ABSTRACT. To examine the influence of insulin on megakaryocytopoiesis, we tested its effect on murine bone marrow cultures in a liquid culture system. In the presence of pokeweed mitogen-stimulated spleen cell conditioned medium in culture, insulin markedly enhanced megakaryocyte colony formation and increased the number and size of free megakaryocytes seen after 7 days. Many of the cells in cultures with insulin, however, were classified as immature, since they had a basophillic cytoplasm, a low cytoplasmic/nuclear ratio and low acetylcholinesterase activity. It is suggested that insulin potentiates murine marrow megakaryocytopoiesis in vitro, but that this is not accompanied by differentiation of the cells from the immature to mature state.
SummaryTreatment of washed rabbit platelets with 1 u/ml of thrombin at 37° C resulted in a disappearance from platelets of a protein with 250,000 dalton molecular weight which was shown to be originated from plasma membrane. Parallel loss of adenyl cyclase was noted, and both reactions were complete within 30 sec. From the patterns of disc electrophoretograms, the importance of quick suppression of thrombin action in demonstrating the primary event was stressed.Thrombin induced an apparent activation of membrane bound phosphodiesterase. This reaction was also complete within 30 sec. The cellular component which contained the enzyme activity was distinct from plasma membrane. Soluble phosphodiesterase was not influenced by thrombin at all.These reactions required intact platelet cells to react with thrombin, and no reaction was detected when subcellular preparations were treated with thrombin.Possibility of collaboration of changes in externally located synthetic enzyme with those in internally located degrading enzyme in the early phase of thrombin action on platelets was suggested.
SummaryThe creatine kinase (CK) activity in rat plasma was found to be correlated with that in serum or platelets. Rat serum contained higher activity not only of CK but also of lactate dehydrogenase than the corresponding plasma. The plasma CK activity decreased with increasing age of rats. Only the brain-type isoenzyme of CK was found in plasma, serum and platelets. Contamination of brain-type with muscle-type isoenzyme was detected in rather exceptional cases in which the activity was high among old rats. These results suggest the possible contribution of blood platelets to the CK activity of circulating plasma as well as to the activity in serum in rats.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.