990 resultados para cyclic citrullinated peptide antibody
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In this report, we describe a short peptide, containing a T helper- and a B-cell epitope, located in the Gag protein of the caprine arthritis encephalitis virus (CAEV). This T-cell epitope is capable of inducing a robust T-cell proliferative response in vaccinated goats with different genetic backgrounds and to provide help for a strong antibody response to the B-cell epitope, indicating that it may function as a universal antigen-carrier for goat vaccines. The primary immune response of goats homozygous for MHC class I and II genes showed an MHC-dependent partitioning in rapid-high and slow-low responses, whereas the memory immune response was strong in both groups, demonstrating that a vaccine based on this immunodominant T helper epitope is capable to overcome genetic differences.
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A protein of a biological sample is usually quantified by immunological techniques based on antibodies. Mass spectrometry offers alternative approaches that are not dependent on antibody affinity and avidity, protein isoforms, quaternary structures, or steric hindrance of antibody-antigen recognition in case of multiprotein complexes. One approach is the use of stable isotope-labeled internal standards; another is the direct exploitation of mass spectrometric signals recorded by LC-MS/MS analysis of protein digests. Here we assessed the peptide match score summation index based on probabilistic peptide scores calculated by the PHENYX protein identification engine for absolute protein quantification in accordance with the protein abundance index as proposed by Mann and co-workers (Rappsilber, J., Ryder, U., Lamond, A. I., and Mann, M. (2002) Large-scale proteomic analysis of the human spliceosome. Genome Res. 12, 1231-1245). Using synthetic protein mixtures, we demonstrated that this approach works well, although proteins can have different response factors. Applied to high density lipoproteins (HDLs), this new approach compared favorably to alternative protein quantitation methods like UV detection of protein peaks separated by capillary electrophoresis or quantitation of protein spots on SDS-PAGE. We compared the protein composition of a well defined HDL density class isolated from plasma of seven hypercholesterolemia subjects having low or high HDL cholesterol with HDL from nine normolipidemia subjects. The quantitative protein patterns distinguished individuals according to the corresponding concentration and distribution of cholesterol from serum lipid measurements of the same samples and revealed that hypercholesterolemia in unrelated individuals is the result of different deficiencies. The presented approach is complementary to HDL lipid analysis; does not rely on complicated sample treatment, e.g. chemical reactions, or antibodies; and can be used for projective clinical studies of larger patient groups.
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OBJECTIVES: To report a novel observation of neutrophil signal transduction abnormalities in patients with localized aggressive periodontitis (LAP) that are associated with an enhanced phosphorylation of the nuclear signal transduction protein cyclic AMP response element-binding factor (CREB). METHOD AND MATERIALS: Peripheral venous blood neutrophils of 18 subjects, 9 patients with LAP and 9 race-, sex-, and age-matched healthy controls, were isolated and prepared using the Ficoll-Hypaque density-gradient technique. Neutrophils (5.4 x 10(6)/mL) were stimulated with the chemoattractant FMLP (10(-6) mol/L) for 5 minutes and lysed. Aliquots of these samples were separated by SDS-PAGE (60 microg/lane) on 9.0% (w/v) polyacrylamide slab gels and transferred electrophoretically to polyvinyl difluoride membranes. The cell lysates were immunoblotted with a 1:1,000 dilution of rabbit-phospho-CREB antibody that recognizes only the phosphorylated form of CREB at Ser133. The activated CREB was visualized with a luminol-enhanced chemoluminescence detection system and evaluated by laser densitometry. RESULTS: In patients with LAP, the average activation of CREB displayed an overexpression for the unstimulated peripheral blood neutrophils of 80.3% (17.5-fold) compared to healthy controls (4.6%). CONCLUSION: LAP neutrophils who express their phenotype appear to be constitutively primed, as evidenced by activated CREB in resting cells compared to normal individuals. The genetically primed neutrophil phenotype may contribute to neutrophil-mediated tissue damage in the pathogenesis of LAP.
