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  • SPACE SCIENCES  (1,090)
  • Life and Medical Sciences
  • Cell & Developmental Biology
  • 1965-1969  (1,297)
  • 1966  (1,297)
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  • 1965-1969  (1,297)
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  • 101
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Fragmented sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubular system, as isolated in the microsomal fraction from rabbit skeletal muscle, bind H+, Na+, K+, Ca++, Mg++, and Zn++. The binding depends on a cation exchange type of interaction between these cations and the chemical components of the membranous systems of the muscle cell. The monovalent and divalent cations exchange quantitatively for each other at the binding sites on an equivalent basis. Scatchard plots of the H+ binding data indicate that the binding groups can be resolved into two major components in terms of their pK values. Component 1 has a pK value of 6.6 and a capacity for H+ binding of 2.2 meq/g N. The second component has a much higher H+ binding capacity (7-8 meq/g N), but its pK value, 3.4, is non-physiological. The binding of cations other than H+ at a neutral pH occurs at the binding sites making up component 1. The order of affinity of the cations for the microsome binding sites is H+ » Zn++ 〉 Ca++ 〉 Mg++ » Na+ = K+ as reflected by the apparent respective pKM values: 6.6, 5.2, 4.7, 4.2, 1.3, 1.3. Caffeine, which causes contracture and potentiates the twitch of skeletal muscle, does not interfere with the binding of Ca++ by the microsomes at neutral pH.
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  • 102
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Electropotential differences between the cell interior and the external medium have been studied with intracellular microelectrodes in ovarian oocytes, ovulated unfertilized eggs and fertilized eggs of R. pipiens. In ovarian oocytes the cytoplasm was 50 to 80 mV negative, relative to isotonic Ringer's solution. In contrast, electrode penetration of the oocyte nucleus in situ indicated that the nucleoplasm was about 25 mV positive, relative to the cytoplasm. After ovulation, the cortical cytoplasm became 20 to 50 mV positive with regard to an external solution of 0.1 strength Ringer's solution (ca. pond water). Penetration of the cytoplasm at levels from 0.3 to 0.6 mm below the egg surface revealed an inner zone with a potential which was about 15 mV negative, relative to the cortical cytoplasm. A slow hyperpolarization of the cortical membrane occurred at activation, with the potential returning to that of the ovulated unfertilized egg within ten minutes. After fertilization, the egg cytoplasm remained positive until the first cleavage. As division proceeded, the cytoplasm slowly depolarized and became 50 to 60 mV negative, relative to 0.1 strength Ringer's solution.
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  • 103
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Methods have been developed which permit measurements of cardiac output and sampling of mixed venous and arterial blood in the elasmobrach, Squalus acanthias. These methods have been utilized to characterize some of the parameters involved in gill gas exchange. A total of 17 animals have been studied with the following results. Cardiac output: 1.49±0.57 1/kg/hr.; V̇o2: 38.3±22.1 ml/kg/hr.; V̇co2: 32.1±19.0 ml/kg/hr.; RER: 0.92±0.17; PaO2: 104±27 mmHg; Pv̄o2: 18±8.8 mmHg; PaCO2: 2.9±0.75 mmHg; Pv̄co2: 4.6±1.1 mmHg; CaO2: 3.8±0.75 vol. %; Cv̄o2: 1.26±0.59 vol. %; pHa: 7.52±0.10 units; Pv̄: 7.42±0.11 units; [HCO3-]a: 3.92± 1.14 meq/1; [HCO3-]v̄: 4.80±1.15 meq/1; [dissolved CO2]a: 0.17± 0.04 mM/1; [dissolved CO2]v̄: 0.24±0.04 mM/1; [lactate-]a: 13.47±7.17 meq/1; [Lactate-]v̄: 13.01±8.18 meq/1. Some of the mechanisms involved in gill gas exchange have been characterized.
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  • 104
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Assessment of the respiratory and glycolytic capacity of non-growing WI-38 cells shows that, in the absence and presence of added glucose, the mean rates of oxygen consumption were 247 (QO2 = 5.61) and 208 (QO2 = 4.73) mμmoles/mg dry wt/hr., respectively. Mean glucose consumption was 225 mμmoles/mg dry wt/ hr. With uniformly labeled 14C glucose as substrate, 36 mμg atoms of carbon dioxide were produced, corresponding to 15-20% of the total cellular respiration. Mean values for lactate production in the presence and absence of glucose were 345 (QLO2 = 7.85) and 196 (QLO2 = 4.45) mμmoles/mg dry wt/hr., respectively.Human diploid cells in culture age, in the sense that their ability to proliferate decreases with time during serial subcultivation. Studies of their respiratory and glycolytic capacity as a function of the aging process showed that total respiration, glucose respiration and glycolytic capacity were relatively constant for cells in the middle and late passages and indicate that aging in this sense is not directly related to the respiratory and glycolytic capacity of the cell.
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  • 105
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The rate of C14O2 incorporation into amino acids and organic acids in C. reinhardtii is a function of particular stages of development in the life cycle of the alga. Gametic differentiation in nitrogen free medium is accompanied by a reduced rate of amino acid synthesis and a higher synthesis of organic acids than that found for the cells undergoing vegetative development. The addition of ammonium to differentiating gametes results in an increased synthesis of amino acids, particularly the basic ones, and a concomitant reduction in organic acid synthesis.
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  • 106
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 133-139 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The authors studied the influence of adrenaline-like substances and acetylcholine on the protoplasmic streaming in Physarella oblonga, investigating the effect on the duration of the rhythmic period. Adrenaline and noradrenaline proved to cause a shortening, whereas acetylcholine appeared to be capable of causing an extension of the period duration.The authors present and discuss critically the possibility that the adrenergic and cholinergic transmitter substances, which influence the visceral (mechano-) effectors in the higher animal organism often antagonistically, may also affect an elementary “functional” effector system responsible for protoplasmic streaming, and that in so doing they have comparable effects.The results of experiments with eserine, acetylcholine and a mixture of these two substances render it probable that an acetylcholine esterase and acetylcholine occur in the plasmodium.The mean normal value of the period duration was, calculated from 976 measurements and expressed in seconds: 284.183 ± 1.486 (S.E. of the mean). The average duration of the progressive and the regressive phase was found to be almost the same.
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  • 107
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 141-147 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Frog sciatic nerves were incubated for 24 hours in either glycine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, lysine, leucine, γ-aminobutyric acid, glutamine, or pentanedioic acid (all labeled with C14), and the rates of release of these compounds were monitored under resting conditions and during stimulation. Upon stimulation, the rate or release of glutamic acid increased an average of 200% above the resting rate. This extra release is highly specific with regard to molecular size and structure, since of the compounds tested only glutamic acid gave significant increases in rates of release during stimulation. Ouabain (0.1 mM) had no effect on the rate of release; however, sodium azide (0.2 mM or 1.0 mM) completely eliminated the extra release during excitation, indicating that the increased permeability to glutamic acid is energy-dependent. Competition experiments show that the extra release of glutamic acid can be eliminated with 10 mM concentrations of non-isotopic choline. The hypothesis is advanced that glutamic acid is actively extruded by a highly specific carrier mechanism.
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  • 108
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 107-123 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Comparison has been made between innervated and chronically denervated frog sartorius muscle fibers for resting potentials and a number of features of the action potential. Muscles were obtained from force-fed frogs maintained at room temperature for periods up to one year, and were studied with intracellular microelectrodes. Denervated muscles increased in sensitivity to acetylcholine by 100-400-fold. Studies were made in normal Ringer's solution, and in media in which concentrations of K+, Na+, Ca++, and Cl- were altered. The only significant differences noted between the denervated and the innervated fibers were a reduction in the maximum rate of fall of the action potential (ca. 20%) and an increase in the fall time of the active membrane potential (ca. 25%). These differences were present in normal Ringer's solution and remained when the bathing medium was modified. The resting membrane potential of denervated and innervated muscles varied with log [K+]o in exactly the same manner, and followed the theoretical relation proposed by Hodgkin (Proc. Roy. Soc., B, 148: 1-37, ′58), with the term representing the ratio of the sodium to potassium permeabilities assigned a value of 0.01. The results suggest that (a) the resting sodium and potassium permeabilities are reduced proportionately after denervation, since it is known that denervated frog muscle has a smaller potassium permeability, and (b) the mechanism controlling the increase in potassium conductance during the action potential is less available after denervation. Data indicate that the system controlling the sodium permeability is capable of activation to the same extent as in innervated muscles. Muslces which had been allowed to reinnervate did not show the differences presented by the denervated muscles. Innervated and denervated muscles did not show any significant changes in maximum rates of rise or fall of the action potential, nor of the active membrane potential amplitude over a 30 mV range of resting membrane potentials, indicating that the sodium and potassium permeability systems are fully available in frog muscle at membrane potentials larger than -80 mV.
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  • 109
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 159-168 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Oxygen consumption and Ca exchangeability at different levels of potassium depolarization were studied in frog sartorius muscle. It was found that the changes in oxygen consumption parallel the changes in Ca exchangeability. Procaine (10-3 M) and CaCl2 (2.10-2 M) suppressed both extra oxygen consumption and Ca exchangeability at low values of depolarization. At higher values of depolarization procaine and CaCl2 differed in their action. Procaine favored inhibition of these processes, CaCl2 caused their activation. The effects of these compounds was not a result of a change in the membrane potential, since their effect on potassium depolarization was found to be small.Relations between oxygen consumption and Ca exchangeability similar to those observed at potassium depolarization seem to exist under conditions where caffeine was applied. It is proposed that the extra oxygen consumption caused by potassium depolarization or on application of caffeine and unaccompanied by mechanical changes is related to the release of Ca from its bound form. Oxygen consumption in isotonic sucrose solution was also studied, but some different data from the above were obtained.
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  • 110
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Exudate leucocytes lost approximately 30% of their original intracellular ascorbic acid content during two hour incubation in glucose medium. The same loss was observed for cells containing initially both high and low levels of ascorbic acid. High concentrations of ascorbic acid in the incubation medium depressed lactic acid production and increased oxygen uptake by the cells. Iodoacetate and fluoride at low concentrations decreased ascorbic acid loss from cells during incubation; at high concentrations they increased loss. Ascorbic acid uptake from the medium was inhibited by iodoacetate but stimulated by fluoride.
