53 resultados para Feulgen
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The 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, usually named 2,4-D is one of the most widely used herbicides in the world. Acute toxicity of 2,4-D herbicide was investigated through its effects on guppies (Poecilia vivipara Bloch et Schneider 1801). Fish were exposed to the herbicide at concentrations of 10, 20 and 40µl per liter of water for 24 hours to determine its effects on gills and liver epithelia. The estimated LC50 was 34.64µl of 2,4-D per liter of water. Histochemical analyses and Feulgen's reaction were conducted to detect glycoconjugates and DNA, respectively, in gills and liver epithelia. Histochemistry revealed qualitative variations of glycoconjugates present on mucous cells and granules. The four types of mucous cells contained neutral granules, acids, or both. Increasing amounts of syalomucins were observed from the control group to the group exposed to the highest concentration of 2,4-D, suggesting increased mucous viscosity and the formation of plaques that could inhibit gas exchange and osmoregulation. Lamellar fusion observed in the group exposed to 40µl of 2,4-D suggests a defense mechanism. Hepatocytes showed vacuolization in the 10 and 20µl/L groups. The 40 µl/L group showed normal hepatocytes as well as changed ones, many Ito cells, micronuclei, and nuclear swelling. These effects may be associated with toxicity or adaptative processes to cellular stress. The data from this study indicates the importance of assessing similar risks to aquatic species and suggests that Poecilia vivipara is an adequate biological model for analysis of environmental contamination.
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Karyotypes of 14 populations including eight species of the genus Lobelia were studied using root tip mitotic metaphases. All populations were tetraploid with 2n = 28 chromosomes. The chromosome base number x = 7 was confirmed for the genus. Karyotype analysis showed that chromosome size varied from 1.05 µm to 2.02 µm with predominance of M and SM chromosome types. The karyotypes were similar among themselves with small intra- and interspecific variations on the size of haploid sets, symmetry indexes and centromere position of some chromosome pairs. These results showed that karyotypes of Brazilian lobelias of the subgenus Tupa were probably due to polyploidy associated with chromosomal rearrangements probably in small chromatin segments.
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The binding capacity of concanavalin A (Con A) to condensed euchromatin and heterochromatin was investigated in chicken erythrocyte nuclei (CEN), mouse liver cells, Zea mays mays meristematic cells and Drosophila melanogaster polytene chromosomes after 4 N HCl hydrolysis to determine whether binding was preferentially occurring in bands and heterochromatin. Dry mass (DM) variation was investigated in CEN by interference microscopy. Feulgen and Con A reactions were employed for all materials to correlate the loci of the two reactions. Quantifications and topological verifications were carried out by video image analysis (high performance cytometry). It was observed that 4 N HCl hydrolysis caused an important DM loss in CEN leaving a level corresponding to the average DNA DM content. In this material, Con A binding was restricted to the nuclear envelope, which reinforces the idea of the absence of a nuclear matrix in these cells. The other cell types exhibited a correspondence of Feulgen-positive and Con A-reactive areas. The Con A reaction was highly positive in the condensed chromatin areas and heterochromatin. This fact led us to speculate that Con A-positive proteins may play a role in the chromatin condensation mechanism, endowing this structure with physico-chemical stability towards acid hydrolysis and contributing to its rheological properties.
