwann cells appeared to be due in part to the secretion by short-term cultured Schwann cells of growth inhibitory activity since DNA synthesis of long-term, immortalised Schwann cells was inhibited by conditioned medium from short-term cultures. This conditioned medium also inhibited DNA synthesis in short-term Schwann cells stimulated to divide by glial growth factor or elevation of intracellular cAMP. The growth inhibitory activity was not detected in the medium of long-term immortalised Schwann cells, epineurial fibroblasts, a Schwannoma (33B), astrocytes or a fibroblast-like cell-line (3T3) and it did not inhibit serum-induced DNA synthesis in epineurial fibroblasts, 33B cells or 3T3 cells. The activity was apparently distinct from transforming growth factor-beta, activin, IL6, epidermal growth factor, atrial natriuretic peptide and gamma-interferon and was heat and acid stable, resistant to collagenase and destroyed by trypsin treatment. We raise the possibility that loss of an inhibitory autocrine loop may contribute to the rapid proliferation of long-term cultured Schwann cells and that an autocrine growth inhibitor may have a role in the cessation of Schwann cell division that precedes differentiation in peripheral nerve development.


1984 ◽  
Vol 247 (6) ◽  
pp. G667-G673
Author(s):  
P. S. Oates ◽  
R. G. Morgan

Pancreatic acinar cell turnover was studied after a 48-h fast and in rats fed raw soya flour (RSF) for up to 28 days. Feeding RSF for 2 days resulted in a significant increase in pancreatic weight and RNA content while protein was increased by the 4th day compared with rats fasted for 48 h. RSF also resulted in a significant increase in RNA by the 4th day and weight and protein by the 7th day compared with rats fed heated soya flour (HSF). This pancreatic hypertrophy was maintained for the rest of the study period. Two days after starting RSF, pancreatic DNA synthesis, measured bythe rate of incorporation of [3H]thymidine into pancreatic DNA, had increased sixfold compared with that in animals fedHSF but returned to control values again by the 4th day on the diet. Autoradiography showed that this increase in DNA synthesis occurred in both acinar and duct cells, with turnover in acinar cells preceding that in duct cells. A second moregradual rise in DNA synthesis was seen from the 7th to 28th day. This peak in DNA synthesis was associated with an increased total pancreatic DNA content and occurred predominately in duct cells with a smaller contribution from acinar cells. Histological studies of the pancreas during the 1st wk showed cell damage and tissue necrosis, possibly due to exposure to high levels of cholecystokinin released by RSF. The first peak in DNA synthesis may be a regenerative response to this damage. The second more delayed peak appears to be hyperplasia in response to a trophic stimulus, again possibly mediated by cholecystokinin.


1970 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. NORDQVIST

SUMMARY Twenty-five endometrial carcinomas and three non-endometrial carcinomas were studied for the influence of various steroid hormones on the synthesis of DNA and RNA in short-term incubations in vitro. Endometrial carcinomas showed a dose-dependent sensitivity to progesterone in vitro, the response in both nucleic acids sometimes exceeding that of normal endometria. The mean reduction in DNA synthesis was to 46% and in RNA synthesis to 39% of the control values. Poorly differentiated carcinomas showed higher values of DNA synthesis than highly differentiated ones, as did carcinomas from younger women compared with those from older women. The response in vitro to progesterone was not correlated with these factors. Pregnenolone and a synthetic progestogen were less effective in vitro than progesterone. Oestradiol at a high concentration (20 μg/ml) in some cases significantly reduced the synthesis of both nucleic acids, possibly because of a specific 'toxic' action on the cells. No hormonal effects were observed in non-endometrial carcinomas.


1980 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 425-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paolo Perocco ◽  
Angela Fini

The action of dichlorvos (2.2-dichlorovinyldimethyl phosphate) was studied with a short-term in vitro system which utilizes human lymphocytes. The parameters studied were the action exerted by the pesticide on scheduled (semiconservative) and unscheduled (reparative) DNA synthesis measured as tritiated thymidine uptake. The results obtained show that dichlorvos affects semiconservative DNA synthesis, damages human lymphocyte DNA inducing low reparative synthesis, and interferes with DNA repair processes after damage exerted by ultraviolet rays.


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