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Short synthetic peptides are important tools in biomedical research permitting to generate hapten specific polyclonal sera for analytical purposes or functional studies. In this paper we provide proof of principle that a peptide located in a highly conserved portion of the Gag protein of the caprine arthritis encephalitis virus and carrying an immunodominant T helper cell epitope functions as an efficient carrier peptide, mediating a strong antibody response to a peptidic hapten encompassing a well-characterized B cell epitope of Env. The carrier and hapten peptides were collinearly synthesized permutating their molecular arrangement. While the antibody response to the hapten was similar for both constructs, the antibody response to a B cell epitope overlapping the T helper cell epitope of the Gag carrier peptide was considerably different. This permits a modular use of the carrier peptide to generate antibody directed exclusively to the hapten peptide or a strong humoral response to both carrier- and hapten-peptide. Finally, we have mapped the epitopes involved in this polarized antibody response and discussed the potential immunological implications.
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Suppression of cyclic activity in cattle is often desired in alpine farming and for feedlot cattle not intended for breeding. A cattle-specific anti-GnRH vaccination (Bopriva, Zoetis Australia Ltd., West Ryde, Australia) is approved for use in heifers and bulls in New Zealand, Australia, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Turkey, and Peru. Eleven healthy, cyclic Swiss Fleckvieh cows were included in the study and vaccinated twice with Bopriva 4wk apart. Injection site, rectal body temperature, and heart and respiratory rates were recorded before and 3d following each vaccination. Blood samples were taken weekly for progesterone and estrogen analysis and to determine GnRH antibody titer. Ovaries were examined weekly, using ultrasound to count the number of follicles and identify the presence of a corpus luteum. Thirty weeks after the first vaccination, the cows were subjected to a controlled internal drug-releasing device-based Select-Synch treatment. The GnRH antibody titers increased after the second vaccination and peaked 2wk later. Estrogen levels were not influenced by vaccination, and progesterone level decreased in 7 of 11 cows up to 3wk after the second vaccination and remained low for 10 to 15wk following the second vaccination. The number of class I follicles (diameter ≤5mm) was not influenced by vaccination, whereas the number of class II follicles (diameter 6-9mm) decreased between 7 and 16wk after the first vaccination. Class III follicles (diameter >9mm) were totally absent during this period in most cows. The median period until recurrence of class III follicles was 78d from the day of the second vaccination (95% confidence interval: 60-92d). After vaccination, all cows showed swelling and pain at the injection site, and these reactions subsided within 2wk. Body temperature and heart and respiratory rates increased after the first and second vaccinations and returned to normal values within 2d of each vaccination. The cows in our study were not observed to display estrus behavior until 30wk after the first vaccination. Therefore, a Select-Synch protocol was initiated at that time. Ten cows became pregnant after the first insemination (the remaining cow was reinseminated once until confirmed pregnancy). Bopriva induced a reliable and reversible suppression of reproductive cyclicity for more than 2mo. The best practical predictor for the length of the anestrus period was the absence of class III follicles.
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BACKGROUND Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is the major cause of viral encephalitis in Southeast Asia. Vaccination of domestic pigs has been suggested as a "one health" strategy to reduce viral disease transmission to humans. The efficiency of two lentiviral TRIP/JEV vectors expressing the JEV envelope prM and E glycoproteins at eliciting protective humoral response was assessed in a mouse model and piglets. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS A gene encoding the envelope proteins prM and E from a genotype 3 JEV strain was inserted into a lentiviral TRIP vector. Two lentiviral vectors TRIP/JEV were generated, each expressing the prM signal peptide followed by the prM protein and the E glycoprotein, the latter being expressed either in its native form or lacking its two C-terminal transmembrane domains. In vitro transduction of cells with the TRIP/JEV vector expressing the native prM and E resulted in the efficient secretion of virus-like particles of Japanese encephalitis virus. Immunization of BALB/c mice with TRIP/JEV vectors resulted in the production of IgGs against Japanese encephalitis virus, and the injection of a second dose one month after the prime injection greatly boosted antibody titers. The TRIP/JEV vectors elicited neutralizing antibodies against JEV strains belonging to genotypes 1, 3, and 5. Immunization of piglets with two doses of the lentiviral vector expressing JEV virus-like particles led to high titers of anti-JEV antibodies, that had efficient neutralizing activity regardless of the JEV genotype tested. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE Immunization of pigs with the lentiviral vector expressing JEV virus-like particles is particularly efficient to prime antigen-specific humoral immunity and trigger neutralizing antibody responses against JEV genotypes 1, 3, and 5. The titers of neutralizing antibodies elicited by the TRIP/JEV vector are sufficient to confer protection in domestic pigs against different genotypes of JEV and this could be of a great utility in endemic regions where more than one genotype is circulating.
