3 resultados para Ion Implantation effects

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Calcium ionophore, ionomycin, and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) were used to activate rabbit peripheral blood B cells to study the role of increased intracellular calcium ion concentration ( (Ca$\sp2+\rbrack\sb{\rm i}$), protein kinase C (PKC) activation, and autocrine interleukin (IL-2) in inducing cell cycle entry and maintaining activation to DNA synthesis. When stimulated with a combination of ionomycin and PMA the B cells produced a soluble factor that supported the IL-2 dependent cell line, CTLL-2. The identity of the factor was established as IL-2 and its source was proved to be B cells in further experiments. Absorption studies and limiting dilution analysis indicated that IL-2 produced by B cells can act as an autocrine growth factor. Next, the effect of complete and incomplete signalling on B lymphocyte activation leading to cell cycle entry, IL-2 production, functional IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) expression, and DNA synthesis was examined. It was observed that cell cycle entry could be induced by signals provided by each reagent alone, but IL-2 production, IL-2R expression, and progression to DNA synthesis required activation with both reagents. Incomplete activation with ionomycin or PMA alone altered the responsiveness of B cells to further stimulation only in the case of ionomycin, and the unresponsiveness of these cells was apparently due to a lack of functional IL-2R expression on these cells, even though IL-2 production was maintained. The requirement of IL-2 for maintenance of activation to DNA synthesis was then investigated. The hypothesis that IL-2, acts in late G$\sb1$ and is required for DNA synthesis in B cells was supported by comparing IL-2 production and DNA synthesis in peripheral blood cells and purified B cells, kinetic analysis of these events in B cells, effects of anti-IL-2 antibody and PKC inhibitors, and by the response of G$\sb1$ B cells. Additional signals transduced by the interaction of autocrine IL-2 and functional IL-2 receptor on rabbit B cells were found to be necessary to drive these cells to S phase, after initial activation caused by simultaneous increase in (Ca$\sp2+\rbrack\sb{\rm i}$ and PKC activation had induced cell cycle entry, IL-2 production, and functional IL-2 receptor expression. ^

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Mineralocorticoids (DOCA) are known to increase Na('+) absorption and K('+) secretion in the rabbit cortical collecting duct (CCD). However, the mechanism of regulation of the apical and basolateral cell membranes and tight junction ion conductive pathways (G('a), G('b), and G('tj), respectively) by mineralocorticoids are only partially understood. Using electrophysiological techniques and microelectrodes it was demonstrated that the apical cell membrane contained a dominant Ba('2+) sensitive K('+) conductive pathway, G(,K)('a), and an amiloride sensitive Na('+) conductive pathway, G(,Na)('a). The basolateral membrane contained a dominant Cl('-) conductive pathway, G(,Cl)('b), and a significant Ba('2+) sensitive K('+) conductive pathway, G(,K)('b). Upon elevating the mineralocorticoid levels of rabbits with intact adrenal glands it was found that V('te) was significantly increased after 1 day with a further increase after 13-16 days. These results indicated both primary and secondary effects of mineralocorticoid elevation. After 1 day of DOCA treatment, G(,Na)('a), I(,Na)('a) and I(,K)('a) increased by more than 2-fold and were maintained at high levels after 13-16 days of DOCA treatment. Secondary (chronic) effects of mineralocorticoids were evident after 4 days or more of DOCA treatment. These included a significant increase in G(,K)('a) from 4.0 to 10.2 mS.cm('-2) and a hyperpolarization of V('b) by -20 mV after 4 days of treatment. After 13-16 days of DOCA treatment V('b) remained hyperpolarized at -98.1 mV and G('tj) decreased from 5.6 to 4.2 mS.cm('-2). The hyperpolarization of V('b) was due to an increase in electrogenic Na('+) pump activity as the pump current, I(,act)('b), increased significantly from 35.7 to 195.2 (mu)A.cm('-2). Whereas net passive K('+) current across the basolateral membrane, I(,K)('b), was near zero in the control group of animals, i.e., K('+) near equilibrium, I(,K)('b) was approximately -40 (mu)A.cm('-2) in chronic DOCA treated animals. These results demonstrate that the initial effect of mineralocorticoid elevation is to increase G(,Na)('a). The ensuing depolarization of the apical membrane increases the driving force for K('+) exit into the lumen. Between 1 and 4 days of elevation, G(,K)('a) more than doubles in magnitude and at the same time the electrogenic activity of the Na('+) pump increases. This results in a hyperpolarization of V('b) which increases the driving force for K('+) uptake from the bath to the cell through a basolateral membrane conductive pathway. After 13-16 days G('tj) decreases thereby serving to maintain high electrochemical gradients across the epithelium. Therefore, the long term effects of mineralocorticoid elevation on the CCD appear to be adaptive mechanisms that serve to maintain high levels of K('+) secretion and Na('+) absorption. ^

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Parkinson disease (PD) is a movement disorder affecting over one million Americans, and 1% of our population over 60 years of age. Currently, PD has an unknown cause, no predictive biomarker, and no cure, yet there are effective treatments (medicine and surgery) to chronically manage the motor symptoms. But, PD patients also develop cognitive symptoms (e.g., distractibility, executive dysfunction) that remain untreated or may decline as a result of treating the motor symptoms. To address this important issue, I measured covert orienting of attention and overt eye movements in PD patients to assess the patients' ability to automatically detect stimuli in their visual field, to predict and attend to where the stimuli would appear, and to volitionally look somewhere else. ^ PD patients completed the cognitive tasks under multiple treatment conditions, and their performance was compared to healthy adults. PD patients first completed the tasks after they had withdrawn from medication. Their unmedicated performance revealed exaggerated automatic orienting, poor predictability, and weak volitional orienting. PD patients then repeated the tasks while medication was giving its peak benefit. The medication returned automatic covert orienting toward normal but did not improve volitional covert orienting. Several PD patients completed the tasks a third time after receiving surgery (specifically, implantation of stimulating electrodes in a subcortical brain region to alleviate motor symptoms). The stimulation (without medication) returned automatic orienting toward normal, did not change predictability, and further impaired volitional orienting. Taken together, treatments prescribed to alleviate the motor symptoms (a patient's primary concern) only improve some cognitive functions. Future studies may establish criteria to predict which patients are more likely to have cognitive benefit from medication over surgery, or vice versa. ^ I have also hypothesized an anatomical model relating orienting circuitry to abnormal PD circuitry and the therapeutic targets. My results suggest medication is more effective restoring the orienting circuitry than stimulation. Further, automatic and volitional orienting abilities seem to be modulated independently, which differs from an earlier model proposing a dependent, inverse relationship. My results are further discussed in terms of response inhibition, response selection, and the location of the selection. ^