912 resultados para HYPOCOTYL CULTURES


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Rotation-mediated aggregate cultures of foetal rat liver cells were prepared and grown in a chemically defined medium. Their capacity for cellular organisation and maturation was studied over a culture period of 3 wk by using both morphologic and biochemical criteria. It was found that within each aggregate, distinct liver cell types were present and attained their normal, differentiated phenotype. Parenchymal cells formed small acini with a central lumen. Within the first 2 wk in culture, albumin and ferritin mRNA levels were maintained, while the alpha-fetoprotein mRNA levels decreased, and tyrosine aminotransferase (TAT) gene expression increased. No significant response to glucocorticoids was observed in early cultures, whereas after 3 wk a marked increase in TAT mRNA levels was elicited by dexamethasone and glucagon (additive stimulatory effects). The results show that foetal rat liver cells cultured in a chemically defined medium are able to rearrange themselves into histotypic structures, and display a developmental pattern of gene expression comparable to that of perinatal rat liver in vivo. This culture system offers therefore a useful model to study the development and function of liver cells.

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Primary cell cultures were obtained from eggs of Anopheles albimanus and Aedes taeniorhynchus mosquitoes, vectors of human malaria and of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus, respectively. The cellular growth of the An. albimanus cells began four weeks after explanting the embryonic tissues in MK/VP12 medium, supplemented with 15% fetal bovine serum. The culture showed heterogeneous cellular morphology. With regard to the Ae. taeniorhynchus culture, growth occurred three weeks after initiating the culture in MM/VP12 medium. The majority of cells were small and round. Karyotypes were examined in the latter species.

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BACKGROUND: In vitro aggregating brain cell cultures containing all types of brain cells have been shown to be useful for neurotoxicological investigations. The cultures are used for the detection of nervous system-specific effects of compounds by measuring multiple endpoints, including changes in enzyme activities. Concentration-dependent neurotoxicity is determined at several time points. METHODS: A Markov model was set up to describe the dynamics of brain cell populations exposed to potentially neurotoxic compounds. Brain cells were assumed to be either in a healthy or stressed state, with only stressed cells being susceptible to cell death. Cells may have switched between these states or died with concentration-dependent transition rates. Since cell numbers were not directly measurable, intracellular lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity was used as a surrogate. Assuming that changes in cell numbers are proportional to changes in intracellular LDH activity, stochastic enzyme activity models were derived. Maximum likelihood and least squares regression techniques were applied for estimation of the transition rates. Likelihood ratio tests were performed to test hypotheses about the transition rates. Simulation studies were used to investigate the performance of the transition rate estimators and to analyze the error rates of the likelihood ratio tests. The stochastic time-concentration activity model was applied to intracellular LDH activity measurements after 7 and 14 days of continuous exposure to propofol. The model describes transitions from healthy to stressed cells and from stressed cells to death. RESULTS: The model predicted that propofol would affect stressed cells more than healthy cells. Increasing propofol concentration from 10 to 100 μM reduced the mean waiting time for transition to the stressed state by 50%, from 14 to 7 days, whereas the mean duration to cellular death reduced more dramatically from 2.7 days to 6.5 hours. CONCLUSION: The proposed stochastic modeling approach can be used to discriminate between different biological hypotheses regarding the effect of a compound on the transition rates. The effects of different compounds on the transition rate estimates can be quantitatively compared. Data can be extrapolated at late measurement time points to investigate whether costs and time-consuming long-term experiments could possibly be eliminated.

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This research paper seeks to bring into view the present-day situation of Native-American narrative in English. It is divided into four chapters. The first deals with the emergence of what we might call a Native-American narrative style and its evolution from 1900 up until its particularly forceful expression in 1968 with the appearance of N. Scott Momaday’s novel House Made of Dawn. To trace this evolution, we follow the chronology set forth by Paula Gunn Allen in her anthology Voice of the Turtle: American Indian Literature 1900-1970. In the second chapter we hear various voices from contemporary Native-American literary production as we follow Simon J. Ortiz’s anthology Speaking for the Generations: Native Writers on Writing. Noteworthy among these are Leslie Marmon Silko and Gloria Bird, alongside new voices such as those of Esther G. Belin and Daniel David Moses, and closing with Guatemalan-Mayan Victor D. Montejo, exiled in the United States. These writers’ contributions gravitate around two fundamental notions: the interdependence between human beings and the surrounding landscape, and the struggle for survival, which of necessity involves the deconstruction of the (post-)colonial subject. The third chapter deals with an anthology of short stories and poems by present-day Native-American women writers, edited by Joy Harjo and Gloria Bird and entitled Reinventing the Enemy’s Language: Contemporary Native Women’s Writings of North America. It too exemplifies personal and cultural reaffirmation on a landscape rich in ancestral elements, but also where one’s own voice takes shape in the language which, historically, is that of the enemy. In the final chapter we see how translation studies provide a critical perspective and fruitful reflection on the literary production of Native-American translative cultures, where a wide range of writers struggle to bring about the affirmative deconstruction of the colonialised subject. Thus there comes a turnaround in the function of the “enemy’s language,” giving rise also to the question of cultural incommensurability.