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  • 111
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The conjugated bile salts, sodium taurocholate and glycocholate, inhibited oxygen consumption and uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation of mucosal homogenates from rat jejunum and ileum. These bile salts also were capable of increasing the ATP-ase activity, in the presence of Na+ + K+ with Mg++, of both mucosal homogenates. Consequently, it was concluded from the results of this investigation that the previously observed decrease in ATP levels of rat jejunum and ileum, in the presence of bile salts, can be accounted for by both a complete uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and by an increase in ATP-ase activity. Furthermore, the mechanism of bile salt inhibition of tissue ATP levels was discussed in relation to a regulatory role played by bile salts in the active transport of water soluble substances across the small intestine.
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  • 112
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 209-209 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 113
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Skate and stingray cells were shown to hemolyze in isosmotic solutions containing urea as the sole solute. The rate of urea penetration into these cells as determined by the rate of hemolysis is highly temperature dependent with a Q10 of 2.50-2.75. A reduced rate of methylurea penetration in the presence of urea was reconfirmed. The present results are consonant with the hypothesis of carrier mediated transport of urea in elasmobranch erythrocytes previously proposed by Murdaugh, Robin and Hearn.
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  • 114
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Rabbit red cells are separated by centrifuging them for one hour at 33,000 G in density gradient tubes of bovine serum albumin. The separation represented an equilibrium situation since rebanding experiments showed that the cells from a layer would again seek that density layer when recentrifuged in a new gradient tube. When rabbits were injected with 59Fe, the radioactive red cells at one day were nearly all light, but these labeled cells moved into the more dense layers over the next few days. This not only shows that the separation by density is discriminating but that some red cells became dense very quickly. Bearing in mind the problems of interpreting radioactive iron data because of the possibility of reutilization, it is tentatively concluded that dense red cells are not necessarily senescent red cells since these dense cells appear to persist for the normal life span of the rabbit red cell.
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  • 115
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 181-196 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The crustacean single nerve fiber gives rise to trains of impulses during a prolonged depolarizing stimulus. It is well known that the alkaloid veratrine itself causes a prolonged depolarization; and consequently it was of interest to investigate the effect of this chemically produced depolarization on repetitive firing in the single axon and compare it with the effect of depolarization by an applied stimulating current or by a potassium-rich solution. It was found that veratrine depolarization, though similar in some respects to a potassium-rich depolarization of depolarizing current effect, was in many respects quite different.(1) At low veratrine concentration, less than 1 Mg%, the negative after potential following a spike action potential was prolonged and augmented. At higher concentrations or after a long period of time, veratrine caused a prolonged steady state depolarization of the membrane, the “veratrine response”. The prolonged plateau depolarization response could be elicited with or without an action potential spike by a short or long duration stimulating pulse, but only if the veratrine depolarization was prevented or offset by an applied conditioning hyperpolarizing inward current.(2) The “veratrine response” resembled the potassium-rich solution response in the plateau-like contour of the depolarization and the very low membrane resistance during this plateau phase. Like the potassium response, it was possible to obtain a typical hyperpolarizing response with an inwardly directed current pulse if applied during the plateau phase. During the negative after potential augmented with veratrine, however, this hyperpolarizing response was not observed.(3) In contrast to the potassium response, however, the “veratrine response” is intimately associated with the sodium concentration in the external medium. The depolarization in millivolts is linearly related to the log of the concentration of external sodium. Moreover, during veratrine action there is a continuous and progressive inactivation of the sodium mechanism which ultimately terminates repetitive firing and abolishes the spike action potential. Then even with conditioning hyperpolarization only the slow response may be elicited in veratrine, occasionally with a spike superimposed if sodium is present, but without repetitive firing.(4) It is concluded that veratrine action is the result of a chemical or metabolic reaction by the alkaloid in the membrane. It is suggested that veratrine may inhibit the sodium extrusion mechanism, or may itself compete for sites in the membrane with calcium and/or sodium. This explains the inhibiting effect of high calcium, the abolition of the “veratrine response” with low temperature and high calcium combined and the progressive inactivation of the sodium system.
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  • 116
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966) 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 117
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 217-223 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Cells of Tetrahymena pyriformis have been cold-synchronized using a repetitive cycle of six, two-hour cold shocks (9.5°C) alternating with decreasing periods (60-30 minutes) at 28°C. This system gives a maximum division index of 70-80% occurring at 90 minutes from the end of the last synchronizing cold-treatment (EC). Examination of the division sensitivity of these cells to actinomycin D applied continuously at ten-minute intervals from EC reveals that division is essentially blocked until approximately 40 minutes past EC, after which a rapid decrease is sensitivity to the inhibitor occurs. Coinciding with this period of high sensitivity is the occurrence of a peak of C14 uridine incorporation at 40 minutes past EC. Inhibition of this peak is correlated with an inhibition of division, whereas strong inhibition of RNA synthesis beyond 60 minutes past EC has little effect on division activity. The similarity of these findings with those of the heat-synchronized system is discussed with the suggestion that both heat- and cold-synchronizing treatments result in the synchronous resynthesis of a division-associated fraction of RNA.
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  • 118
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    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 225-231 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Heat production was measured calorimetrically in the turtle, Pseudemys scripta elegans, (a) while submerged and (b) while partially submerged and breathing various gas mixtures. Submersion resulted in a profound reduction of heat production (80%). This reduction was not merely a response to the dive per se, but depended on the oxygen concentration available to the turtle prior to the onset of the dive. Heat production while breathing gas mixtures with different O2 concentrations was unchanged down to 5% O2. At 3% O2, heat production was 50% of normal, and at 100% N2, it was 20% of normal. Uptake of dissolved O2 from water was found to be 6% of the O2 uptake from air by these turtles. These results suggest that following diving, there is a profound reduction in metabolic rate, but not until the O2 stores are depleted. This low rate is primarily anaerobic and only a very low oxidative metabolism can be supported by O2 extracted from the water.
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  • 119
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 233-238 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Rabbit skeletal muscle homogenates were fractionated by differential centrifugation over the range 2,000-35,000 × G, and the calcium pumping activity of each fraction was assayed, together with the sensitivity of this activity to ryanodine. The greatest ryanodine sensitivity was found in material sedimenting between 2,000-4,000 × G, with decreasing sensitivities seen in the successively lighter fractions.Muscle mitochondria accumulated calcium slowly, the process being essentially insensitive to ryanodine but greatly inhibited by azide. With oxalate present in the incubation medium the ryanodine-sensitive fractions showed no inhibition by azide or by dinitrophenol; when oxalate was omitted the pumping activity decreased greatly but now was inhibited by azide and little affected by ryanodine.Although the cellular origin of the sensitive calcium pumping element is not yet known, it appears that it is derived from the sarcoplasmic reticulum rather than from mitochondria, and may represent a substructure of the reticulum possessing specialized pharmacological properties.
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  • 120
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The effect of serum albumin on the washout of K42 from isolated frog sartorius muscles, previously labeled in vitro with this isotope, has been investigated. Incorporation of 1% serum albumin in the washout fluid has been found to cause a significant reduction in the rate constant for K42 loss from the muscle fibers. A similar reduction in the rat constant for K42 efflux was observed when the medium, though not containing protein, was exhaustively dialyzed before use against a solution containing serum albumin. Addition of 10-6 M HgCl2 to “dialyzed” Ringer increased the rate of loss of K42 from the fibers. Effects similar to those obtained with serum albumin were observed when 10-4 M cysteine was incorporated in the washout fluid. 3-mercapto-propanol gave rise to transient reductions in the rate of K42 efflux, but, following prolonged exposure to this agent, the efflux rate was increased. 2′3-dimercapto-propanol (BAL) increased the rate of K42 loss from the fibers. It is suggested that this effect of serum albumin is due to its sequestering action on toxic substances (tentatively identified as heavy metals) normally present in trace amounts in Ringer's solutions.
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  • 121
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Two new alleles, C and c, involved in mating type expression were demonstrated. A dominant allele, C(cycler), must be present for the expression of the rhythm involving a sequential alternation of the two complementary mating types (III and IV). Cultures can be entrained with light-dark cycles. The phase of each clone can be characterized by its III to IV and IV to III transitions in relation to the zero hour of a given light-dark cycle. Phase is a stable phenotypic trait during asexual reproduction, but following sexual reproduction it does not display Mendelian segregation. Instead phase is determined through nuclear differentiation, i.e., the trait is controlled by differently determined macronuclear alagen (caryonidal inheritance) which normally segregate at the second cell division after conjugation. The phase of a clone within its genetic limits is a function of the photofractions and the light intensities used in the entraining treatment. By examining a number of clones a variety of phase angles between the mating type cycle and the entraining light-dark cycle are found. Dividing cells which are sexually unreactive and therefore do not express the rhythm can be entrained and following entrainment, phase is inherited through repeated cell replications at a rate greater than one fission a day in continuous darkness or continuous dim light. This result unique to this system indicates that the cellular processes underlying the phase and period of this circadian rhythm persist (unexpressed: sexual reactivity requires slight starvation) through repeated cell replications even when the division cycle is considerably shorter than the expressed circadian period. The rhythm has a circadian period in continuous darkness or light (tested for six days) of less than 24 hours. The reversal of mating type ceases in continuous light at higher intensities. Cells homozygous for the recessive allele, c(acyclic), do not reverse mating type but are either mating type III or IV, again as a consequence of nuclear differentiation. Since individual cells with the dominant allele express both mating types, differentiation for mating type can not involve the absence in the macronucleus of mating type determining factors.
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  • 122
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The morphologic, functional, and biochemical changes produced by hematoporphyrin and light in human platelets have been characterized. by phase microscopy the cells appeared swollen and resembled signet rings; by electron microscopy they showed considerable loss of cytoplasm and their contour was smoother than normal. irradiated platelets were not aggregable by thrombin and calcium chloride, although they contained clottable protein, and were incapable of supporting clot retraction. a linear relationship was demonstrated between the per cent depletion of serotonin from irradiated platelets and the log dose of hematoporphyrin. the depletion of serotonin from these platelets was related lineraly to the log of time of exposure to light during the initial six minutes of exposure; but thereafter continued at a constant rate. the temperature of incubation influenced directly the rate of depletion of serotonin from irradiated platelets but did not influence the movement of serotonin into these platelets. atp was diminished considerably in irradiated platelets. these changes are attributable to damage to the membrane of the platelet by hematoporphyrin and light.These studies provide additional information about the blood platelet in terms of its response to photodynamic action.
