It has been demonstrated that opioid peptides are involved in the stimulation of food intake in rats and that the circulating beta-endorphin levels are increased in genetically obese rodents. Therefore, to assess whether the changes in food intake may influence circulating beta-endorphin levels in obese subjects, plasma beta-endorphin, ACTH and cortisol concentrations were determined in obese patients after an oral glucose load and during a 7-day total starvation. Baseline plasma beta-endorphin concentrations were significantly higher in obese patients than in control normal-weight subjects, while ACTH and cortisol levels were similar in both groups. Plasma beta-endorphin, ACTH and cortisol concentrations were not affected by the ingestion of 75 g glucose, neither were plasma beta-endorphin concentrations modified during prolonged starvation. Moreover, the lack of nycthemeral variations in beta-endorphin levels, documented before and during starvation while plasma ACTH and cortisol were significantly reduced in the evening, suggests that some extra anterior pituitary sources or some obesity-related changes in beta-endorphin metabolism may contribute to the pool of circulating beta-endorphin in obese subjects. On the other hand, even the extreme changes in nutritional conditions, such as total food deprivation or glucose ingestion, are devoid of any detectable influence on circulating beta-endorphin levels.
Summary.Immunoassays based on latex agglutination or enzyme labelling (ELISA) were devised for the detection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of BrucelZa abortus, or its degradation products, in biological fluids of infected mice. The agglutination of latex was measured by counting of the remaining non-agglutinated particles in an automated immunoassay analyser. LPS was assayed by agglutination with antibodycoated latex and by competitive inhibition of agglutination of LPS-coated latex by anti-LPS antiserum. The inhibition system was more sensitive for the detection of degradation products of LPS. Correlation between ELISA and agglutination inhibition immunoassay was excellent (r = 0.96). Degradation of LPS occurred during storage, particularly when the samples contained specific antibodies. It could be prevented by removing cells immediately after collecting blood samples and by heating or alkaline denaturation of plasma.CBA/H mice were infected with various doses [65-(65 x lo6) cfu] of B. abortus biovar 3 cells and the course of infection followed by immunoassay of LPS-related antigens in serum and urine, and by titration of specific antibodies and non-specific circulating immune complexes. The concentration of LPS degradation products, assayed by the agglutination inhibition assay, was related to the severity of the infection, which was assessed by viable counts of B. abortus in the spleen. A close correlation was observed between the values of antigenaemia, the number of cfu (r = 0.97), and the inoculum size (r = 0.99 at day 28).
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