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In the developing mouse embryo, the diploid trophectoderm is known to undergo a diploid to giant cell transformation. These cells arise by a process of endoreduplication, characterized by replication of the entire genome without subsequent mitosis or cell division, leading to polyploidy and the formation of giant nuclei. Studies of 13.5 day rat trophoblast derived from the parietal yolk sac have indicated a relatively low rate of DNA polymerase a activity, the noinnal eukaryotic replicase, in comparison to that of DNA polymerase g. These results have suggested that endoreduplication in trophoblast giant cells may not employ the normal replicase enzyme, DNA polymerase a. In order to determine whether a 'switch' from DNA polymerase to DNA polymerase is a necessary concomitant of the diploid to giant cell transformation, two distinct populations of trophoblast giant cells, the primary giant cell derived from the mural trophectoderm and the secondary giant cell derived from the polar trophoectoderm were used. These two populations of trophoblast giant cells can be obtained from the tissue outgrowths of 3.5da blastocysts and the extraembryonic ectoderm (EX) and ectoplacental cone (EPC) of 7.5 day embryos respectively. Tissue outgrowths were treated with aphidicolin, a specific reversible inhibitor of eukaryotic DNA polymerase a, on various days after explantation. The effect of aphidicolin treatment was assessed both qualitatively, using autoradiography and quantitatively by scintillation counting and Feulgen staining. 3 DNA synthesis was measured in control and treated cultures after a Hthymidine pulse. Scintillation counts of the embryo proper revealed that DNA synthesis was consistently inhibited by greater than 907. in the presence of aphidicolin. Inhibition of DNA synthesis in the EX and EPC varied between 81-957. and 82-987. respectively, indicating that most DNA synthesis was mediated by DNA polymerase a, but that a small but significant amount of residual synthesis was indicated. A qualitative approach was then applied to determine whether the apparent residual DNA synthesis was restricted to a subpopulation of giant cells or whether all giant cells displayed a low level of DNA synthesis. Autoradiographs of the ICM of blastocysts and the embryo proper of 7.5da embryos, which acted as diploid control population, was completely inhibited regardless of duration in explant culture. In contrast, primary trophoblast giant cells derived from blastocysts and secondary giant cells derived from the EX and EPC were observed to possess some heavily labelled cells after aphidicolin treatment. These results suggest that although DNA polymerase a is the primary replicating enzyme responsible for endoreduplication in mouse trophoblast giant cells, some nonactivity is also observed. A DNA polymerase assay employing tissue lysates of outgrown 7.5da embryo, EX and EPC tissues was used to attempt to confirm the presence of higher nonactivity in tissues possessing trophoblast giant cells. Employing a series of inhibitors of DNA polymerases, it would appear that DNA polymerase a is the major polymerase active in all tissues of the 7.5da mouse embryo. The nature of the putative residual DNA synthetic activity could not be unequivically determined in this study. Therefore, these results suggest that both primary and secondary trophoblast giant cells possess and use DNA polymerase a in endoreduplicative DNA synthesis. It would appear that the high levels of DNA polymerase g activity reported in trophoblast tissue derived from the 13.5 da rat yolk sac was not a general feature of all endoreduplication.
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Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the genotoxic effects of X-rays on epithelial gingival cells during panoramic dental radiography using a differentiated protocol for the micronucleus test. Methods: 40 healthy individuals who underwent this procedure for diagnostic purposes on request from their dentists agreed to participate in this study. All of them answered a questionnaire before the examination. Epithelial gingival cells were obtained from the keratinized mucosa of the upper dental arcade by gentle scraping with a cervical brush immediately before exposure and 10 days later. Cytological preparations were stained according to the Feulgen-Rossenbeck reaction, counterstained with fast green 1% for 1 min and analysed under a light microscope. Micronuclei, nuclear projections (broken eggs) and degenerative nuclear alterations (pyknosis, karyolysis, karyorrhexis and condensed chromatin) were scored. Results: The frequency of micronuclei was significantly higher after exposure (P < 0.05), as were frequencies of nuclear alterations indicate of apoptosis (P < 0.001). Conclusions: These results indicate that X-ray radiation emitted during panoramic dental radiography induces a genotoxic effect on epithelial gingival cells that increases the frequency of chromosomal damage and nuclear alterations indicative of apoptosis.
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Foram estudadas, pelo método da assinatura digital, 35 biópsias esofágicas provenientes de pacientes da província de Linxian, China, classificadas por dois observadores com ampla experiência em patologia gastrointestinal como normais, displasias ou carcinomas (8 casos normais, 6 displasias leves, 8 displasias moderadas, 4 displasias acentuadas, 4 carcinomas suspeitos de invasão e 5 carcinomas invasores). O objetivo do trabalho foi caracterizar os núcleos das populações celulares desses casos de forma que permitisse a derivação de informações diagnósticas e de possível implicação prognóstica a partir do estudo quantitativo das características nucleares de cada caso ou categoria diagnóstica. As biópsias foram coradas pelo método de Feulgen, sendo então selecionados e digitalizados 48 a 50 núcleos de cada uma delas. De cada núcleo foram extraídas 93 características cariométricas, arranjadas arbitrariamente em histograma designado como assinatura nuclear. Da média aritmética de cada característica dos núcleos de uma mesma biópsia resultou a assinatura digital do caso. A análise de funções discriminantes, baseada nas 15 características cariométricas que ofereceram melhor discriminação entre as categorias diagnósticas, mostrou que o grupo classificado como normal foi claramente distinto das demais categorias. A densidade óptica total aumentou progressivamente segundo a classificação das biópsias, do normal à displasia acentuada, sendo o valor do carcinoma semelhante ao da displasia moderada. A matriz de comprimento de seqüência apresentou o mesmo perfil, ou seja, ambas as características ofereceram discriminação clara entre as categorias diagnósticas, com exceção do carcinoma invasor, cujos valores foram superponíveis aos da displasia moderada. O estudo demonstrou a viabilidade da quantificação de características nucleares através das assinaturas nucleares digitais, que demonstraram diferenças estatisticamente significativas entre diferentes categorias diagnósticas e a elevação progressiva dos valores mensurados relacionados com o espectro das lesões, apresentando-as como um histograma (assinatura digital nuclear).
