This study was designed to determine regional changes of amino acids and indole amines in the brain and possible interactions between amino acids and indole amines 18 h after hepatectomy in rats. Hepatectomy and glucose infusion alone resulted in a profound increase of most large neutral amino acids (LNAA) in plasma and in the brain except for the branched-chain amino acids (BCAA), which maintained normal or somewhat lower values in plasma. Hepatectomy and infusion of glucose combined with BCAA sharply reduced the plasma and brain amino acid concentrations of other LNAA. Simultaneously the concentrations of serotonin and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid were decreased in all brain regions. In both groups of hepatectomized rats there were regional variations of the amino acid and the indole amine concentrations in the brain, but the response to BCAA infusion was generally the same in all brain regions. No difference in survival between the 2 groups could be found.
The molluscicidal properties of Solanum nigrum L. were tested against three Egyptian snail species (Biomphalaria alexandrina, Bulinus truncatus and Lymnaea natalensis), each an intermediate host of parasites causing human schistosomiasis or fascioliasis. The plant was collected in two regions within Egypt: Fayium and Giza. Snails were exposed for 24 and 48 h, to the dry powdered fruits and leaves or to crude water extracts of the powders, and mortality was recorded. The water extract of the leaves collected in Fayium (FLWE) had the highest molluscicidal activity, with median lethal concentrations (LC50) of 18.6 mg/litre for Bi. alexandrina, 14.5 mg/litre for Bu. truncatus and 17.7 mg/litre for L. natalensis. When Bi. alexandrina infected with Schistosoma mansoni were exposed to FLWE (20 or 25 mg/litre), they shed significantly fewer cercariae than unexposed snails (P < 0.02). The cercaricidal properties of FLWE were directly tested against S. haematobium, S. mansoni and Fasciola gigantica cercariae and a time-concentration relationship was observed; the concentrations needed to kill all cercariae (LC100) within 30 min of exposure were 30 mg/litre for both S. haematobium and S. mansoni and 40 mg/litre for F. gigantica.
SummaryThe present study was carried out in order to evaluate the mutagenic effect of 3 nitrogenous fertilizers; urea, ammonium nitrate and calcium nitrate; on Drosophila melanogaster. Newly hatched larvae were treated with the LC 25 and LC 50 of the 3 tested nitrogenous fertilizers. The classic sex-linked recessive lethal (SLRL) test was used to detect the differential mutagenic effect of the fertilizers on the 3 germ stages. The results showed that all fertilizers exhibited variable mutation frequencies in the different broods of spermatogenesis after a single treatment. Urea exhibited a direct mutagenic effect on post-meiotic stages whereas ammonium nitrate and calcium nitrate revealed an indirect mutagenic effect on meiotic and pre-meiotic stages. The electrophoretic separation of proteins (SDS-PAGE) showed that treatment with these fertilizers resulted in polymorphetic changes in different low and high molecular weight protein bands, causing alteration in the electrophoretic patterns and densities of proteins. This study showed that the tested nitrogenous fertilizers possess mutagenic potentialities which are related to their nitrogen content.
Portal-systemic shunting of blood is associated with hyperammonemia, an increased glutamine concentration
in brain, an altered plasma neutral amino acid pattern, and high levels of several of the large
neutral amino acids in brain. Since some of these amino acids are precursors for neurotransmitters and
for other potentially neuroactive substances, high CNS levels of these amino acids may contribute to the
development of encephalopathy. In order to determine the relative importance of changes in brain
glutamine levels and changes in competition among the neutral amino acids for blood-brain transport,
we measured the concentrations of the large neutral amino acids in plasma, cisternal cerebrospinal fluid
and in brain tissue from various regions of dogs after end-to-side portacaval shunt. Although the
changes in CSF amino acid levels correlated partially with altered amino acid plasma competitor ratios,
better correlations were observed with the elevation of CSF glutamine. These results suggest a model of
blood-brain amino acid transport in which a high level of glutamine in brain extracellular fluid competes
with other neutral amino acids for efflux from brain, thus raising brain amino acid levels after portalsystemic
shunting
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