scholarly journals A modified technique to obtain uniform precipitation of lanthanum tracer in the extracellular space.

1977 ◽  
Vol 25 (8) ◽  
pp. 1013-1015 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Shaklai ◽  
M Tavassoli

A method for obtaining a uniform, dense precipitate of lanthanum nitrate to delineate extracellular space is described. Improvement of the previous technique is achieved by phosphate precipitation of lanthanum in the tissue carried out at low temperature. This method has been successfully applied to bone marrow.

1968 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 597-609
Author(s):  
R. MORRIS ◽  
J. M. BULL

1. An investigation has been made of the factors which cause sodium loss from ammocoetes when they are immersed in de-ionized water at 1° and 10° C. 2. Sodium influx ceases when animals are first immersed in de-ionized water, but can recommence when the animal loses sufficient sodium to the environment. The concentration of sodium required for influx to take place decreases with succeeding periods of immersion in de-ionized water at 10° C. and reaches minimum equilibrium concentrations as low as 0.005 mM-Na/l. 3. Low temperature inhibits sodium influx and thus promotes net loss of sodium to de-ionized water. 4. Low temperature also decreases the initial loss of sodium to de-ionized water and probably lowers the permeability of the external surfaces of the animal to ions. This effect is small compared with the inhibition of ion uptake so that the combined result is to increase the net loss of sodium from the animal. 5. Since animals lose calcium to de-ionized water and show a decreased rate of sodium loss when calcium salts are added, it is believed that the high rates of sodium loss in de-ionized water are attributable to the effect of calcium on permeability. 6. Lack of calcium may also explain why animals which have been depleted of sodium by low-temperature treatment take up sodium much faster at higher temperatures from dilute Ringer solutions than from pure sodium chloride solutions. 7. When animals lose ions to de-ionized water at low temperature, sodium and chloride are lost from the extracellular space, whilst the muscle cells lose potassium. These ions are recovered into the extracellular space when animals are allowed to take up ions at 10° C. from diluted Ringer solution later.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 8971
Author(s):  
Sergej V. Belov ◽  
Yakov P. Lobachevsky ◽  
Yurij K. Danilejko ◽  
Aleksej B. Egorov ◽  
Alexander V. Simakin ◽  
...  

The potential use of low-temperature plasma (LTP) for therapeutic purposes has aroused the concern of many researchers. This paper examines the effect of LTP on the morphofunctional state of human bone marrow stem cells (BMSC). It has been established that LTP-induced oxidative stress has a dual effect on the state of stem cells. On the one hand, a cell culture exposed to LTP exhibits the progression of a destructive processes, which is manifested by the perturbation of the cell’s morphology, the initiation of lipid peroxidation and the accumulation of products of this process, like diene conjugates and malondialdehyde, as well as the induction of mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to cell death. On the other hand, the effect of LTP on BMSC located at a distance from the plasma is accompanied by the activation of proliferative processes, as evidenced by the tendency of the activity of mitochondrial biogenesis and fission/fusion processes to increase. The paper discusses the role of mitochondria and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the cellular response to LTP.


Blood ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 984-992 ◽  
Author(s):  
TAKASHI MAKINODAN ◽  
NORMAN G. ANDERSON

Abstract 1. Two months after injection of rat bone marrow into lethally X-irradiated mice (950 r-RBM mice), 100% of the circulating RBC were serologically of the rat type, indicating that the surface molecular configuration of RBC from these experimental mice are of the rat type. 2. The hemoglobin was found to be also very much like the rat type in its ease in crystallization, its alkali denaturation property, its electrophoretic property, and its tendency to form a paracrystalline state at low temperature. 3. These cells possessed dual osmotic properties; the relative hemoglobin concentration released when cells were lysed in water was more comparable to the rat type, but its temperature dependency was more comparable to the mouse type.


Blood ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 679-686
Author(s):  
G Brecher ◽  
JH Tjio ◽  
WW Smith ◽  
JE Haley

The origin of marrow regeneration after mechanical depletion was reinvestigated in mouse chimeras. The results were compatible with the local origin of stem cells from remnants of incompletely removed marrow, but not with their origin from a common precursor of both bone and hemopoietic cell lines. In transplanted femurs depleted by a modified technique of in vivo evacuation of marrow, hemopoietic regeneration failed to occur. The presence of hemopoietic stem cells in the Haversian canals was thus excluded. The demonstration of ample hemopoiesis with minimal bone formation in nondepleted controls in which bone marrow initially became necrotic provided new evidence that osteogenesis was not a prerequisite of hemopoietic regeneration.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen Volchuk ◽  
Anna Ye ◽  
Leon Chi ◽  
Benjamin E. Steinberg ◽  
Neil M. Goldenberg

Abstract The protein high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) is released into the extracellular space in response to many inflammatory stimuli, where it is a potent signaling molecule. Although research has focused on downstream HMGB1 signaling, the means by which HMGB1 exits the cell is controversial. Here we demonstrate that HMGB1 is not released from bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDM) after lipopolysaccharide (LPS) treatment. We also explore whether HMGB1 is released via the pore-forming protein gasdermin D after inflammasome activation, as is the case for IL-1β. HMGB1 is only released under conditions that cause cell lysis (pyroptosis). When pyroptosis is prevented, HMGB1 is not released, despite inflammasome activation and IL-1β secretion. During endotoxemia, gasdermin D knockout mice secrete HMGB1 normally, yet secretion of IL-1β is completely blocked. Together, these data demonstrate that in vitro HMGB1 release after inflammasome activation occurs after cellular rupture, which is probably inflammasome-independent in vivo.