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A radioproteção dos pacientes submetidos a exames radiográficos está diretamente ligada à qualidade e à repetição das radiografias realizadas. Esta dissertação é apresentada sob a forma de três artigos. O artigo I avaliou a qualidade de 300 radiografias panorâmicas enviadas a clínicas de ortodontia. As radiografias foram classificadas como excelentes (não se observam erros), aceitáveis para diagnóstico (observam-se erros, contudo os mesmos não impedem o diagnóstico) e inaceitáveis (imagem sem valor diagnóstico). Um total de 16,33% das radiografias foi considerado excelente, 78,66% aceitáveis para o diagnóstico e 5% inaceitáveis. Encontrou-se uma média de 1.54 erros por radiografia, sendo os mais freqüentemente encontrados a falta de contato da língua com o palato (21%), aparecimento de imagens fantasma (19,66%), mento inclinado para cima (15,66%), paciente à frente do plano de foco (13,33%), cabeça girada (13,33%), imagens com alta densidade (10,33%) e com baixa densidade (8,66%). Concluiu-se que os padrões de qualidade da amostra estão de acordo com o preconizado em Guidelines on Radiology Standards for Primary Dental Care, segundo os quais se admite até 10% de imagens inaceitáveis. Contudo, cabe salientar que não se conhece o índice de repetições nas clínicas onde as radiografias da amostra foram obtidas e, tendo passado por um controle de qualidade prévio, todas as imagens deveriam ser classificadas como excelentes ou aceitáveis. O artigo II avaliou a freqüência dos erros que levaram à repetição de radiografias panorâmicas realizadas no Serviço de Radiologia da FO-UFRS. O livro de registros do Serviço mostrou um total de 3815 radiografias panorâmicas realizadas no período de junho de 2002 a junho de 2005. No mesmo período o Serviço apresentou 330 radiografias panorâmicas repetidas, resultando em índice de repetição de 8,65% dos exames. Os erros mais freqüentemente encontrados foram: paciente posicionado à frente do plano de foco (25,15%); cabeça girada para direita ou esquerda (24,84%); cabeça inclinada para frente (21,21%); paciente posicionado atrás do plano de foco (20,30%); imagem com a alta densidade (19,69%); imagem com baixa densidade (17,27%); imagem com baixo contraste (16,96%); imagem com alto contraste (12,72%); cabeça inclinada para direita ou esquerda (12,42%); corte do côndilo na radiografia (11,21); corte do mento na radiografia (8,48%); ausência de contato da língua com o palato (7,27%); paciente se moveu durante a exposição (4,94%); cabeça inclinada para trás (2,72%) e aparecimento de imagem fantasma (2,12%). Encontrou-se uma média de 2,07 erros por radiografia. Conclui-se que os erros mais freqüentemente cometidos foram classificados como erros de posicionamento do paciente e que o Serviço de Radiologia da FO-UFRGS apresenta um índice de repetição de radiografias panorâmicas satisfatório, estando de acordo com os padrões de qualidade estabelecidos pelo Guidelines on Radiology Standards for Primary Dental Care. O artigo III teve por objetivo verificar o efeito da radiação emitida em radiografias panorâmicas sobre as células da borda lateral direita da língua, através da avaliação das alterações nucleares, antes e depois da exposição aos raios X. A amostra foi constituída de 42 indivíduos adultos jovens do gênero masculino, sendo 22 deles pertencentes ao grupo que realizou uma radiografia panorâmica (grupo I) e os outros 20 pacientes pertencentes ao grupo II, que realizou duas radiografias panorâmicas. O exame citopatológico das células esfoliadas da mucosa da língua foi realizado antes da incidência radiográfica e 10 dias após. As células foram obtidas através da raspagem e as lâminas foram coradas pela técnica de Feulgen. Para observação das alterações citopatológicas foram analisadas 2.000 células em cada lâmina e quantificados os micronúcleos, buds, broken eggs, cariorrexes e células binucleadas. As lâminas foram analisadas por um único observador. Constatou-se que existe diferença significativa (p=0,01) para as variáveis broken egg, bud, cariorrexe e célula binucleada antes e depois da exposição à radiação ionizante. Na comparação entre os grupos, verificou-se que as variáveis cariorrexe e célula binucleada apresentaram diferença significativa (p=0,01), ambas com valores superiores para o grupo II.