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  • 123
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The respiratory activity of avian blood cells was determined with samples of whole blood from individual male and female chickens. this oxygen consumption represents only that of the cells since no measurable activity was found in the plasma samples. the precision of determining respiratory activity was examined statistically and found to be approximately that obtained with a blood cell count but much less precise than the packed cell volume determination. the variability of cell count and mean corpuscular volume indicates that neither is a good means for expressing oxygen consumption - the most meaningful basis is oxygen consumption per milliliter of cells. the relationship between blood cell respiration and temperature is described.
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  • 124
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: A linear relationship was demonstrated between the reciprocals of the concentration of free hematoporphyrin and the moles of hematoporphyrin taken up by the platelet in the dark. radiated platelets took up more hematoporphyrin than did controls; this increase in uptake was accounted for by the movement of the dye across the damaged membrane of the cell. platelets irradiated at 4°c remained impermeable to hematoporphyrin until warmed to 37°c. during the initial three to four minutes of exposure to light at 37°c, there was no additional uptake of hematoporphyrin by platelets in comparison to controls. between six to ten minutes irradiation, the uptake of hematoporphyrin increased linearly with the log time of irradiation. thereafter, no further uptake occurred. a further increase in uptake of dye was demonstrated by both control and irradiated platelets at a reduced ph. this study enables a correlation to be made between the effects of hematoporphyrin on the platelet and the uptake of this agent by the platelet.
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  • 125
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    Notes: By the “labeled mitoses” method of Quastler and Sherman and others, the cell cycle of the germinative zone cells of the bullfrog lens epithelium has been characterized. It has been shown that this cycle lasts approximately 83 days with the DNA synthetic phase enduring 100 hours and G2, 11 hours. G1 occupies over 90% of the total time. the duration of mitosis itself has not been precisely determined. the length of the synthetic phase was corroborated by double labeling with c14 and h3-thymidine.When the temperature is raised by 6°c, from 24° to 30° the cycle is compressed by 40%.When the nongerminative, central cells of bullfrog lens epithelium are activated (stimulated to undergo DNA synthesis and mitosis) by injury or through in vitro culture, the length of the cycle also appears to decrease. in the in vitro experiments the generation time, as judged by the period elapsing between two successive bursts of DNA synthesis involving the same cells, amounts to 177-190 hours at 24°c. by raising the temperature to 30°c the time from injury or isolation until the appearance of the first wave of mitosis is reduced by 20%.
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  • 126
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The response of thymic lymphocytes of the pig to phytohemagglutinin was studied with H3 thymidine in cultures, from 0-72 hours. At the beginning of the culture period 6-18% of lymphocytes were in DNA synthesis. during the first 24 hours a sharp decrease in the number of DNA synthesizing cells was observed in both pha and control cultures, although pha cultures consistently showed small but significantly greater numbers of DNA synthesizing cells. this was followed by a definite peak in DNA synthesis and mitotic response of a minority of the cells in pha cultures between 48-54 hours, whereas in control cultures activity ceased. in addition, a small proportion of the progeny of initially DNA synthesizing medium sized lymphocytes was apparently stimulated by pha and found in mitosis by 48 hours.It was concluded that the thymus contains a fraction of lymphocytes, not in the mitotic cycle, which are capable of being transformed by pha to mitotic activity. the data also suggests some stimulation of cells already in the mitotic cycle.
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  • 127
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 339-344 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: When a weak electric field is applied to longitudinal sections of myelinated nerve, myelin material migrates out of the tissue edges towards both poles. the materials migrating from the anodal and cathodal edges seem to be chemically similar but differ in physical properties. at the anodal edge the bimolecular lipid layers rearrange into spherical micelles forming an “oil in water” emulsion, and at the cathodal edge into micelles forming a “water in oil” emulsion. the latter is unstable in water and is rapidly transformed into an “oil in water” emulsion. these findings have physiological and structural implications for the study of biological membranes.
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  • 128
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 319-332 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The responses of single units and evoked potentials to a pair of artificial sounds, mimicking theorientation sound and echo, and to tape recorded actual orientation sounds were studied in terms of recovery cycle. the recovery cycle of single units could be classified into four groups: (1) short suppression (4%), (2) delayed inhibition (11%), (3) temporal recovery with or without a supernormal phase (7%), and (4) undelayed inhibition (78%) lasting 4 to 26 msec. therefore the majority of neurons were not excited by the second sound (echo) of a pair when it was delivered within several milliseconds after the first (out-going orientation sound). the duration of the recovery cycle was a function of the intensity of a pair of sounds. the weaker the first tone pulse relative to the second, the more rapid the recovery to the second. therefore, the reception of echoes is probably improved by contraction of middle ear muscles resulting in attenuation of self-stimulation by the out-going pulse.The collicular evoked potential consisted of two components, a fast one mainly due to the incoming fibers from lower levels and a slow one due to the main body of the inferior colliculus. The slow component showed slow recovery cycles as did the majority of single units while the fast one recovered very quickly. No noticeable difference in recovery cycles was found between awake and anesthetized animals. The functional meaning of inhibitory periods in the recovery cycle and role of the inferior colliculus in echo-location are discussed.
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  • 129
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 333-338 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Low concentrations (below 0.00005 m) of colchicine and low intensities (below 2,800 psi) of pressure, applied separately to early prophase eggs (lytechinus variegatus) produced no measurable inhibition of the first cleavage division (at 20°c). in combination, however, these subliminal treatments produced marked inhibition. complete blockage, in fact, was observed: at 2,300 psi for eggs in 0.00004 m colchicine; at 2,500 psi for eggs in 0.00003 m; and at 2,800 psi for eggs in 0.00002 m solutions.The curves obtained by plotting percentage inhibition as a function of pressure for each of the colchicine concentrations specified above were approximately parallel to one another; but each decrement in the colchicine concentration shifted the curve about 300 psi higher along the (pressure) abscissa.In short, a distinct synergism was found in reference to the anti-mitotic effects of colchicine and pressure. This result is quite opposite to that reported previously in regard to the actions of heavy water and high pressure.As to basic mechanism, the evidence indicates that both colchicine and pressure exert their effects by inhibiting polymerization of the subunits of a fibrous protein which constitutes an important structural component of the mitotic apparatus or by depolymerizing the mitotic protein, if it already has been formed at the time of treatment.
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  • 130
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 131
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 355-360 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The water exchange has been measured in oocytes of siredon mexicanum and rana temporaria, and in unfertilized eggs and early gastrulae of the former species, by recording the D2O—H2O exchange with the cartesian diver balance.In oocytes, where no diffusion barrier to water is demonstrable, the temperature coefficient Q10 for the exchange of water is about 1.3-1.4, corresponding to that of free diffusion. in unfertilized eggs, and in early gastrulae the exchange is considerably slowed down, indicating that a surface membrane to some extent limits the rate of exchange. at the same time the Q10 value is increased, lying in the range 2.3-3.8. since it is most likely that the exchange even in this case occurs by diffusion, but through membrane pores, it is concluded that the area available for diffusion (pore size or number, or both) increases with temperature.
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  • 132
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    Notes: The addition of CO2 in gaseous form to the growth medium of Euglena gracilis var bacillaris (streptomycin bleached) results in a marked increase in the peak populations reached by the organism. when 20 mm succinate is used as the carbon source, the increase in peak population is proportional to the percentage CO2 enrichment of an air wash up to at least 10% CO2. when acetate is used as a carbon source for growth, some increase is seen in the peak population reached by euglena but the increase is not dependent upon the percentage enrichment of CO2 between 2 and 10% CO2. this extended growth is dependent up the presence of gaseous CO2; bicarbonate ion actually inhibiting growth. thiamin is not required for the CO2 effect, in fact no thiamin requirement can be demonstrated for this organism under the conditions of this experiment.
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  • 133
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 134
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 169-184 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Hemoglobin has been used in two ways as a tool in the study of cell differentiation. Because of its obvious value as a marker, cells synthesizing hemoglobin have been studied in the process of acquiring this specific function  -  a property determined by genetic, hormonal, and physiological factors which have been investigated. Alternatively, hemoglobins associated with specific developmental stages have been studied; the molecular relationships of these hemoglobins and the genetic determinants of their structure and of the timing of their appearance in development have been investigated. The following subjects are reviewed: (1) initiation of hemoglobin synthesis, (2) regulation of stem cell differentiation and hemoglobin formation, (3) hemoglobin types in the ontogenesis of erythrocytes, (4) hemoglobin and erythrocyte differentiation, and (5) control of the switch of developmental types of hemoglobin.Experiments bearing on the cytoplasmic control of hemoglobin synthesis in reticulocytes are presented. These experiments indicate that the peptide chains of hemoglobin are differentially released from polysomes: β chains are immediately released as soon as completed, whereas α chains are retained on polysomes after completion and are presumably released upon combination with β chains. Experiments on the accumulation of globin in reticulocytes in the presence of iron-chelating agents indicate that globin is an intermediate in the assembly of hemoglobin and that heme does not play a direct role in the release of hemoglobin chains from polysomes.
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  • 135
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 207-215 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: An attempt is made to summarize and synthesize salient points from the conference. Considering the immunoglobulin-synthesizing and hemoglobin-synthesizing cell systems in parallel, first attention is given to aspects of cellular differentiation that deal with specialization in the formation of the predominant molecular products, the immunoglobulins and the hemoglobins. Primary structural considerations point to similar genetic mechanisms as the basis for phylogenetic diversity and similarities within each of the two classes of macromolecules, and to similar restrictions on the sorts of amino acid substitutions that can be tolerated while retaining the funcional integrity of the molecules. In the immunoglobulins, the appearance of “variable regions” in the component polypeptide chains, presumably associated with the diverse specificities required of these molecules in order that they may serve their functions, provides additional challenges for interpretation, and the significance of present knowledge in this context is evaluated. Other aspects of cellular differentiation are approached by way of the developmental shifts in molecular products found in both systems, and the explanations that have been suggested for these shifts. A striking difference in the two systems, the phenomenon of allele exclusion in immunoglobulin control, is discussed. The review concludes with discussions of more complicated aspects of differentiation in these cell series: the role of hormones and other humoral substances, particularly with regard to the immunoglobulin-synthesizing system, deriving from the thymus; parallels among cell-lineage patterns in the various hematopoietic series; and evidences of the causes of senescence in the immunoglobulin-synthesizing system.