2006 ◽  
Vol 69 (10) ◽  
pp. 776-783 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harriet Nilsson ◽  
Anca Dragomir ◽  
Anders Ahlander ◽  
Marianne Ljungkvist ◽  
Godfried M. Roomans

1971 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Hudspeth ◽  
J. P. Revel

The intercellular junctions of the epithelium lining the hepatic caecum of Daphnia were examined. Electron microscope investigations involved both conventionally fixed material and tissue exposed to a lanthanum tracer of the extracellular space. Both septate junctions and gap junctions occur between the cells studied. The septate junctions lie apically and resemble those commonly discerned between cells of other invertebrates. They are atypical in that the high electron opacity of the extracellular space obscures septa in routine preparations. The gap junctions are characterized by a uniform 30 A space between apposed cell membranes. Lanthanum treatment of gap junctions reveals an array of particles of 95 A diameter and 120 A separation lying in the plane of the junction. As this pattern closely resembles that described previously in vertebrates, it appears that the gap junction is phylogenetically widespread. In view of evidence that the gap junction mediates intercellular electrotonic coupling, the assignment of a coupling role to other junctions, notably the septate junction, must be questioned wherever these junctions coexist.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2060-2060 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mateusz Adamiak ◽  
Kamila Bujko ◽  
Anna Lenkiewicz ◽  
Magdalena Kucia ◽  
Janina Ratajczak ◽  
...  

Abstract Background . Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is an important nucleotide involved in intracellular energy transfer, but it is also released from activated cells into the extracellular space as a crucial component of the purinergic signaling network. Purinergic signaling is an ancient form of extracellular signaling that is mediated by extracellular nucleotides (EXNs), including most importantly the purine ATP and its nucleoside metabolite, adenosine. Purinergic receptors for EXNs are expressed on the surface of all cells in the body; are represented by several families of P1, P2X, and P2Y receptors; and are among the most abundant receptors in living organisms. ATP, the most important EXN, is secreted from cells through pannexin and connexin channels and is processed in the extracellular space to ADP, AMP and finally adenosine by the cell-surface-expressed ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73. We recently reported that the ATP-adenosine axis regulates the mobilization of hematopoietic stem progenitor cells (HSPCs) (Leukemia 2018, in press,doi: 10.1038/s41375-018-0122-0). Hypothesis. We hypothesized that the ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 are important modulators of the ATP-adenosine axis and are new and underappreciated modulators, not only of mobilization but also of bone marrow (BM) homing of HSPCs. Materials and Methods. To shed more light on the role of purinergic signaling in the trafficking of HSPCs, we i) phenotyped murine and human HSPCs for expression of CD39 and CD73 ectonucleotidases by FACS, ii) performed mobilization and homing studies in CD39-/- and CD73-/- mice, and iii) blocked CD39 and CD73 activity by employing the small-molecule inhibitors ARL 67156 and AMP-CP, respectively. CD39- and CD73-deficient mice were mobilized with G-CSF or AMD3100, and wild type (WT) animals were exposed to CD39 and CD73 inhibitors in addition to mobilizing agents. Following mobilization, we measured i) the total number of white blood cells (WBCs) and ii) the number of clonogenic colony-forming unit granulocyte/macrophage (CFU-GM) progenitors and Sca-1+c-kit+lineage- (SKL) cells circulating in PB. To address the involvement of CD39 and CD73 expressed on the surface of HSPCs or in the hematopoietic microenvironment, we created irradiation chimeras that were subsequently mobilized with G-CSF or AMD3100. Bone marrow (BM) transplantation studies were performed by transplanting WT mice with WT BM cells or BM cells from ectonucleotidase-deficient mice. Homing efficiency was evaluated by determining i) the number of fluorochrome-labeled cells in BM 24 hours after transplantation ii) the number of CFU-S and CFU-GM progenitors that had engrafted in BM on day 12, and iii) the recovery of peripheral blood counts. Results. We found that CD39 and CD73 are expressed by murine and human HSPCs and process ATP to adenosine, which as we observed, is a novel and potent inhibitor of HSPC trafficking. In support of this finding, CD73-/- and CD39-/- mice, with reduced extracellular adenosine levels, mobilize HSPCs much better than their normal control littermates. A similar effect was observed in WT mice exposed to CD39 and CD73 small-molecule inhibitors during mobilization. Studies in irradiation chimeras revealed that this effect depended on expression of CD39 and CD73 on the surface of HSPCs and not in the BM microenvironment. Moreover, adenosine also inhibited the homing of HSPCs to BM, as cells from CD39-/- or CD73-/- mice engrafted better than WT cells. Furthermore, homing was also inhibited in the presence of exogenously added adenosine. That ectonucleotidase-deficient mice engrafted BM cells from WT littermates as efficiently as did WT recipients indicates the involvement of HSPC-expressed CD39 and CD73 in regulating the homing process. Conclusions. We demonstrate for the first time that HSPC-expressed CD39 and CD39 ectonucleotidases modulate the trafficking of HSPCs. By processing ATP to adenosine, these enzymes negatively affect both the mobilization and the homing processes. Based on this finding, future strategies employing small-molecule inhibitors of both ectonucleotidases could find practical application in improving mobilization in poor mobilizers and accelerating the engraftment of HSPCs after transplantation. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 5050-5050
Author(s):  
Yuta Tanizaki ◽  
Takaki Aiso ◽  
Yoko Mochizuki ◽  
Takashi Kato

