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  • Key words Aging  (1)
  • Osteoblast-like culture  (1)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0827
    Keywords: Rat ; Osteoblast-like culture ; Ovariectomy ; Estrogens ; Bone blood supply
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Physics
    Notes: Summary Ovariectomy in the rat induces a rapid osteopenia associated with an elevated bone turnover. One hundred and twenty-day-old rats were ovariectomized (OVX) or sham-operated (n=6–8 per group and per time period studied). 45Ca accretion rate and bone blood flow (microspheres trapping technique) in the femurs were determined at 28, 42, 84, and 119 days after ovariectomy. Both parameters were markedly increased by 84 days and subsided thereafter. At the 42nd day, when bone turnover was maximal, bone marrow and trabecular bone cultures were obtained from shamoperated and ovariectomized animals (n=10/group). Proliferation rate of bone marrow cells and trabecular osteoblast-like cells estimated by fibroblast colony-forming units (FCFU) efficiency and cell counting was markedly increased in primary and secondary cultures in ovariectomy. These data fitted well with the enhanced number of osteoblasts observed in situ in the long bone metaphyses of estrogen-depleted animals. As estrogens were shown in the literature to inhibit proliferation of the red cell line and of other hemopoietic lines, it is possible that estrogens, through a general mechanism, inhibit hemopoietic and stromal lines and also the proliferation of bone marrow-derived trabecular bone cells.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Key words Aging ; Thyroid hormones ; Lysosomes ; Amyloidosis ; Sexual dimorphism ; Cream hamster (LHC/LAK)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  We have shown that large lysosomes appear in thyroids of aging male cream hamsters. To investigate the role of this lysosomal change in the age-dependent reduction in hormone secretion, thyroids of young (〈4 months of age) and old (〉22 months of age) male and female hamsters were labeled with 125I at near isotopic equilibrium. Changes in thyroid morphology were analyzed by light- and electron-microscopic morphometry. Changes in thyroglobulin processing were analyzed by subcellular fractionation and identification of 125I-compounds by sucrose gradients and reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). Sexual dimorphism present in thyroids of young animals became more marked upon aging. The parallel increase in thyroid weight and thyroglobulin content was more conspicuous in old females than in old males. Two morphological observations were specific to old females: (1) large follicles with flat epithelium and evenly labeled colloid and (2) deposits of amyloid material (possibly immunoglobulin light chain-related) between follicles. Although lysosomes were enlarged in female and male aged thyroids, they did not accumulate iodine. However, after isopycnic centrifugation of crude lysosomal fractions in Percoll gradients, 125I in old thyroids was not distributed mainly in the dense fraction L1 (lysosomes) as in young thyroids, but partly in particles of lower density (light L2 and buoyant fractions). 125I in the lighter particles was mostly found in intact thyroglobulin and in large iodopeptides. This 125I shift towards less dense particles was more marked in females than in males. These results indicate that age delays thyroglobulin progression towards dense lysosomes and suggest that the slower traffic of thyroglobulin in the endocytic pathway contributes to the reduction in thyroid hormone secretion in the aged cream hamster.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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