The relationship of chemical structure to teratogenic activity among bisazo dyes: a re-evaluation

Development ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-39
Author(s):  
J. B. Lloyd ◽  
F. Beck

Although the potency of trypan blue as a teratogenic agent in rodents has been known for almost twenty years the mechanism of its action remains obscure. The dye produces a variety of biological effects (see review by Beck & Lloyd, 1966) and most of these have at some time been suggested as possibly relevant to its teratogenicity. The investigation of such correlations would clearly be assisted by determining whether the biological effects of the dye are individually modified by small changes in its chemical structure, particularly if these changes also result in differences in its teratogenicity. The first teratological study of dyes related to trypan blue was made by Gillman, Gilbert, Spence & Gillman (1951), who obtained negative results in rats with six dyes (methylene blue, trypan red, Sudan IV, Bismarck brown, Niagara blue and sky blue), but gave no experimental details of their investigation.

1938 ◽  
Vol s2-80 (318) ◽  
pp. 293-319
Author(s):  
MARGARET I. DANIELS

A. Three gregarine species are found to inhabit the mid-gut of the mealworm larvae used: Gregarina cuneata Stein, Gregarina polymorpha Hamm, and Gregarina steini Berndt. The often described Steinina ovalis is probably seldom or never found. They live only in the mid-gut of larvae. They are never found in pupal or adult forms. Gregarines have been seen moving when in a stratified condition. B. The gregarine cytoplasm has five important inclusions, each having a characteristic position in a centrifuged animal (Text-fig. 2). 1. Paraglycogen.--This gives a dark brown colour with iodine, a pinkish general colour with the acid fuchsin of the Feulgen technique, and often a red colour with Bauer's reaction. It occupies the centrifugal pole of the centrifuged cell and is in the form of disc-like granules of varying size. 2. In young centrifuged Gregarina steini chromidial granules are seen in the paraglycogen area, and have, therefore, approximately the same specific gravity. They arise by karyosomic budding with the subsequent extrusion of these buds into the cytoplasm. They stain with iron alum haematoxylin, like the karyosome, and both give a negative result with the Feulgen test for thymonucleic acid. They probably correspond to Joyet-Lavergne's ‘albuminoid reserves’, but do not have the mitochondrial‘cap’ he describes. 3. Mitochondria.--These are usually granular, but sometimes rod-like. They are seen between the ‘alveoli’ formed by the paraglycogen granules. They lie distally to the paraglycogen in a centrifuged parasite; they stain by the iron alum haematoxylin long method, after Benoit, Champy, or Altmann fixation, also with Altmann's fuchsin picric acid stain and the Bensley Cowdry modification of it. 4. The Nucleus is karyosomic, and the karyosome is moved to the centrifugal pole by pressure as is the nucleolus of metazoan cells. The nucleus shows budding of the karyosome. There is plasmatic as well as chromatic material in the karyosome, as shown by centrifuging. The nucleus gives a negative result with Feulgen's nuclear reaction, but chromatin may exist in a very dispersed condition. 5. Golgi Material.--This lies at the centripetal end of the nucleus. It is best shown by Weigl fixation. The large and regular Golgi elements are slightly heavier than the granular Golgi material, which may be compared with that of young oocytes. 6. Fatty Material lies at the extreme centripetal pole of the cell, in globules of varying size. It becomes brown or black after treatment with osmium tetroxide, and vivid cherry red with Sudan IV. It gives a negative result with the Schultz reaction for cholestrol. C. Large globules are seen in the protomerite of Gregarina steini , eosinophile, sometimes fuchsinophile, and also staining with methylene blue. These move towards the centrifugal pole. Methylene blue preparations show blue granules among the paraglycogen granules in the centrifuged animal. They are remarkably resistant to dilute sulphuric acid. They are possibly allied to volutin or chromidia. Tests for the presence of Vitamin C yielded negative results. Only the inclusions of the gregarines in the gut lumen were studied, and the complete life-cycles of the species were not followed out.