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ErbB2 is an excellent target for cancer therapies because its overexpression was found in about 30% of breast cancers and correlated with poor prognosis of the patients. Unfortunately, current therapies for ErbB2-positive breast cancers remain unsatisfying due to side effects and resistance, and new therapies for ErbB2 overexpressing breast cancers are needed. Peptide/protein therapy using cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) as carriers is promising because the internalization is highly efficient and the cargos can be bioactive. The major obstacle in using CPPs for therapy is their lack of specificity. We sought to develop a peptide carrier specifically introducing therapeutics to ErbB2-overexpressing breast cancer cells. By modifying the TAT-derived CPP, and attaching anti-HER2/neu peptide mimetic (AHNP), we developed the peptide carrier (P3-AHNP) specifically targeted ErbB2-overexpressing breast cancers in vitro and in vivo. A STAT3 SH2 domain-binding peptide conjugated to this peptide carrier (P3-AHNP-STAT3BP) was delivered preferentially into ErbB2-overexpressing breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. P3-AHNP-STAT3BP inhibited growth and induced apoptosis in vitro, with ErbB2-overexpressing 435.eB cells being more sensitive than the ErbB2-lowexpressing MDA-MB-435 cells. P3-AHNP-STAT3BP preferentially accumulated and inhibited growth in 435.eB xenografts, comparing with MDA-MB-435 xenografts or normal tissues with low levels of ErbB2. This ErbB2-targeting peptide delivery system provided the basis for future development of novel cancer target-specific treatments with low toxicity to normal cells. ^ Another urgent issue in treating ErbB2-positive breast cancers is trastuzumab resistance. Trastuzumab is the only FDA-approved ErbB2-targeting antibody for treatment of metastatic breast cancers overexpressing ErbB2, and has remarkable therapeutic efficacy in certain patients. The overall trastuzumab response rate, however, is limited, and understanding the mechanisms of trastuzumab resistance is needed to overcome this problem. We report that PTEN activation contributes to trastuzumab's anti-tumor activity. Trastuzumab treatment quickly inactivated Src, which reduced PTEN tyrosine phosphorylation, increased PTEN membrane localization and its phosphatase activity in cancer cells. Reducing PTEN expression in breast cancer cells by antisense oligonucleotides conferred trastuzumab resistance in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, PI3K inhibitors sensitized PTEN-deficient breast cancers to the growth inhibition by trastuzumab in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that combination therapies with PI3K inhibitors plus trastuzumab could overcome trastuzumab resistance. ^
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Anti-Glomerular Basement Membrane Glomerulonephritis (anti-GBM GM) is one of the earliest described autoimmune disorders. Patients present with proteinuria, anti-GBM antibodies, and renal failure. Studies have implicated a T Helper 1 (TH1) response in disease induction and a T Helper 2 (TH2) response for disease progression. A 13 amino acid long peptide sequence spanning residues 28 through 40 [pCol(28–40)] of the Collagen IV α3 non-collagen domain (Col IV α3 NCD) is immunogenic and induces anti-GBM GN. In order to fully understand disease initiation, this peptide was further characterized. Peptides were created containing one amino acid substitution for the entire length of pCol(28–40) and induction of anti-GBM GN was monitored. When residues 31, 33, or 34 contained the substitution, anti-GBM GN was unable to be induced. Thus, residues 31, 33, and 34 of pCol(28–40) are required for induction of anti-GBM. Glomerular injury is observed as early