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  • 136
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    Notes: Electrical activity in response to light stimuli was recorded from the brain of the cricket (Gryllus domesticus) using stainless steel microelectrodes. Four basic types of elements were observed as follows: (1) units which registered ambient light intensity by frequency of firing as well as responding with transient changes in rate to stepwise increases or decreases in intensity; (2) units which fired at a higher frequency in dark than in light; (3) units which fired continuously at low level in light and responded with a transient high frequency burst to light off; and (4) units which responded with a brief burst to on and off, but tended to be “on-dominant” or “off-dominant.” Also observed were synchronized spikes in mushroom body responding primarily to light off, but also on occasion to light on, and often accompanied by single unit responses. The units registering intensity are probably homologous with units showing similar properties recorded from the visual systems of several other arthropods and usually referred to as “sustaining units.” On-off, off, and dark units are also known from other forms. The mushroom body light responses were similar to synchronized spikes recorded in cockroach mushroom body following antennal stimulation.
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  • 137
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    Notes: Using a method of cocultivation of embryonic Chinese hamster cells (CHEF) with Rous sarcoma cells and infection of CHEF by RSV-SR, it was possible to obtain malignant transformation of hamster cells. The morphologically altered cells became apparent within 15-36 days.In the cells transformed by cocultivation, the genome of RSV was determined by the method of contact of the transformed cell and the chicken cell in vivo; the malignant character of the transformed cells was demonstrated by transfer to a homologous newborn host. Repeated attempts to detect virus production in transformed Chinese hamster cells failed.Prior to malignant transformation and in early transformed cultures the diploid stem-line was maintained. A slight decrease in the proportion of diploid cells in transformed cultures was revealed in some experiments and is discussed. Prolonged cultivation of these cells, as also of control fibroblasts, shifts the stem-line to the hyperdiploid or hypotetraploid region.The mechanism of malignant transformation by RSV is discussed with regard to the action of the viral genome and alteration of the genetic make-up of the cell by the virus.
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  • 138
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    Notes: A normal cell type that can be cloned in agar has been identified by electron microscopy as a macrophage.
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  • 139
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    Notes: Properties of the fully developed phosphate transport system in the fertilized egg of the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, were investigated. The rates of phosphate transport at concentrations of external phosphate of 1 to 44 μM, both in the absence and in the presence of 100 μM arsenate, exhibit typical saturation kinetics. At sea water concentrations of 2 μM phosphate, the rate of uptake is about 2 × 10-9 μm/egg/minute at 15°C. Arsenate is a competitive inhibitor of phosphate transport, fully and immediately reversible in its effects, yielding Ki values ranging from 10.5 to 14.1 × 10-6 M in comparison to the corresponding apparent KM (Michaelis-Menten) constants for phosphate of 5.6 to 7.5 × 10-6 M (pH 8.0, 15°C).The rate of arsenate uptake in a phosphate deficient medium amounts to 2.8 to 2.9 × 10-10 μm arsenate/egg/minute at an arsenate concentration of 2.9 to 10.2 μM arsenate (HAsO4--), which is 9.5 and 5.6% of the rate of phosphate uptake at corresponding phosphate concentrations.Arsenate has essentially the same developmental effects at initial concentrations of 5-10 μM and 100 μM arsenate, namely no observable effects for exposure periods of 7.5 hours, although longer periods result in blockage of development at the early blastula stage.Outward flux of phosphate ions cannot be demonstrated by washing prelabelled eggs with sea water containing low or high concentrations of phosphate, even when phosphorylation has been blocked by exposing the eggs to a metabolic inhibitor.Phosphate uptake rates measured in the pH range from 5.0 to 10.0 reveal a sharp optimum at pH 8.8-8.9. Reference to the apparent pK' values of the phosphoric acid system indicate that the entering species is the HPO4-- ion. The effects on rates of phosphate uptake of exposure to sea water at pH values between 7 and 10 for 30 minute periods are fully reversible, but at lower pH values, reversal is delayed, and is only partial.Sodium molybdate (0.01 M), sodium pyrophosphate (1.5 × 10-4 M), and adenosine triphosphate (1-5 × 10-4 M) for exposure periods ranging from 40 to 180 minutes did not significantly affect phosphate uptake. Omission of Ca++ ion from artificial sea water is without effect on phosphate uptake but the absence of both Ca++ and Mg++ results in profound and irreversible depression of both phosphate uptake and development.The data of this and the following paper are consistent with the conclusion that the transport of phosphate involves a surface located carrier.The apparent secondary and tertiary ionization constants of phosphoric acid in sea water (ionic strength = 0.6885) were measured, resulting in a value for pK′2 = 6.14 and for pK′3 = 10.99, at 15°C and phosphate at infinite dilution.
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  • 140
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    Notes: The hibernating habits of Citellus lateralis under standard laboratory conditions are described. It has been shown that it is possible to use a biopsy technique to investigate the brown fat tissues without serious disturbance to the hibernation pattern. This technique was used to sample brown and white fat tissues in the same animal at various seasons of the year. Histological studies did not reveal any changes in morphology or lipid composition which could be related purely to the hibernating season, however, during the short periods of arousal a large proportion of the brown fat cells appeared to be partially depleted of neutral fat. At this time a large increase in Luxol fast blue staining was always observed, which may be due to unmasking of tissue phosphatides.
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  • 141
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 443-453 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Coxsackie B-3 virus produces a mild infection which passes unnoticed in the non-hibernating Citellus lateralis. A severe infection occurs in the hibernating animal. The progress of infection in the hiberating animal is related to the number of arousal hours and quite independent of the number of infected days. Nevertheless, it has been shown that the low-temperature hibernation phase has a potentiating effect upon subsequent viral production. Infective virus has not been found in the inoculated brown fat pads during the hibernation phase but very high virus titers are recorded 48 hours after arousal. This results in an earlier viraemia and earlier and higher titers in other organs of the body. A similar effect is noted when virus is inoculated at the very beginning of the arousal phase. While most animals recover with subsequent antibody development, a few succumb. Antibody development is slow and related only to the number of arousal hours experienced.Particular note is made of the fact that an animal may successfully resume hibernation despite complete loss of the axillary brown fat pads.
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  • 142
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: A cell line from a mouse lymphoma heterozygous at the chromosome region for the H-2d and H-2k alleles was originally obtained from a transplantable lymphoma in the (C3H × DBA/2)F1 hybrid (H-2d/H-2k) and cultured in vitro. The original cultured line, termed parent line, was susceptible to the cytotoxic action of antibodies directed against antigenic components of both the d and k alleles. The parent line also absorbed hemagglutinins from both anti-d anti-k antisera. A resistant, variant subline was selected from the original population by immunoselection in vitro with anti-H-2d antibody and complement in a cytotoxic system. After one year in continuous culture in the absence of selecting antisera, the variant subline was still resistant to the cytotoxic action of anti-H-2d antibody. Serologic analysis of the variant indicated that it had lost the D antigenic component of the d allele, had a reduced amount of the H component, controlled by both the d and k alleles, and had retained the K component of the k allele. Possible genetic mechanisms that might account for the emergence of the variant line are discussed. While the results do not necessarily support an analysis based on mitotic recombination, ascribing other mechanisms is also difficult because of aneuploidy in the cell line. Finally, the experiments point out the advantages of using in vitro immunoselective methods in the genetics of mammalian somatic cells.
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  • 143
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    Notes: Glyceride and total phosphatide levels of brown and white fat of Citellus lateralis have been followed throughout the year in biopsy samples.Extraction of the glycerides for fatty acid analysis is described. As much as 20% of the phosphatide of brown fat was found in the upper fat layer of a centrifuged tissue homogenate. This phosphatide appeared to be present as a low-density lipoprotein, and may be associated with the lipid globules of the intact cell.Glyceride and phosphatide levels varied considerably in brown fat, and no particular level was consistently observed to be associated with any part of the hibernation cycle. Fatty acid composition of the glycerides also varied widely. The degree of unsaturation was not related to the hibernation cycle, although there appeared to be a differential utilization of fatty acids during a few weeks prior to spring arousal.A decrease in tissue glyceride levels was observed in both brown and white fat during arousal from hibernation at 2°C, the loss from brown fat being double the loss from white fat.
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  • 144
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    Notes: The effect of strychnine was studied on the slow, fast, and inhibitory systems in the abdominal extensor muscles of the crayfish. Strychnine nitrate (0.1 mg/ml and up) caused rapid block of the fast responses of the deep abdominal extensor muscles. The nerve and muscle remained directly excitable, and the blocked preparation contracted with added glutamate. It is concluded that strychnine acts mainly presynaptically or to neutralize the transmitter substance. No marked effect was observed on the purely slow superficial extensor muscles or on inhibitory systems. Essentially the same results were obtained in other slow and fast systems of Pachygrapsus and Panulirus. The possibility of a common transmitter substance for the slow and fast neuromuscular systems is discussed.
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  • 145
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 185-206 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Studies were performed on the capacity of mice for hemagglutinating antibody production throughout their life-span. An in vivo culture method was used for assessment of primary and secondary antibody-forming potentials of spleen cells of mice ranging in age from 1 to 130 weeks. There was a marked growth of potential for antibody formation during neonatal and juvenile life followed by a gradual decline in potential with advancing age. It was possible to show that the changes in potential were principally due to changes in the number of competent progenitor cells and not to changes in their performance. Death of very old animals was correlated with decline in number of immunologically competent progenitor cells. The decay in number of progenitor cells during aging of mice was random. Loss of progenitor cells was not entirely attributable to either generative failure of the pool of progenitor cells or the capacity of the milieu of the animal to support such cells. Thus, spleen cells from aged animals displayed increasing capacity for primary antibody formation during a 3-week period of culture in young, irradiated mice; identical cultures in old, irradiated recipients failed in respect to growth of primary antibody-forming potential. Progressive imparirment of the milieu of aging animals was suggested by the fact that spleen cells from very old animals were “toxic” when infused into lightly irradiated recipients which were themselves of advanced age but far short of the senescent phase of their life-span. These results lead to the argument that senescence may be, to a major degree, the result of progressive loss of progenitor, or “stem,” cells which are normally utilized to replace terminally differentiated, dying cells.
