Epidemiologic and in vitro data have shown that the association of house-dust mite (HDM) allergy and snail allergy in the same patients was due to cross-reactivity between HDM and snail allergenic components. However, the cross-reacting allergen(s) have not yet been identified. In vitro reactivity of seven patients' sera to the various extracts and hemolymph of four different Helix snail species was analyzed by IgE detection and immunodots and Western blots. Cross-reactivity between snails and Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus was assessed by immunodot and ELISA inhibition in two patients. Heterologous inhibition of the snail immunodot and ELISA was observed in one serum. Western blotting showed a specific binding on all four snail species extracts; molecular weights of snail allergens ranged from < 21 to 200 kDa. Marked individual differences were observed in the seven sera under study; most sera demonstrated IgE recognition of multiple bands, illustrating that no single allergen is responsible for cross-reactivity between snail and mite. These results confirm that cross-reactivity exists between snails of the Helix genus and HDM. This cross-reactivity, involving more than a single allergen, may be of clinical significance in atopic patients allergic to D. pteronyssinus. The identity of the cross-reacting allergens remains to be determined. Potential candidates include the thermostable minor allergens of D. pteronyssinus, tropomyosin and hemocyanin.
This study aimed at evaluating OS in an amyotrophic quadricipital syndrome with cardiac impairment in a family of 80 members with a mutation in lamin A/C gene. Twelve patients had cardiac involvement (5 cardiac and skeletal muscles impairment). OS was evaluated in blood samples (thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), carbonylated proteins (PCO)) 6 "affected patients" with phenotypic and genotypic abnormalities without heart failure and 3 "healthy carrier" patients. OS was higher in affected patients than in healthy, as shown by the higher TBARS and PCO values. Patients with cardiac and peripheral myopathy exhibited a higher OS than patients with only cardiac disease (TBARS: 1.73 +/- 0.05 vs. 1.51 +/- 0.04 mmol/l (p = 0.051), PCO: 2.73 +/- 0.34 vs. 0.90 +/- 0.10 nmol/mg protein (p = 0.47)), and with healthy carriers patients (TBARS: 1.73 +/- 0.05 vs. 1.16 +/- 0.14 mmol/l (p = 0.05), PCO: 2.73 +/- 0.34 vs. 0.90 +/- 0.20 nmol/mg protein (p = 0.47)). OS may thus contribute to the degenerative process of this laminopathy. ROS production occurs, prior to heart failure symptoms. We suggest that the extent activation may also promote the variable phenotypic expression of the disease.
Dormant, hibernating snails whose brains (supraoesophageal cerebral ganglia and associated dorsal bodies) were removed by surgery continued to live retracted in their shells. The remaining ganglia of the circumoesophageal ring did not regenerate in the 12 months following the removal of the brain. The transplanted brains in the haemocoel (auto- or allo-graft) were not rejected and many of their cerebral neurosecretory cells and the endocrine dorsal bodies appeared normal structurally and functionally, as evidenced by ultrastructural and immunocytochemical studies. The data from these experiments demonstrate the possibility of studying by in vivo culture methods the roles of cerebral ganglia and endocrine dorsal bodies on the control of reproduction under different temperature regimes.
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