as 14 days post anti-GBM GN induction. However, the presence of anti-GBM antibodies is not observed until 20 days post immunization. An enlarged lymph node adjacent to the diseased kidney exhibits B cell activation after renal injury and produces antibodies toward GBM. Thus, anti-GBM antibodies are a consequence of the initial renal injury. Differences between disease susceptible and disease resistant rat strains exist in the expression of IL-4Rα, a major player in the TH2 response. IL-4Rα signaling is regulated by soluble IL-4Rα (sIL-4Rα). Low expression levels of sIL-4Rα result in the stabilization of IL-4 binding, while elevated expression sequesters IL-4. Quantitative PCR experiments noted low siL-4Rα expression levels in disease susceptible rats. Induction of an immune response toward sIL-4Rα in this strain was responsible for delayed disease progression in 15 out of the 17 experimental animals. Antibody transfer and in vivo biological activity experiments confirmed that delayed disease development was due to anti-sIL-4Rα antibodies. Together these experiments indicate that a T-cell epitope is required for activation of a TH1 autoimmune response and anti-GBM antibodies are a consequence of renal injury. More importantly, a role for IL-4Rα signaling is implicated in the progression of anti-GBM GN. ^
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Sox9 is a transcription factor required for chondrocyte differentiation and cartilage formation. In an effort to identify SOX9 interacting protein(s), we screened a chondrocyte cDNA library with a modified yeast two-hybrid method, Son of Sevenless (SOS) recruitment system (SRS). The catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA-Cα) and a new long form of c-Maf transcription factor (Lc-Maf) were found to interact specifically with SOX9. We showed here that two PKA phosphorylation consensus sites of SOX9 could be phosphorylated by PKA in vitro as well as in vivo. PKA phosphorylation of SOX9 increases its DNA binding and transcriptional activities on a Col2a1 chondrocyte-specific enhancer. Mutations of these two PKA phosphorylation sites markedly decreased the activation of SOX9 by PKA. ^ To test whether parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) signaling results in SOX9 phosphorylation, we generated a phosphospecific antibody that specifically recognizes SOX9 that is phosphorylated at serine 181 (S 181) one of the two consensus PKA phosphorylation sites. Addition of PTHrP to COS7 cells cotransfected with SOX9 and PTH/PTHrP receptor strongly increased phosphorylation of SOX9 at S181; this phosphorylation was blocked by a PKA-specific inhibitor. In similar experiments we showed that PTHrP increased the activity of a SOX9-dependent Col2a1 enhancer. This increase in activity was abolished when a SOX9 mutant was used containing serine-to-alanine substitution in the two consensus PKA phosphorylation sites of SOX9. Using our phosphospecific SOX9 antibody we showed by immunohistochemistry of mouse embryos that Sox9 phosphorylated at S181 was localized almost exclusively in the pre-hypertrophic zone of the growth plate, an area corresponding to the major site of expression of PTH/PTHrP receptor. In contrast, no phosphorylation of Sox9 at S181 was detected in growth plates of PTH/PTHrP receptor null mutant mice. Sox9, regardless of phosphorylation state, was present in all chondrocytes of both genotypes except in hypertrophic chondrocytes. Thus, Sox9 is a target of PTHrP signaling and the PTHrP-dependent phosphorylation of SOX9 enhances its transcriptional activity. ^ In order to investigate the in vivo function of Sox9 phosphorylation by PKA, we are generating a mouse model of mutant Sox9 harboring point mutations in two PKA phosphorylation sites. Preliminary results indicated that heterozygous mice containing