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  • 146
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 25-34 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The amounts of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) in the skin of nine species of anurans were estimated by the fluorescence method. Relatively large quantities of 5-HT were found in the dorsal skin of five species of semi-terrestrial frogs, while in the skins of four highly aquatic species none, or only a trace, was found. Using the histochemical fluorescence method of Falck, 5-HT was located in the granules of the venom glands of Rana pipiens, a semi-terrestrial species, while no fluorescing glands were found in R. catesbeiana, a highly aquatic species. The results of Erspamer and others are discussed. It is suggested that the most probable role of 5-HT in frog skin is that of defense against land predators.
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  • 147
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 19-24 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The effect of ammonium chloride on the cellular Na+, K+ and water has been examined in human and horse (high K), cow (medium K) and cat (low K) red cells. It was found that high K red cells, especially those of the horse, gained water an Na+, whereas the net movement of K+ was negligible. There was a correlation between the increase of cellular Na+ concentration and of the packed red cell volume. In contrast, the packed cell volume of low K red cells increased slightly or not at all, and Na+ ions leaked out from the cells. The high K cells had a lower Cl- concentration and higher buffer capacity than the low K cells. The results obtained with the medium K (cow) cells usually lay between those of the other two cell types. In all the cases both the plasma and cell pH decreased resulting from the addition of ammonium chloride. The mechanism of movements of water and Na+ ions in high K cells remained unsolved, but the response of low K cells to ammonium chloride was near that of a cation exchange resin.
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  • 148
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    Notes: Net RNA degradation occurs in Tetrahymem pyrifmmis when this ciliate is suspended in a non-nutrient medium. The quantity and quality of the excretion products is at least partially under the control of the ionic content and the tonicity of the cellular environment. The excretion of ultraviolet-absorbing materials was found to be elevated by sodium ions in a medium isotonic to the culture fluid, or by a hypertonic environment. Magnesium counteracted these effects.In isotonic suspension, sodium and magnesium ions lowered orthophosphate excretion; however, sodium altered the nature of the phosphate products so that acidlabile phosphates were also excreted rather than solely orthophosphate. Similar results were obtained in a hypertonic environment with or without sodium.The degree of purine and pyrimidine loss from the cells in all conditions of suspension was reflected in the amount of RNA degraded. The ion and tonicity effects apparently reflect events which alter the stability of the RNA and the properties of the membrane system, resulting in changes in both the rate of RNA degradation and the nature of the excreted products. The rates of orthophosphate excretion appear to be affected by changes in the acid-base balance within the cell which may be governed by the cation levels. The manipulation of the ionic content and tonicity of the medium offers a convenient method for obtaining cells reduced in RNA content.
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  • 149
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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    Notes: In homogenates of Tetrahymena pyriformis, five hydrolases  -  phosphatase, ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, proteinase, amylase  -  with acid pH optima were found. Over 75% of their activity is sedimentable with a centrifugal force of 250,000 g. min. Only 17% of the acid phosphatase and ribonuclease is active when assayed in the presence of 0.25 M sucrose at 0°. Exposure to a lowered osmotic pressure, freezing and thawing, and incubation at temperatures over 0° result in activation of the latent phosphatase and ribonuclease. After isopycnic centrifugation in a sucrose density gradient the hydrolases show a broad distribution which differs greatly from those of enzymes associated with mitochondria (succinate dehydrogenase) or with peroxisomes (catalase). The results are interpreted as evidence that the five acid hydrolases studied are localized in lysosomes which represent a distinct population of subcellular particles in Tetrahymena.
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  • 150
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 197-202 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: An actin-like protein was obtained from the plasmodia of a myxomycete, Physarum polycephalum. It forms a complex with muscle myosin A which behaves similarly to the actomyosin from rabbit striated muscle. On the addition of ATP the complex of this protein with myosin A shows a viscosity drop at high concentrations of KCl (∼0.5 M). At low concentrations of KCl (∼0.05 M) this complex superprecipitates from solutions containing 1 mM MgCl2 and shows Mg-activated ATPase activity. That is, the actin-like protein converts the ATPase of myosin A to the actomyosin type.
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  • 151
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 203-205 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 152
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The effects of selective mitochondrial inhibitors on the short-circuit current and oxygen consumption displayed by the isolated urinary bladder of the toad was studied.Three types of compounds were used: (a) electron transfer inhibitors, Amytal, Cyanide and Antimycin A; (b) energy transfer inhibitors Guanidine, Oligomycin and Rutamycin; and (c) uncoupling agents, Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and 2-4 dinitrophenol.The kinetics of inhibition of oxygen consumption indicated that the inhibitors tested were effectively reaching the mitochondria of the bladder cells.Different kinetics of inhibition of short-circuit current were obtained with the various inhibitors tested.Uncouplers and electron transfer inhibitors rapidly blocked the short-circuit current; energy transfer inhibitors only produced a slow and partial inhibition.A site of energy-coupling, tentatively identified with the intermediate formed in the energy transfer reactions closest to the electron transfer chain, is proposed.
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  • 153
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Actinomycin D (0.008 μg/gm of body weight) injected intraperitoneally every two hours, produced a prompt 50% inhibition of RNA synthesis in the jejunum of mice, and a delayed inhibition of DNA synthesis, that reached its maximum inhibition (68% of control values) 4.5 hours after the first injection of actinomycin D. Autoradiographic studies indicated that this low level of actinomycin D inhibited a step in the G1 phase of the cell cycle, preventing the initiation, but not affecting the continuation, of DNA biosynthesis. The activity of DNA polymerase was not affected under these conditions. The results are substantially similar to those previously obtained with Ehrlich ascites cells growing in the peritoneal cavity of mice and can be interpreted as indicating that in the G1 phase of dividing cells there is an actinomycin sensitive step whose inhibition prevents the entrance of cells into the DNA-synthesis phase.
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  • 154
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966) 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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  • 155
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 241-247 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: These experiments showed that an isolated muscle bundle could be used to study, simultaneously, ion transport and the activity of surface enzymes. Frog muscles were carefully dissected and incubated for four hours in Ringer's solution containing a tris buffer and 3 mM ATP; at various times samples of the medium were chromatographed and analysed spectrophotometrically for nucleotide content. Samples of the final medium were analysed for inorganic phoshpate and for ammonia. The results demonstrated the conversion of adenosine triphosphate to inosine monophosphate, via adenosine diphosphate and adenosine monophosphate. Under the conditions of the experiment IMP was detected on chromatograms within 20 minutes of incubation; at the end of four hours the media had concentrations of 2.3 mM IMP, 4.4 mM inorganic phosphate and 2.6 mM ammonia, showing a stoichiometric relation among the products formed. There was convincing evidence that the enzymes involved (ATPase, adenylate kinase and AMP deaminase) must be situated close to or on the muscle surface. No effect of ouabain (1 μM) on the activity of the ATPase, adenylate kinase or deaminase could be found in these experiments, but the drug inhibited Na and K recovery from a Na-loaded, K-depleted state.
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  • 156
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 237-240 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Effects of KCN (10-4 M), simultaneous presence of varying concentrations of D-glucose and L-sorbose, and temperature on transport of carbohydrate in C. luciliae have been studied. The rate of carbohydrate entrance is inhibited, in all sugars used, ranging from 19% to 70% inhibition at 0.5 mM external concentrations. However, this inhibitor does not affect transport from external concentrations of the order of 0.02 M. At 20 mM external concentration, the rate of L-sorbose entrance is greatly inhibited by the simultaneous presence of D-glucose, and the transport mechanism shows enormously greater affinity for glucose than for other monosaccharides. However, at 0.5 mM external concentration, the rate of sorbose entrance is not inhibited at all by the simultaneous presence of D-glucose. In the temperature interval 15°-25°C, the Q10 for rate of entrance when the external concentration is 0.5 mM is 2.8 times larger than the Q10 when the external concentration is 20 mM. These data are interpreted as strongly suggesting two mechanisms for carbohydrate entrance: (a) facilitated diffusion, of importance only at high external concentrations; (b) an active transport mechanism, active at low external concentrations and dependent upon a supply of metabolic energy. These results are compared with those reported in the literature for other types of cells.
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  • 157
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The progressive growth and development of spleen colonies was studied in heavily irradiated host mice in which erythropoiesis was modified by various procedures. Erythropoietic activity in non-polycythemic hosts bearing spleen colonies was not increased by injections of exogenous erythropoietin. Detectable levels of erythropoietin were found in the heavily irradiated host mice suggesting that the failure of exogenous erythropoietin to modify erythropoiesis was because the host mice were already maximally stimulated by the high endogenous erythropoietin levels.Spleen colonies do not become erythroid in polycythemic mice. The injection of exogenous erythropoietin into heavily irradiated polycythemic hosts did not decrease the total number of spleen colonies produced by a given bone marrow transplant, as would be expected if erythropoietin acted directly on the colony-forming cells. Comparison of growth curves for colony-forming cells in the spleens of polycythemic hosts either receiving or not receiving erythropoietin indicated that the overall doubling time of colony-forming cells during the first ten days after transplantation was not changed by the daily injection of erythropoietin.These experiments are consistent with the concept that erythropoietin is necessary for the development of erythroid colonies. Erythropoietin acts upon some progeny of the colony-forming cell rather than the colony-forming cell itself.
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  • 158
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Procedures have been devised for the isolation of the surface membranes of mouse fibroblasts (L cell) and a variety of other cells. The surface membranes are stabilized by various reagents in a hypotonic solution and are then removed intact or as large fragments with a Dounce homogenizer. The membranes are purified by differential centrifugation on solutions of sucrose or glycerol or on a column of fine glass beads. A trilaminar pattern can be seen in thin sections of the membrane in the electron microscope. Sufficient material can be conveniently obtained for chemical analyses.
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  • 159
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 263-268 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Isolated 3- and 5-day chick embryo hearts contain sufficient endogenous substrates to maintain their pulsatile activity for several hours under aerobic conditions, and even after five hours in substrate-free medium the rates are 40 to 50% of the original rates. Carbohydrate appears to be an important component of the endogenous substrates since 1 mM 2-deoxyglucose causes rapid failure of rate, and glycolysis appears to be a major energy pathway since the rate is depressed only about 50% by 2-hour's exposure to 10 mM fluoroacetate. In nitrogen the hearts rapidly become asystolic in the absence of added substrate. Recovery of the rate occurs if oxygen is reintroduced within one hour, but longer periods of anoxia result in progressively less recovery, especially with the 3-day hearts which appear to be particularly susceptible to irreversible damage. With 5.55 mM glucose as substrate there is little decrease in the original aerobic heart rate during five hours, and the hearts can tolerate total anoxia for five hours with rates only slightly less than the aerobic rates. The hypothesis of a preferential pentose phosphate pathway of glucose catabolism in the very young chick embryo heart is discussed, but no direct evidence in support of its existence is revealed in this study.