Abstract Mammalian hematopoiesis begins in the yolk sac, and then shifts to the aorta-gonad-mesonephros, liver, spleen, and finally to the bone marrow. Hematopoietic tissue also shifts by environmental stress. In rats, the marrow contained hematopoietic progenitors at birth and contains no fat cells, and after birth, fat cells develop within the marrow cavity. However, hematopoiesis is retained in the tail vertebrae by transposing the tail into the warmer environment of the abdomen. To elucidate temperature-dependent regulation of hematopoiesis, we attempted to establish an African clawed frog (X. laevis) model which is systemically-resistant to low-temperature environment. Unlike mammals, X. laevis is filled with adipose cells, and blood cells are mainly produced in the liver. Moreover, cold stress (5°C) for 24 hour induced pancytopenia in X. laevis (Maekawa et al. J Exp Biol., 2012), demonstrating environmental regulation of hematopoiesis in animals has been largely conserved throughout evolution. However, dynamic behavior of hematopoietic stem progenitor cells (HSPCs) under the environmental stress, especially temperature stress, is unclear. We therefore attempted to identify the HSPCs in X. laevis to evaluate the ability of hematopoiesis under low-temperature. We have previously reported the function of Xenopus thrombopoietin (TPO) to stimulate proliferation of hematopoietic progenitor cell (Tanizaki Y et al. ASH. 2013, Tanizaki Y et al. Sci rep. 2015). To obtain hematopoietic progenitors with multipotent capacity, hepatic cells were cultured in serum-containing semisolid media with Xenopus TPO alone. Hepatic colonies stimulated by TPO could be cultured for more than 3 months, during which the cell number reached 1 × 106. These colonies expressed mRNAs of ESAM, c-kit, Oct-25, 60, 91 (Oct-4 orthologues) and Sox2, and have the potency to differentiate into myeloid cells. To test stemness of the cells, we resected the left lobe from the X. laevis,and cultured in the presence of TPO for 30 days. After that period, cells were labeled with PKH26 and transplanted autologously. After 30 days of transplantation, PKH26-positive cells were detected in the sinusoids of liver and spleen. Flow cytometric analysis showed that the PKH26-positive cells displayed low forward scatter (FSC) and side scatter, and had thin-layered cytoplasm and round nuclei, which are typical features of mammalian HSPCs. These results indicated that TPO stimulates proliferation of HSPCs, which can be engrafted and differentiated to multiple lineages. To enrich HSPCs from the liver, we generated anti-Xenopus MPl mouse monoclonal antibodies, and showed that anti-thrombocyte antibody (T12)-Mpl+FSClow population was enriched in high nuclear/cytoplasm (N/C) ratio-hematopoietic progenitors. The ratio of these cells to all hepatic cells was 0.28%. Surprisingly, T12-Mpl+FSClow cells were also identified (0.69±0.4%) in the fatty marrow. Furthermore, T12-Mpl+FSClow cells in the liver and the BM expressing mRNAs of ESAM, c-kit, GATA2, Oct-25, 60 and Sox2 showed the extremely high N/C ratio. These results demonstrated that HSPCs are enriched in T12-Mpl+FSClow population and localized in the both liver and the BM. We then focused on HSPCs as a marker of hematopoietic regulation under the low temperature condition. To explore the hematopoietic capacity in the BM, X. laevis were exposed to 5°C, which led to pancytopenia. After exposure to low temperature for 12 days, we observed a significant increase (approx. 2 fold) of the number of HSPCs only in the BM compared to controls. To reveal whether microenvironment of the BM was modified under the low-temperature stimulation, we analyzed the bone structure under the low-temperature stimulation by using micro-CT. Micro CT analysis showed that femoral bone density was higher than that before exposure to 5°C, indicating the modification of the BM microenvironment. Besides, TPO mRNA expression in the BM also increased to 15-fold by low-temperature stress, showing that microenvironment of the BM under low-temperature provided further signals for proliferation of HSPCs. These findings suggested that low-temperature stimulation induced proliferation of HSPCs. Hematopoietic switch from fatty to "active" bone marrow has the clue to make considerable progress in understanding the pathophysiology of hematological diseases, e.g. aplastic anemia. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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