half amount of mutant Sox9 that can not be phosphorylated by PKA have normal skeletal phenotype and homozygous mice are being generated. ^ Lc-Maf encodes an extra ten amino acids at the carboxyl terminus of c-Maf and contains a completely different 3′ untranslated region. The interaction between SOX9 and Lc-Maf was further confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation and GST-pull down assays, which mapped the interacting domains of SOX9 to HMG DNA binding domain and that of Lc-Maf to basic leusine zipper motif. In situ hybridizations showed that RNA of Lc-Maf coexpressed with those of Sox9 and Col2a1 in areas of mesenchymal condensation during the early stages of mouse embryo development. A DNA binding site of Lc-Maf was identified at the 5′ part of a 48-bp Col2a1 enhancer element near the HMG binding site of SOX9. Lc-Maf and SOX9 synergistically activated a luciferase reporter plasmid containing a Col2al enhancer and increased the transcription of endogenous Col2a1 gene. In summary, Lc-Maf is the first identified SOX9-interating protein during chondrogenesis and may be an important activator of Col2a1 gene. ^
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An antibody generated to an α-keto amide containing hapten 1 catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of peptidyl-prolyl amide bonds in peptides and in the protein RNase T1. The antibody-catalyzed peptide isomerization reaction showed saturation kinetics for the cis-substrate, Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-pNA, with a kcat/Km value of 883 s−1⋅M−1; the reaction was inhibited by the hapten analog 13 (Ki = 3.0 ± 0.4 μM). Refolding of denatured RNase T1 to its native conformation also was catalyzed by the antibody, with the antibody-catalyzed folding reaction inhibitable both by the hapten 1 and hapten analog 13. These results demonstrate that antibodies can catalyze conformational changes in protein structure, a transformation involved in many cellular processes.
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Although coronary artery disease (CAD) is appreciated to be accelerated in patients with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI), the underlying mechanism of CAD in SCI remains obscure. We have recently shown that platelets from subjects with SCI develop resistance to the inhibitory effect of prostacyclin (PGI2) on the platelet stimulation of thrombin generation. The loss of the inhibitory effect was due to the loss of high-affinity prostanoid receptors, which may contribute to atherogenesis in SCI. Incubation of normal, non-SCI platelets in SCI plasma (n = 12) also resulted in the loss of high-affinity binding of PGI2 (Kd1 = 9.1 ± 2.0 nM; n1 = 170 ± 32 sites per cell vs. Kd1 = 7.2 ± 1.1 nM; n1 = 23 ± 8 sites per cell), with no significant change in the low-affinity receptors (Kd2 = 1.9 ± 0.1 μM; n2 = 1,832 ± 232 sites per cell vs. Kd2 = 1.6 ± 0.1 μM; n2 = 1,740 ± 161 sites per cell) as determined by Scatchard analysis of the binding of [3H]PGE1. The loss of high-affinity PGI2 binding led to the failure of PGI2 to inhibit the platelet-stimulated thrombin generation. The increase of cellular cyclic AMP level, mediated through the binding of PGI2 to low-affinity receptors in platelets, was unaffected in SCI platelets. PAGE and immunoblot of SCI plasma showed the presence of an IgG band, which specifically blocked the binding of [3H]PGE1 to the high-affinity PGI2 receptors of normal platelets. PAGE of the reduced IgG band, the amino acid sequence of the novel band as a heavy chain of IgG that inhibits the binding of [3H]PGE1 to the high-affinity platelet PGI2 receptor, demonstrates that the specific recognition and inhibition of high-affinity PGI2 binding to platelets was due to an anti-prostacyclin receptor antibody present in SCI plasma.