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  • 160
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 306-308 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 161
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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    Notes: An autoradiographic study of H3-histidine incorporation into nonhistone protein of explanted larval salivary gland chromosomes of D. virilis showed patterns of incorporation that were dependent upon the stage of larval development. The sequence of changes in the development of several puffs in a specific chromosomal region was followed using the appearance of pigment in the anterior spiracles as a means of larval staging. H3-histidine incorporation into these puffs in prepupae occurred as the puffs were regressing in size and protein staining. Acid extraction of histone and nucleic acid failed to alter the character of the autographs; presumably a non-histone protein is involved in the H3-histidine incorporation. Other puff sites in the same prepupal chromosomes showed various patterns of isotopic amino acid incorporation indicating that the pattern reported for a specific region may not be true for all puff sites.
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  • 162
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    Notes: Arginine, cystine, histidine, leucine and threonine were needed for outgrowth of the mouse blastocyst in vitro. Omission of lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, tryptophane and tyrosine from the culture medium markedly reduced blastocyst outgrowth, but did not inhibit it completely; while omission of isolecine and valine reduced the extent of outgrowth only slightly. Blastocysts kept for seven days in a free-floating condition by omitting arginine and leucine from the medium, grew out when these amino acids were added. Such behavior may be analogous to delayed implantation in utero and suggests that the free amino acid content of the uterus could be an important factor in the control of implantation. Blastocysts delayed from implanting in the uterus by ovariectomy were activated to outgrowth in a complete medium, but the intracellular changes associated with outgrowth occurred more slowly than in undelayed blastocysts.
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  • 163
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 345-359 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: An attempt has been made to locate RNA as a structural component of the peripheries of cultured cells derived from a human osteogenic sarcoma, and L1210 mouse leukaemia cells. In the case of cells derived from the osteogenic sarcoma, their detachment from glass was facilitated by incubation with ribonuclease; on removal from glass, they left cellular “footprints” behind, which were visulized in radioautographs of cells previously labeled with tritiated uridine, and removable with ribonuclease. The electrophoretic data show loss of charge by both types of cell following incubation with ribonuclease.These results are interpreted to indicate that RNA is a structural component of the peripheries of these cells. No attempt is made to speculate on the obvious biological improtance of these observations if they are applicable to cells in general.
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  • 164
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    Notes: Metabolic inhibitors were applied after the transport system was fully developed in concentrations sufficient to block cleavage. 0.5-1.0 × 10-4 M cyanide and anaerobiosis caused from negligible to moderate (40%) inhibition of phosphate uptake. The inhibition occurred late in the breeding season, and the inhibitory action of cyanide on uptake was associated with irreversible developmental effects. Azide (3 × 10-3 M) did not inhibit uptake when the chamber method was used, but the aliquot and Hopkins' tube methods gave considerable inhibition. Purified preparations of 2,4-dinitrophenol (1 × 10-4 M) did not inhibit uptake. Sodium iodoacetate (up to 0.05 M) and phlorizin (0.005 M) exerted no effect.Calculations of the minimal work requirement for the transport process reveal that this amounts to only a small fraction (0.24% at an external phosphate concentration of 2 μM) of the total available metabolic energy.Exposure of eggs at five minutes after insemination (lag phase) to cyanide (5 × 10-5 M), anaerobic conditions, or azide (3 × 10-3 M) blocked the expected increase of phosphate uptake. Removal of the inhibitors led to resumption of development and the appearance of the phosphate transport system in an essentially normal pattern.Exposure of eggs to 1.4-2.0 × 10-4 M p-chloromercuribenzoate (p-CMB) during the accumulation phase severely depressed phosphate uptake, but cleavage was not inhibited nor delayed; recovery from the inhibition was accelerated by 1 × 10-3 M cysteine. Exposure to p-CMB during the lag phase blocked the appearance of the transport system; cleavage proceeded normally. After the removal of p-CMB little reversal occurred until the addtion of 1 × 10-3 M cysteine, when the phosphate transport system developed in an essentially normal manner.Trypsin (0.001-0.01%) neither activates the transport system in unfertilized eggs, nor inactivates it in denuded fertilized eggs by removal of surface proteins.The data are consistent with the conclusion that (1) the phosphate transport system is newly synthesized at fertilization in energy dependent reactions, and (2) phosphate transport is a carrier mediated process not directly dependent on metabolic energy.
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  • 165
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The H-2 antigenic properties of lipoprotein fractions from malignant (L-5178Y leukemia) and normal (spleen, thymus, liver, kidney) mouse tissues have been studied by serological and immunological tests, and the results compared to the previously described activities of these fractions in homograft-sensitization tests. Although, in general, the relative activities in the different assays parallel each other some notable exceptions were found. The non-microsomal lipoproteins from leukemic tissue, inactive in homograft-sensitization tests, did elicit H-2 antibody. Also, the liver microsomal lipoproteins, which are inactive in homograft-sensitization tests in amounts 400 × the minimal effective doses of spleen preparations, exhibited, in in vitro agglutinin-inhibition tests, approximately one-fourth the H-2 activity of the latter. Other findings of note include the high antibody-eliciting potency of the spleen and leukemia microsomal lipoproteins (15 μg protein was sufficient to initiate primary immunization and 1 μg protein to cause an anamnestic response); and the quantitive identity of H-2 antigen activity of the microsomal lipoproteins from spleen and thymus.
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  • 166
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 367-373 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Net inward transport of Cl in the absence of an electrochemical potential difference was demonstrated in the skin of two species of frog, R. pipiens and R. esculenta under conditions of low (2 mM) Cl concentration in the bathing solutions. The electrical potential profile of skins of R. pipiens was examined with microelectrodes under conditions in which the inside solution was negative relative to the outside solution. This reversal of the normal potential difference was found to arise as a result of potential changes across the outward facing electrical barriers in the skin. The reversed potential difference appears to arise, at least in part, as a result of the inward Cl transport. The effect may be due either to electrogenic Cl transfer or to variations in internal composition of the epithelial cells arising as a result of Cl transport.
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  • 167
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    Notes: Metabolic control reactions have been studied in the intact toad bladder by means of fluorescence spectrophotometric measurement of reduced pyridine nucleotide and by measurement of respiration with the platinum electrode. substrates such as pyruvate and succinate lead to prompt increases in reduction level of pyridine nucleotide with only slight acceleration of respiration. major metabolic control is exerted by adp, which depletes the intact bladder of reduced pyridine nucleotide and accelerates respiration. respiratory control ratios, as for isolated mitochondria, depend upon the substrate being metabolized. a significant fraction of added adp appears to gain entry into the intact toad bladder and is converted to atp, anaerobiosis and amobarbital lead to increased levels of reduction of pyridine nucleotide. the spectroscopic and metabolic properties of the reduced pyridine nucleotide being studied identify it with that fraction of dpnh which is bound at one of the energy conservation sites linking phosphorylation reactions with electron transfer.
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  • 168
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    Notes: Electropotential differences between the cytoplasm and external medium have been compared in the mature R. pipiens occyte and the ovulated unfertilized egg as a function of [Na]o, [K]o, [Ca]o and [Cl]o. In solutions containing 1.0 mM Ca++ the oocyte behaved as though it were predominantly permeable to K+ and Cl-, i.e., like a KCl electrode. However, the steady potential decreased with decreasing [Ca]o and in 5 × 10-4 mM [Ca]o the oocyte membrane behaved like a NaCl electrode. Studies on the steady potential as a function of [Na]o, [K]o and [Cl]o in 1.0 mM Ca++ or Ca-free solutions suggest that Ca++ controls the passive permeability of the oocyte membrane to Na+ and Cl-. In the ovulated unfertilized egg the K+ selectivity of the cell membrane disappeared and the system behaved like a NaCl electrode. No effect of external Ca++ or K+ concentration changes on the steady potential was observed. These results indicate that the ion permeability properties of the ovulated egg are similar to that of the ovarian oocyte in Ca-deficient medium, and suggests that the mechanism of ovulation may involve the removal of Ca++ regulation of ion permeability of the egg cell membrane.
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  • 169
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    Notes: Incubation of washed white cells with phytohemagglutinin (PHA) had a stimulatory effect on the rate of C14O2 evolution from uniformly C14-labeled glucose by the cells. The intensity of this effect depended not only on the concentration of PHA, but also on the duration of soaking of the cells in protein-free medium for tissue culture before PHA was added and on the length of incubation of the soaked cells with PHA before glucose-U-C14 was added. This effect of PHA on the rate of glucose-U-C14 oxidation by the cells was essentially the same, whether white blood cells or peritoneal white cells were used.
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  • 170
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    Notes: The utilization of L-glutamate by clone 929 mouse cells growing in a synthetic medium, MAL 294/2, was studied with the aid of carbon-14 labeled L-glutamate. The rate of consumption of extracellular glutamate was rapid even though the extracellular concentration of this substance has been found to remain constant or to increase. The rate of uptake during an interval of otpimal growth was calculated to be approximately 42 mμmoles/mg of cell protein per hour.Among the metabolic products that are derived from the carbon of glutamate and secreted from the cells are carbon dioxide, lactic acid, proline, alanine, alpha-ketoglutaric acid and 5-carboxypyrrolidone. Aspartic acid, although produced by the cells in amounts sufficient to meet the needs for growth, does not appear as an extracellular product of glutamate metabolism. Extracts of L cells were found to exhibit four times as much glutamic-oxaloacetic as glutamic-pyruvic transaminase activities. Failure to secrete aspartic acid must not be due to a deficiency in the transaminase. The transaminase concentrations are apparently not affected by variations in the concentrations of aspartic acid and alanine in the medium, both of which are absent from MAL 294/2.5-Carboxypyrrolidone, although produced from L-glutamate by L cells, is metabolically inert in this system. Likewise, mouse fetal lung cells, cultured in a similar way, use glutamic acid as extensively as L cells and fail to metabolize exogenous 5-carboxypyrrolidone.