1965 ◽  
Vol 121 (4) ◽  
pp. 633-645 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isaac Ginsburg ◽  
Zvi Bentwich ◽  
T. N. Harris

The relationship of the streptococcal hemolysin which is recognized on incubation of RBC with streptococcal cells (cell-bound hemolysin, CBH), to RNA hemolysin, a representative of oxygen-stable hemolysin (streptolysin S) has been studied. A number of similarities have been found in the conditions for optimal production of each of these hemolysins, a requirement for cysteine, Mg++, and glucose; maximal production by streptococci in the stationary phase; similar curves of pH-dependence. In both systems, the production of hemolysin was inhibited by certain antibiotics, by ultraviolet irradiation, and by sonic disruption and was absent in the same streptococcal mutant strain. The hemolytic activity of both systems was inhibited by lecithin, trypan blue, and papain. Similarities were also found in relative susceptibilities to the two hemolytic systems of erythrocytes of a number of animal species. These data support a suggestion advanced in an earlier study that a streptococcal hemolytic moiety, which can be induced by, and carried on, a number of diverse agents to comprise the group of oxygen-stable hemolysins, serves, in its original attachment to a component of the streptococcal cell, to produce the hemolytic effect recognized as the cell-bound hemolysin.


1979 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 497-499
Author(s):  
A. G. Pechenkin ◽  
L. G. Tugnibidina ◽  
V. K. Gorshkova ◽  
L. A. Tikhonova

Author(s):  
Fatima Sapundzhi ◽  
Tatyana Dzimbova

Mu-opioid receptor (MOR) is an attractive target for <em>in silico</em> docking experiments. Many potent analgesics currently in use act through the MOR. The main objective of the present work was to find the polynomial function for modelling of the structure-activity relationship of a series of MOR analogues and the results of the molecular docking with MOR (PDBid:4dkl). The relationship of the biological activity of the ligands with the ChemScore function and with the total energy (MolDock function) was modelled with first- to third-degree polynomials and surface fitted method, assessed by least squares method. The finding, established in the paper, suggests that the third order polynomial could be successfully used for modelling of the relationship between the biological effect of the MOR analogues and results from docking procedure. Analysis and comparison of the data from in vitro tests and docking studies could help to understand better the relationship between in vitro biological effects and docking studies and to answer whether the models of the biological macromolecules (in our case MOR) correspond to the real 3D structure.


1961 ◽  
Vol 200 (2) ◽  
pp. 297-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. Riggi ◽  
N. R. Di Luzio

The functional activity of the reticuloendothelial system (RES), as determined by the intravascular clearance of colloidal carbon, and the degree of induced RE hyperplasia were studied following the intravenous injection of various constituents of zymosan. The readily extractable lipid component from the yeast cell wall was inactive, as was the polysaccharide, mannan. Stimulatory activity was still present in the zymosan residue after removal of free and bound lipids. The administration of glucan derived either from yeast, or its cell wall, resulted in marked RE activation and induced hyperplasia, demonstrating it to be the active RE stimulating agent. The relationship of glucan's chemical structure to its ability to induce RE hyperfunction and hyperplasia is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Lavoisier Almeida dosntos Santos ◽  
Valci Melo ◽  
Maria do Socorro Aguiar de Oliveira Cavalcante

This work had as an objective to examine the importance and the utilization of Paulo Freire’s legacy for the comprehension of the nature of education, the social historic conditioning of school and the relationship of the pedagogical practice-social practice. For that, we analyzed a discursive event occurred in teaching institutions of the city of Maceió, Ceará, Brazil. In order to carry out this analysis, in addition to Freire’s theory, we relied on the theoretical-methodological assumptions of the Discourse Analysis, founded in France, by Michel Pêcheux, anchored in the Dialectical and Historical Materialism. From the analyzed case, we demonstrate that, contrary to the accusations that attribute to Freirean ideas the responsibility for the negative results of Brazilian education, what exists is the total absence of these ideas in the concrete reality of Brazilian schools today. This fact reaffirms the importance of his work as a point of resistance against conservative policies and excluding pedagogical practices.


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