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Aggregating fetal liver cell cultures were tested for their ability to metabolize xenobiotics using ethoxycoumarin-O-deethylase (ECOD), as marker of phase I metabolism, and glutathione S-transferase (GST), as marker for phase II reactions. Significant basal activities, stable over 14 days in culture were measured for both ECOD and GST activities. The prototype cytochrome P450 inducers, 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MC) and phenobarbital (PB), increased ECOD and GST activities reaching an optimum 7 days after culturing, followed by a decline in activity. This decline was partially prevented by 1% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) added chronically to the culture medium. DMSO was also found to induce ECOD activity and to a lesser extent GST activity. Furthermore, it potentiated in a dose-dependent manner the induction of ECOD by PB. The food-borne carcinogen 2-amino-3,8-dimethylimidazo[4,5-f]quinoxaline (MeIQx) is metabolically transformed through a number of pathways in vivo. It was therefore used to examine the metabolic capacity in fetal and adult liver cell aggregates. Metabolism of MeIQx was mainly through N2-conjugation, resulting in formation of the N2-glucuronide and sulfamate conjugates for non-induced fetal liver cells. These metabolites were also found in large amounts in non-induced adult liver cells. Low levels of cytochrome P450-mediated ring-hydroxylated metabolites were detected in both non-induced fetal and adult liver cells. After induction with arochlor (PCB) or 3-MC, the major pathway was ring-hydroxylation (cytochrome P450 dependent), followed by conjugation to beta-glucuronic or sulfuric acid. The presence of the glucuronide conjugate of N-hydroxy-MeIQx, a mutagenic metabolite, suggested an induction of P450 CYP1A2. The metabolism of MeIQx by liver cell aggregates is very similar to that observed in vivo and suggests that aggregating liver cell cultures are a useful model for in vitro metabolic studies in toxicology.

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During brain development, spontaneous neuronal activity has been shown to play a crucial role in the maturation of neuronal circuitries. Activity-related signals may cause selective neuronal cell death and/or rearrangement of neuronal connectivity. To study the effects of sustained inhibitory activity on developing inhibitory (GABAergic) neurons, three-dimensional primary cell cultures of fetal rat telencephalon were used. In relatively immature cultures, muscimol (10 microns), a GABAA receptor agonist, induced a transient increase in apoptotic cell death, as evidenced by a cycloheximide-sensitive increase of free nucleosomes and an increased frequency of DNA double strand breaks (TUNEL labeling). Furthermore, muscimol caused an irreversible reduction of glutamic acid decarboxylase activity, indicating a loss of GABAergic neurons. The muscimol-induced death of GABAergic neurons was attenuated by the GABAA receptor blockers bicuculline (100 microns) and picrotoxin (100 microns), by depolarizing potassium concentrations (30 mM KCl) and by the L-type calcium channel activator BAY K8644 (2 microns). As compared to the cholinergic marker (choline acetyltransferase activity), glutamic acid decarboxylase activity was significantly more affected by various agents known to inhibit neuronal activity, including tetrodotoxin (1 micron), flunarizine (5 microns), MK 801 (50 microns) and propofol (40 microns). The present results suggest that the survival of a subpopulation of immature GABAergic neurons is dependent on sustained neuronal activity and that these neurons may undergo apoptotic cell death in response to GABAA autoreceptor activation.

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L'exposition aux bioaérosols (endotoxines, bactéries et spores de champignons en suspension dans l'air) et les problèmes de santé qui en découlent sont bien connus dans certains milieux professionnels (station d'épuration des eaux usées, élevages d'animaux, traitements des déchets organiques, travailleurs du bois, récolte et manutention des céréales, agriculture...). Cependant, les études avec investigations des concentrations aéroportées d'endotoxines et de micro-organismes se font très rares dans d'autres milieux professionnels à risque. Cette note d'actualité scientifique présente la synthèse de deux publications visant à quantifier les bioaérosols dans deux milieux professionnels rarement étudiés : les cabinets dentaires et les cultures maraîchères de concombres et tomates. Les dentistes ainsi que leurs assistants sont souvent bien informés sur les risques chimiques, les risques liés aux postures et les risques d'accidents avec exposition au sang. En revanche, le risque infectieux lié à une exposition aux bioaérosols est la plupart du temps méconnu. La flore bactérienne buccale est très riche et l'utilisation d'instruments tels que la fraise, le détartreur à ultrasons et le pistolet air-eau entraîne la dissémination aéroportée d'une grande quantité de bactéries. De plus, la conception des instruments générant un jet d'eau (diamètre des tubulures) favorise la formation de biofilm propice à l'adhérence et à la multiplication de micro-organismes à l'intérieur même des tuyaux. Ces micro-organismes se retrouvent alors en suspension dans l'air lors de l'utilisation de ces pistolets.L'inhalation de grandes quantités de ces micro-organismes pourrait alors engendrer des problèmes respiratoires (hypersensibilisation, asthme). De plus la présence de pathogènes, tels que les légionelles, les pseudomonas et les mycobactéries à croissance rapide, dans l'eau de ces unités dentaires peut aussi entraîner des risques infectieux pour les patients et pour les soignants. La production de tomates et concombres en Europe en 2008, était respectivement de 17 et 2 millions de tonnes dont 850 000 et 140 000 tonnes pour la France. La récolte, le tri et la mise en cageots ou en barquette individuelle de ces légumes génèrent de la poussière riche en matières organiques. Très peu d'études ont investigué l'exposition à ces poussières et aux endotoxines dans les serres de cultures intensives. Notamment, les données concernant les cultures de tomates sont inexistantes bien que ce légume soit un des plus cultivés en Europe. [Auteur]