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  • 171
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 455-461 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Ventricles from 11-day-old chick embryonic heart were disaggregated by elastase and the component cells cultured on glass in maintenance medium containing 10 μc of P32. After 48 hours incubation at 37°C the medium was removed, the cells rinsed and exposed to a phosphate-free test solution for two hours. During this period samples of the test medium were removed for counting and spectrophotometric analysis. Cells incubated in solutions lacking amino acids or vitamins or serum components lost phosphate at essentially the same rate as in the complete culture medium; furthermore such cells lost very small amounts of nucleotide materials. Cells incubated in 0.16 M NaCl lost phosphate and nucleotides rapidly; the addition of either K+ or Ca+2 or Mg+2 reduced phosphate and nucleotide loss and cells in balanced saline media containing all four cations, retained phosphate and nucleotides at essentially the same level as in the complete medium. These results show that primary isolated chick heart cells can be maintained for short periods in physiological saline solutions without injury and that saline balance in short term studies is a primary factor in maintaining these cells in an uninjured state.
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  • 172
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    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The heat and water balance of the antelope jack rabbit, Lepus alleni, was studied at various ambient temperatures. At high ambient temperature the animal primarily depends on evaporation for dissipation of the heat load. The use of water was, however, less than could be expected if only body size is considered.It was shown that, when the ambient temperature is below body temperature, there is a two- to three-fold increase in the conductance of the animal as ambient approaches body temperature. This facilitates dry heat loss and contributes to water economy. At ambient temperatures above body temperature the direction of heat flow is reversed, now being from the environment to the body. In this situation the heat flow inwards is impeded by a decrease in conductance to minimal values, thus achieving a considerable saving in the use of water for evaporation.
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  • 173
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 501-506 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: It has been found that human red cell ghosts react differently in the presence of various sugars in the medium. The stability of spheric ghosts is preserved in solutions of sugars entering red cells by means of the common carrier. In media of other sugars the ghosts' shapes change to shrunken, crenated forms and between the microscope slides to discoid ones. Under the conditions employed it was further observed that the incubation of fructose- or rhamnose-containing ghosts in solutions of sugars sharing the carriers led to an equilibration of sugars between the medium and the ghosts. The impermeability of ghosts for sugars not sharing the carriers was supported by the finding that fructose could be washed out to a much less extent than glucose. These results suggest that sugars without affinity to the carriers may move in the erythrocyte membrane through nonspecific sites (pores, channels).
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  • 174
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 487-500 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The Na-K ATPase found in sedimentable fractions of intestinal epithelium of rats hydrolyzed cytidine triphosphate nearly as well as ATP (25% to 50%); was active only in presence of divalent cations, with specificity for Mg (100%), Mn (50%) and Ca (10%); showed a plateau of activation when Mg concentrations were in excess of substrate; and was inhibited by a second divalent cation (Zn 〉 Mn 〉 Ca), and by 3 × 10-4 M ouabain (50%). Parallel assays of rat red cell ghosts showed differences in substrate specificity (CTP was not utilized), in activation kinetics (activation peak with Mg) and in greater specificity to Mg (Mn was a weaker activator and Zn was a weaker inhibitor). Stabilities also differed in the two preparations: Na—K ATPase of intestinal epithelium was activated by sucrose extraction and denatured during cytolysis at room temperature, while that of red cell fragments was denatured during sucrose extraction and preserved by hemolysis at room temperature. Other properties of Na—K ATPase studied in the two tissues included activation by monovalent cations (optimum at 160 mM Na, 15 mM K), specificity to monovalent cations, and sensitivity to lipid solvents and to some drugs. The data were discussed in terms of comparative properties of Na—K ATPases of various cells.Residual ATPase activities of intestinal epithelium and red cell ghosts were shown to differ in substrate specificity, inhibition and activation. “Residual ATPase” from intestinal epithelium was a zinc-activated nucleoside polyphosphate phosphohydrolase, while ghosts contained Mg—ATPase. Only the latter enzyme was specific to ATP and Mg, activated by Ca in presence of Mg, and sensitive to inhibition by PCMB and Zn.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966) 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 176
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. i 
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  • 177
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. ii 
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  • 178
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 1-19 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The amino acid compositions of homologous tryptic peptides, as well as the amino acid sequences of complete peptide chains, are compared in hemoglobins of different species. Special attention is given to the analyses of mammalian and fish hemoglobins. The multiplicity of hemoglobins in one species and the differences between the hemoglobins of different species are considered. These differences are discussed in view of base exchanges, deletions, insertions, and gene duplications.Enormous differences are found between any two single hemoglobin chains. The number of amino acids varies from 127 to 156 residues. In comparing all the hemoglobins, only eight amino acids are found in identical positions (invariant residues). All hemoglobins analyzed to date follow the rule of “isopolar substitution” of Perutz, Kendrew, and Watson. The results are summarized and considered with regard to certain parallels in the morphology.
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  • 179
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 21-31 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Precision scale models of sickle cell hemoglobin molecules indicate that the genetic substitution of valine for glutamic acid at the sixth position in the two β chains allows an intramolecular hydrophobic bond to form. This changes the conformation in such a way as to allow molecular stacking. Results of subjection of Hb S solution to temperature change and to propane are consistent with the presence of such a bond. Examination of sickled erythrocytes in a magnetic field and in polarized light indicates that the Hb S molecules are aligned in situ. Filaments interpreted as hollow cables of six Hb S monofilaments have been demonstrated by electron microscopy.
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  • 180
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    Notes: The control of circadian activity rhythms (diurnal rhythms) in insects has been suggested to result by periodic neuroendocrine secretions. More specifically, Harker ('56) claimed that the locomotor rhythm in the cockroach, Periplaneta americana, is timed by a secretory “clock” located in the subesophageal ganglion. Later experiments by Harker indicated that this “clock” function failed unless the retrocerebral organs were left intact; allatectomy was said (no evidence given) to abolish a rhythm. The procedure for demonstrating a “clock” function in the ganglion involved transplanting it from a rhythmic donor into the hemocoel of an arrhythmic host and observing that the host subsequently became rhythmic. This result (without explicit information about the phase of the rhythm) does not warrant the conclusion that the ganglion acts as a clock. Therefore, I have attempted to confirm and extend these important results. Employing techniques essentially identical to Harker's, and using the same species of roach, I have been unable to find any evidence to support the original claim: (1) in 20 test animals, implantation of ganglia from rhythmic donors failed to re-instate a rhythm, and (2) allatectomy (22 cases) or removal of the entire retrocerebral complex (20 cases) did not interfere with the rhythm.The results of another series of experiments show that the cockroach brain is involved in the control of the activity rhythm. When the brain is surgically bisected (mid-sagittal) through the pars intercerebralis, arrhythmic activity patterns are immediately evoked. These continue for many weeks, but in a few cases rhythms ultimately “regenerate”.
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  • 181
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 65-75 
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The structural genes for the chains of hemoglobin control not only the amino acid sequence but also the net rate of synthesis of the chains. In some cases, high rate of destruction associated with a structural abnormality is an important factor in net synthesis. Balanced net production of α and β chains is probably maintained by selection against mutations that result in gross imbalance, since gross imbalance causes hemolytic anemia or death. Minor imbalances may be compensated for by destruction of excess chains without destruction of red blood cells. A proposed model for control of rate of synthesis of the globin chains postulates that completed chains are released from mRNA at a rate determined by the slowest step in their assembly. Decreased synthesis can result from a mutation that results in a slower step anywhere along the mRNA. On the other hand, increased synthesis can only result from a change in the specific position of the rate-limiting step.
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  • 182
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    Notes: Subunits of immunoglobulins have been prepared by two methods, both of which have contributed to our knowledge of the structural basis of antibody specificity. The first method is enzymic hydrolysis with either papain or pepsin and leads to the unequivocal conclusion that each combining site is contained in a fragment (Fab) of about 45,000 molecular weight and formed from the light chain and the N-terminal half of the heavy chain, the Fd fragment. The second method of preparing subunits is to reduce the interchain disulfide bonds and to isolate the chains. This should decide whether the combining site is in the Fd fragment, the light chain, or is formed jointly by both. In fact, considerable loss of affinity for the antigen follows, whatever technique is used to dissociate the peptide chains and, although many papers have been published on this subject, no definite answer has yet been obtained. Although the majority opinion probably favors the view that both chains are concerned in the formation of the combining site, our tentative conclusion is that the site is placed entirely in the heavy chain and that the light chain has only a semispecific role in facilitating the reformation of the native configuration of the heavy chain after its disruption under the conditions necessary for dissociation of the two chains.
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  • 183
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    Notes: Previous evidence that the specificity of antibodies is determined by differences in their primary structure was based on the finding of characteristic differences in the average amino acid compositions of five purified rabbit antibodies. These differences were shown to be independent of those associated with the allotypic specificities of rabbit γ G-immunoglobulins and independent of the charge on the determinant group of the antigens employed. Further support was provided by recent studies of the location of the amino acid differences in the antibody structures. (1) The differences were found to be distributed in both the light and heavy polypeptide chains, which correlated with immunological data indicating that both chains contribute to the formation of the active site. (2) The amino acid differences were all located in an active fragment obtained after cleavage of the C-terminal half of the heavy chain with cyanogen bromide. Further fractionation of this active fragment showed that the amino acid differences observed in the heavy chains were localized in the N-terminal half known to be involved in the active site. The simplest interpretation of these results is that antibody formation is a genetically controlled process. However, the finding that the light chain from any one antibody was heterogeneous with respect to its amino acid content despite its average characteristic composition raises the possibility that mechanism of antibody synthesis may not be analogous to that of other proteins. Proposed normal and abnormal mechanisms are discussed in relation to both these data on antibody primary structure and the data on the primary structure of the related myeloma proteins.