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The objectives of this study were to assess the effects of induced testicular degeneration in Bos taurus indicus (Nellore) bulls on changes in seminal characteristics and fertilizing ability of sperm. Four Nellore bulls (30-36-month-old, 500-550 kg) with good seminal quality (> 80% motile and morphologically normal sperm) had serotal insulation applied for 5 d. Semen was collected by electroejaculation and cryopreserved at a the pre-insulation moment, and 7, 14, and 21 d after insulation was removed. Gross motility, vigor of sperm movement (1-5), acrosome integrity, sperm morphology (phase-contrast microscopy), nuclear vacuoles and abnormal chromatin (Feulgen-stain) were determined after sperm preparations for in vitro fertilization (IVF). Prior to IVF, sperm were separated using a Percoll gradient (45% and 90%). Normal sperm decreased (P < 0.05) 14 and 21 d after insulation was removed. on 14 and 21 d, the incidence of head defects (9.7 +/- 0.6 and 17.0 +/- 0.8, respectively; mean +/- S.E.M) was higher (P < 0.05) in agreement with the incidence of nuclear vauoles (14.0 +/- 5.0 and 12.3 +/- 2.3) and abnormal chromatin (24.4 +/- 7.2 and 30.8 +/- 2.8). Although the frequency of cleaved oocytes decreased only on 21 d (P < 0.05), blastocyst rates were lower (P < 0.05) than pre-insulation on 14 and 21 d. In regression analyses, only nuclear vacuoles, head defects and intact acrosome accounted for differences in cleavage (R(2) = 0.38, 0.48, and 0.30, respectively) and blastocyst rates (R(2) = 0.35, 0.37, and 0.44). Abnormal chromatin was associated only with blastocyst rates (R(2) = 0.35). In conclusion, blastocyst rate was more sensitive than cleavage rate and the assessment of nuclear integrity is recommended to predict the fertilizing ability of bull sperm. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Aims: This multi-centre analysis assessed the DNA content of TSCC in 37 young patients (<40 years) and 28 old patients (>50 years) and determined the correlation of DNA ploidy findings with clinicopathological data.Methods and results: Image cytometry was carried out using an automated cellular imaging system on Feulgen-stained histological sections to obtain high-fidelity DNA histograms. Among young patients, 37.8% were females compared to 18.7% in the older group (P = 0.002). In total, 48.6% patients were non-smokers and 40.5% were non-drinkers compared to 10.7% non-smokers and non-drinkers in the older group (P < 0.0001). TNM, clinical stage of disease and histological grade of differentiation did not differ between groups. Tumour aneuploidy was detected in 86.5% and tetraploidy in 24.3% young patients; this was significantly greater than in the older group where 64.3% were aneuploid (P < 0.0001) and 7.2% tetraploid (P < 0.0001). The mean values of DNA index (DI) and DNA heterogeneity index as well as the percentage of cells with DI exceeding 5N were higher in young patients (P < 0.0001).Conclusions: Young patients with TSCC represent a distinct clinical entity. The high incidence of DNA ploidy abnormalities suggest that they may have increased genomic instability and indicates underlying genetic differences between TSCC in young and older patients.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Karyotype studies in eight species of Dalechampia, including 10 natural populations, revealed chromosome numbers (2n = 36, 46, 138 and 198) differing from two numbers cited in the literature (2n = 44 and 72). The basic number x = 6, as in the genus Acalypha, may be considered ancestral in Dalechampia. Analysis of Chromosome number, haploid chromosome length and karyotype symmetry suggests that the major chromosome mechanism acting in karyotype evolution of Dalechampia is polyploidy, but differences in chromosome morphology may be caused by chromosome rearrangements.