3 resultados para Spectrofluorimetry, Nitrofurans, Kinetics, way, Nonlinear, Chemometrics
em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça
Resumo:
The goals of the present study were to model the population kinetics of in vivo influx and efflux processes of grepafloxacin at the serum-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier and to propose a simulation-based approach to optimize the design of dose-finding trials in the meningitis rabbit model. Twenty-nine rabbits with pneumococcal meningitis receiving grepafloxacin at 15 mg/kg of body weight (intravenous administration at 0 h), 30 mg/kg (at 0 h), or 50 mg/kg twice (at 0 and 4 h) were studied. A three-compartment population pharmacokinetic model was fit to the data with the program NONMEM (Nonlinear Mixed Effects Modeling). Passive diffusion clearance (CL(diff)) and active efflux clearance (CL(active)) are transfer kinetic modeling parameters. Influx clearance is assumed to be equal to CL(diff), and efflux clearance is the sum of CL(diff), CL(active), and bulk flow clearance (CL(bulk)). The average influx clearance for the population was 0.0055 ml/min (interindividual variability, 17%). Passive diffusion clearance was greater in rabbits receiving grepafloxacin at 15 mg/kg than in those treated with higher doses (0.0088 versus 0.0034 ml/min). Assuming a CL(bulk) of 0.01 ml/min, CL(active) was estimated to be 0.017 ml/min (11%), and clearance by total efflux was estimated to be 0.032 ml/min. The population kinetic model allows not only to quantify in vivo efflux and influx mechanisms at the serum-CSF barrier but also to analyze the effects of different dose regimens on transfer kinetic parameters in the rabbit meningitis model. The modeling-based approach also provides a tool for the simulation and prediction of various outcomes in which researchers might be interested, which is of great potential in designing dose-finding trials.
Resumo:
The growth/differentiation factors (GDFs) are a subgroup of the bone morphogenetic proteins best known for their role in joint formation and chondrogenesis. Mice deficient in one of these signaling proteins, GDF-5, exhibit numerous skeletal abnormalities, including shortened limb bones. The primary aim of this study was determine whether GDF-5 deficiency would alter the growth rate in growth plates from the long bones in mice and, if so, how this is achieved. Stereologic and cell kinetic parameters in proximal tibial growth plates from 5-week-old female GDF-5 -/- mice and control littermates were examined. GDF-5 deficiency resulted in a statistically significant reduction in growth rate (-14%, p=0.03). The effect of genotype on growth rate was associated with an altered hypertrophic phase duration, with hypertrophic cells from GDF-5 deficient mice exhibiting a significantly longer phase duration compared to control littermates (+25%, p=0.006). These data suggest that one way in which GDF-5 might modulate the rate of endochondral bone growth could be by affecting the duration of the hypertrophic phase in growth plate chondrocytes.
Resumo:
A series of chimaeric DNA/RNA triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) with identical base-sequence but varying sequential composition of the sugar residues were prepared. The structural, kinetic and thermodynamic properties of triplex formation with their corresponding double-helical DNA target were investigated by spectroscopic methods. Kinetic and thermodynamic data were obtained from analysis of non-equilibrium UV-melting- and annealing curves in the range of pH 5.1 to 6.7 in a 10 mM citrate/phosphate buffer containing 0.1M NaCl and 1 mM EDTA. It was found that already single substitutions of ribo- for deoxyribonucleotides in the TFOs greatly affect stability and kinetics of triplex formation in a strongly sequence dependent manner. Within the sequence context investigated, triplex stability was found to increase when deoxyribonucleotides were present at the 5'-side and ribonucleotides in the center of the TFO. Especially the substitution of thymidines for uridines in the TFO was found to accelerate both, the association and dissociation process, in a strongly position-dependent way. Differential structural information on triplexes and TFO single-strands was obtained from CD-spectroscopy and gel mobility experiments. Only minor changes were observed in the CD spectra of the triplexes at all pH values investigated, and the electrophoretic mobility was nearly identical in all cases, indicating a high degree of structural similarity. In contrast, the single-stranded TFOs showed high structural variability as determined in the same way. The results are discussed in the context of the design of TFOs for therapeutic or biochemical applications.