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The 2.0-Å resolution x-ray crystal structure of a novel trimeric antibody fragment, a “triabody,” has been determined. The trimer is made up of polypeptides constructed in a manner identical to that previously described for some “diabodies”: a VL domain directly fused to the C terminus of a VH domain—i.e., without any linker sequence. The trimer has three Fv heads with the polypeptides arranged in a cyclic, head-to-tail fashion. For the particular structure reported here, the polypeptide was constructed with a VH domain from one antibody fused to the VL domain from an unrelated antibody giving rise to “combinatorial” Fvs upon formation of the trimer. The structure shows that the exchange of the VL domain from antibody B1-8, a Vλ domain, with the VL domain from antibody NQ11, a Vκ domain, leads to a dramatic conformational change in the VH CDR3 loop of antibody B1-8. The magnitude of this change is similar to the largest of the conformational changes observed in antibody fragments in response to antigen binding. Combinatorial pairing of VH and VL domains constitutes a major component of antibody diversity. Conformationally flexible antigen-binding sites capable of adapting to the specific CDR3 loop context created upon VH–VL pairing may be employed by the immune system to maximize the structural diversity of the immune response.
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Funded by European Research Council. Grant Number: 339367 UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. Grant Number: K015508/1 The Wellcome Trust. Grant Number: 094476 EPSRC Acknowledgements This work was supported by the European Research Council (339367), UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (K015508/1), The Wellcome Trust (TripleTOF 5600 mass spectrometer (094476), the MALDI TOF-TOF Analyser (079272AIA), 700 NMR) and the EPSRC UK National Mass Spectrometry Facility at Swansea University. J.H.N. is a Royal Society Wolfson Merit Award Holder and 1000 talent scholar at Sichuan University.
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Certain peptides derived from the α1 domain of the major histocompatibility class I antigen complex (MHC-I) inhibit receptor internalization, increasing the steady-state number of active receptors on the cell surface and thereby enhancing the sensitivity to hormones and other agonists. These peptides self-assemble, and they also bind to MHC-I at the same site from which they are derived, suggesting that they could bind to receptor sites with significant sequence similarity. Receptors affected by MHC-I peptides do, indeed, have such sequence similarity, as illustrated here by insulin receptor (IR) and insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor. A synthetic peptide with sequence identical to a certain extracellular receptor domain binds to that receptor in a ligand-dependent manner and inhibits receptor internalization. Moreover, each such peptide is selective for its cognate receptor. An antibody to the IR peptide not only binds to IR and competes with the peptide but also inhibits insulin-dependent internalization of IR. These observations, and binding studies with deletion mutants of IR, indicate that the sequence QILKELEESSF encoded by exon 10 plays a key role in IR internalization. Our results illustrate a principle for identifying receptor-specific sites of importance for receptor internalization, and for enhancing sensitivity to hormones and other agonists.
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Previous studies indicated that the central nervous system induces release of the cardiac hormone atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) by release of oxytocin from the neurohypophysis. The presence of specific transcripts for the oxytocin receptor was demonstrated in all chambers of the heart by amplification of cDNA by the PCR using specific oligonucleotide primers. Oxytocin receptor mRNA content in the heart is 10 times lower than in the uterus of female rats. Oxytocin receptor transcripts were demonstrated by in situ hybridization in atrial and ventricular sections and confirmed by competitive binding assay using frozen heart sections. Perfusion of female rat hearts for 25 min with Krebs–Henseleit buffer resulted in nearly constant release of ANP. Addition of oxytocin (10−6 M) significantly stimulated ANP release, and an oxytocin receptor antagonist (10−7 and 10−6 M) caused dose-related inhibition of oxytocin-induced ANP release and in the last few minutes of perfusion decreased ANP release below that in control hearts, suggesting that intracardiac oxytocin stimulates ANP release. In contrast, brain natriuretic peptide release was unaltered by oxytocin. During perfusion, heart rate decreased gradually and it was further decreased significantly by oxytocin (10−6 M). This decrease was totally reversed by the oxytocin antagonist (10−6 M) indicating that oxytocin released ANP that directly slowed the heart, probably by release of cyclic GMP. The results indicate that oxytocin receptors mediate the action of oxytocin to release ANP, which slows the heart and reduces its force of contraction to produce a rapid reduction in circulating blood volume.