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Infection of non-adherent TG180 murine sarcoma cells with Toxoplasma gondii was compared, at the ultrastructural level, in both in vivo and in vitro conditions. Suspensions of 3.0 x 10(6) TG180 cells infected in vitro with 1.0 x 10(6) parasites of the RH strain were harvested between the first and 6th day post-infection and processed for transmission electron microscopy. In vivo infection was made by intraperitoneal inoculation in mice of 1.0 x 10(6) TG180 cells, that were co-inoculated with a parasite suspension at the same cell concentration. Cells were harvested 10, 20, 30 min and 24, 48 h post-inoculation and processed for transmission electron microscopy at the same conditions of the in vitro culture. It was observed TG180 murine sarcoma cells with intense and equivalent intracellular parasitism in both conditions. Host cells with parasitophorous vacuoles containing up to 16 parasites, as well as parasites undergoing mitoses or presenting a bradyzoite-like morphology, were frequently seen in both culture methods.

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Aggregating cell cultures prepared from fetal rat telencephalon express the two subunits [cerebellar soluble lectins (CSL) 1 and 2] of a soluble, mannose-specific endogenous lectin (CSL) in a development-dependent manner. Increased CSL synthesis was found at an early postmitotic stage as well as during the period of maximal myelination. Repetitive treatment of early cultures with epidermal growth factor (EGF, 3nM) caused a great stimulation of CSL biosynthesis. Immunocytochemical studies revealed particularly intense CSL-specific staining in small, EGF-responsive cells, presumably glial cells. Large quantities of CSL-immunoreactive material were found also in the extracellular space and on the external side of the plasma membrane, indicating abundant release of CSL. The present findings suggest that EGF or EGF-related factors in the brain are able to regulate the expression of an endogenous lectin, affecting brain ontogeny.

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iii. Catheter-related bloodstream infection (CR-BSI) diagnosis usually involves catheter withdrawal. An alternative method for CR-BSI diagnosis is the differential time to positivity (DTP) between peripheral and catheter hub blood cultures. This study aims to validate the DTP method in short-term catheters. The results show a low prevalence of CR-BSI in the sample (8.4%). The DTP method is a valid alternative for CR-BSI diagnosis in those cases with monomicrobial cultures (80% sensitivity, 99% specificity, 92% positive predictive value, and 98% negative predictive value) and a cut-off point of 17.7 hours for positivity of hub blood culture may assess in CR-BSI diagnosis.

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Après la révolution religieuse des années 60, une nouvelle religiosité est-elle née ? Cette question est au coeur du livre. Il met, en effet, en scène les jeunes des années 80, les filles et les fils de la génération d'après-guerre, celle de Mai 68. Les parents ont pris leurs distances avec les différentes formes institutionnelles de l'autorité, y compris celle des Églises. Ils avaient été laissés libres de s'initier à une voie « spirituelle » : liberté de conscience et autonomie individuelle, deux valeurs clés attachées à la génération d'après-guerre, avaient orienté leur démarche religieuse. Les années 80 constituent de plus un contexte spécifique. Derrière le rideau de l'abondance, les contours de la précarité se dessinent. L'effondrement du mur de Berlin a entraîné celui des certitudes et des points de repère. L'apparition du sida a mis en cause le mythe dominant d'une jeunesse presque éternelle ouvrant sur une société sans âge et sans conflits de génération. Ces événements ont infléchi les quêtes de sens contemporaines. Fruit de la collaboration de vingt-deux sociologues venant de différents pays de l'Union européenne et de la Suisse, l'ouvrage, plutôt que de mettre côte à côte des observations empruntées aux pays concernés, propose des analyses transversales. Il permet ainsi de se faire une idée du changement religieux qui touche l'Europe dans son ensemble et de dégager quelques enjeux communs suscités par l'incertitude ambiante. Partant de l'analyse de la condition des jeunes dans les années 80, l'ouvrage aborde tour à tour la question de leur identité religieuse, celle de leurs systèmes de croyance, puis s'attarde sur les institutions qui ont contribué à leur socialisation religieuse. L'expérience constitue une caractéristique de la vie religieuse contemporaine, alors que la pluralité de l'offre reflète le changement socioculturel. Un chapitre est ainsi consacré à la présentation de quelques trajectoires typiques illustrant la gestion de l'incertitude dans laquelle est plongée la génération en cause. Enfin est abordée la question posée par une jeunesse qui apparaît aujourd'hui dépourvue d'encadrement institutionnel dans le champ religieux comme dans d'autres domaines : cette situation ne traduit-elle pas la crise de reproduction des institutions elles-mêmes ?