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  • 184
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 129-132 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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  • 185
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 109-127 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The mediastinal nodes of untreated rats contain medullary cords populated by variously matured plasmocytes, classified into large, medium, and small on the basis of nuclear diameters. Since hemocytopoietic cells proliferate while maturing and since proliferation yields progressively greater numbers of mitoses, it follows that the order of mitotic increment of the variously matured plasmocytes can tell the position of each type in the plasmocytic series. Counts were carried out in 32 rats killed at four successive 6-hour intervals. For 3000 plasmocytes counted perrat, there was an average of 10, 26, and 34 mitoses of large, medium, and small plasmocytes respectively. On the basis of an equal mitotic duration for all plasmocytes, this indicated that the large plasmocytes yield the medium plasmocytes which, in turn, give rise to the small plasmocytes. The number of generations of each type of plasmocyte was determined by comparing the experimental ratios, for number of mitoses of a progeny type of plasmocyte over that of its progenitor type, with similar theoretical ratios expected for variable numbers of generations of progeny and progenitor cells. Comparisons indicated that there are likely four generations of large plasmocytes followed by two of medium plasmocytes and also two of small plasmocytes. As for the nature of the ultimate precursors of the large plasmocytes, it is postulated that they are the hypertrophied endothelial cells of the nodes' postcapillary venules. These cells would receive the appropriate stimulus for plasmocytic differentiation from the small lymphocytes which cross them to enter these venules.
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  • 186
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 77-108 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The genetics of immunoglobulins (Ig) has been discussed from the standpoint of the determinism of the antigenic specificities of different kinds that they carry: isotypic specificities, which are uniform in all individuals of the same animal species; allotypic specificities, which are not the same in all individuals, but are uniform within groups of individuals; idiotypic specificities, each of which not only is particular to the antibody against one given antigen but is, in addition, variable with individuals.Allotypic variants of the Ig are mainly these: in the rabbit, of the L polypeptide chains (ab group) and of the IgG chains (aa group); in man, of the L chains (Inv system) and of the IgG H chains (Gm system); in the mouse, of the IgG and IgA H chains. The control of the allotypic variants of the IgG H chains is mediated in man and mouse by alleles at several closely linked loci which were distinguished, with the help of myeloma proteins, because of differences in isotypic specificities. In the mouse, these loci are closely linked also to the locus which controls the IgA H chains. Several linked loci are also responsible for the IgG H chains of rabbits, and nearly certainly for their L chains.The cellular aspect of the genetics of immunoglobulins has been reviewed with the main conclusion that each cell seems to be specialized in the synthesis of Ig made of H and L chains of only one allotypic kind. The number of cells specialized in the synthesis of one kind of molecules seems to be proportional to the concentration of these molecules in serum.
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  • 187
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 133-147 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Four different assay methods of bone marrow stem cells have been examined with regard to the kinetic pattern following perturbation of the steady-state system, e.g., by irradiation. Basically, the stem cell assays fall into two categories: those depending on grafting hemopoietic cells into suitably treated recipients, and those in which recovery of the population is allowed in the animal in which the perturbation was produced, without handling the cells. Evidence is accumulating which indicates that in the grafting techniques, a selective loss of stem cells may occur, especially stem cells in cell cycle; hence, in early stages of recovery of the population, unduly low numerical values might be noted. In view of this evidence, the concept of the colony-forming cell may have to be replaced by the concept of the colony-forming property of the stem cell.
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  • 188
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 67 (1966), S. 149-167 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The proper development of the organs of the immune system is dependent on at least three factors: (1) the development of anlagen with the capacity to trap antigens and support the proliferation of lymphoid and plasma cell precursors; (2) the production by the bone marrow of lymphoid and plasma cell precursors which seed in the lymphoid organs; and (3) the thymus, which seeds reactive cells to the lymphoid organs and produces a humoral factor stimulating antigen-triggered proliferation of primitive lymphoid and plasma cells. Studies on cell population changes in the lymph nodes following thymectomy in mice confirm earlier evidence that most cells produced in the thymus do not seed to the lymphoid organs, but die locally in the thymus.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 13-17 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: In dermal melanocytes of Rana pipiens, colchicine is known to produce a gradual, dosage-dependent dispersion of melanin granules, irreversible over several hours. This effect is potentiated by a number of chemical agents that normally produce a reversible dispersion of granules. In the present study we examined the effect of high hydrostatic pressure on changes induced in melanocytes by colchicine.In Ringer's solution, samples of skin from a single frog were incubated for 30 minutes at room temperature with or without colchicine, 9 × 10-5 M. Then two samples, one of which had been pretreated with colchicine, were successively subjected to 12,000 psi for one hour at 25 to 26°C. The degree of dispersion of melanin granules in melanocytes was observed before, during and after the period of pressure.In frog skin pretreated with colchicine, the usually gradual, irreversible dispersion of melanin granules in melanocytes was potentiated.Since high pressure is known to produce solational changes in protoplasm, such changes may accompany dispersion of melanin granules in melanocytes. If this be so, then sol-gel equilibria may be important in the action of dispersing and aggregating agents, many of which are hormones and other physiologically active agents. Finally, the present study supports the hypothesis that colchicine shifts protoplasmic sol-gel equilibria toward a less gelated condition.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 35-44 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Using paired frog muscles it was shown that fluoride caused no observable change in the rate of oxygen consumption in Ca++-free Ringer's solution, but stimulated the rate in Ca++-containing Ringer's; the obvious explanation for this stimulation is the spontaneous activity of the muscle caused by the rapid lowering of Ca++ ion concentration when fluoride was added. Fluoride had no effect on potassium movement in these experiments. In a Ca++-free solution fluoride (0.03 M) inhibited the insulin + lactate-stimulated oxygen consumption of muscles which had been adapted to the absence of calcium by overnight soaking. In Ca++-containing Ringer's there was no net effect of fluoride, demonstrating the fact that the direct inhibition of oxygen consumption was cancelled by the indirect stimulation caused by the fluoride-lowering of the Ca++ ion concentration. Fluoride depressed the IL-induced K uptake but for this effect some calcium, albeit a very low concentration, was necessary. Fluoride did not alter the muscle glycogen concentrations.The only observable effect of calcium (in the absence of fluoride) was a rise in respiration caused by exposure to a sudden reduction in Ca++ ion concentration. Both the IL-stimulated O2 rate and K uptake were independent of Ca++ ions since they occurred in Ca++-free adapted muscles, in muscles exposed to a rapid reduction of Ca++ ions as well as in muscles in a Ca++-containing Ringer's solution.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 61-67 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: It is possible to use the purine pyrophosphorylase in mammalian cell culture systems as a genetic marker in selecting small numbers of enzyme positive cells from large populations of pyrophosphorylase negative cells of the mouse lymphoma line P388 in medium containing amethopterin, hypoxanthine, glycine and thymidine. Conversely, it is readily possible to obtain pyrophosphorylase-deficient cells by treatment with 8-Azaguanine. We were unsuccessful in demonstrating DNA-mediated transformation using DNA from enzyme positive cells incubated with cells which were enzyme negative.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 69-73 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The effects of three physical-chemical factors, temperature, hydrogen ion concentration, and partial pressure of oxygen, on the respiratory functions of blood of the toad (Bufo marinus) have been studied.Measurements of oxygen affinity of hemoglobin in whole blood were measured tonometrically by a method devised for small quantities of blood. At pH 7.40 and 25°C blood was found to be 50% saturated with oxygen at a partial pressure of 44 mm Hg of oxygen. The Bohr effect was measured at various temperatures and found to be about one-half that found for mammalian blood. Carbon dioxide content of toad blood changes only slightly in the oxygenated and reduced states. Thus the “Haldane” effect parallels the small Bohr effect. Toad blood was found to have average hematocrit values of 37% for erythrocytes and average hemoglobin values of 11 gm/100 ml per cubic millimeter of blood. The respiratory functions of the blood of the toad conform to the pattern of respiratory mechanisms available for gas exchange between the environment and tissues of the organism.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 81-83 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The ability of neutrophil leukocytes to extravasate into the peritoneal cavity in response to an intraperitoneal injection of bacterial endotoxin was studied in mice. The normal response of a marked accumulation of intraperitoneal neutrophils was completely abolished by halothane anesthesia. It was further shown that such abolition depended upon the presence of halothane duringthe time the extravasation would normally be occurring. The evidence points toward an effect on either the leukocyte or the vessel rather than a non-specific “stress” effect. It is suggested that the effect is on the neutrophil, rendering it less deformable and, hence, less able to undergo trans-vascular diapedesis.
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  • 194
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 75-80 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The electrophoretic mobilities of Ehrlich ascites, sarcoma 37 ascites, mouse liver cells and their isolated nuclei were measured under similar environmental conditions. No differences in mobility were detected between cells and homologous nuclei from the same cell population and it was concluded that their surface charge densities were probably the same. The effect of neuraminidase on Ehrlich ascites and liver cells and nuclei was also determined; neuraminidase reduced the mobility of Ehrlich ascites cell nuclei as well as cells. The reduction in mobility of cells and nuclei prepared by a sucrose method was the same; however, the reduction in mobility of citric acid prepared nuclei was less than that of citric acid treated cells. The reduction in mobility of both liver cells and nuclei was small or insignificant. It is suggested that although cells and nuclei have similar electrophoretic mobilities, possibly different groups contribute to their surface charge.
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    Notes: Treatment of cultured CHO cells with neuraminidase reduced the mean surface sialic acid density to less than 10% of pretreatment values. Upon return to culture the mean density returned to pretreatment values within 12--16 hours. During the period of surface sialic acid deficiency, no effect on cell volume, cell division, or attachment and spreading of cells on glass could be discerned. Surface sialic acid regeneration occurred at the same rate in suspension and monolayer cultures. Cells treated with neuraminidase, then with 10 mM thymidine or 6 μg/ml actinomycin D, ceased division yet replaced their surface sialic acid at the usual rate. By contrast puromycin (50 μg/ml), while stopping cell division, caused rapid inhibition of the regeneration process. Puromycin did not prevent cells untreated with neuraminidase from maintaining their control amount of surface sialic acid per cell.
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    Notes: Mitochondria isolated from mouse liver can incorporate amino acids into mitochondrial protein. Studies with oligomycin and antihistamine drugs indicate that this incorporation may not be an ATP requiring process.
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    Notes: Intracellular ribonuclease from the ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis GL was purified 10-fold. After preheating for 20 minutes at 100°C of the ribonuclease preparation 80% of its activity was lost. Preheating under the same conditions, however, in the presence of RNA, did not affect the enzyme activity. Between 0°C and 41°C the apparent activation energy was 15,600 cal per deg. per mole.
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    Journal of Cellular Physiology 68 (1966), S. 99-106 
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    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
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    Notes: Isolated single giant synapses from the squid stellate gangalion, analyzed for cholinesterase activity with the microgasometric magnetic diyer method had a high activity compared to that of pieces of pre- and postsynaptic axons.
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