The effects of changes in macrophage iron status, induced by single or multiple iron injections, iron depletion or pregnancy, on both immune function and mRNA expression of genes involved in iron influx and egress have been evaluated. Macrophages isolated from iron deficient rats, or pregnant rats at day 21 of gestation, either supplemented with a single dose of iron dextran, 10 mg, at the commencement of pregnancy, or not, showed significant increases of macrophage ferroportin mRNA expression, which was paralleled by significant decreases in hepatic Hamp mRNA expression. IRP activity in macrophages was not significantly altered by iron status or the inducement of pregnancy +/- a single iron supplement. Macrophage immune function was significantly altered by iron supplementation and pregnancy. Iron supplementation, alone or combined with pregnancy, increased the activities of both NADPH oxidase and nuclear factor kappa B (NFkappaB). In contrast, the imposition of pregnancy reduced the ability of these parameters to respond to an inflammatory stimuli. Increasing iron status, if only marginally, will reduce the ability of macrophages to mount a sustained response to inflammation as well as altering iron homeostatic mechanisms.
We used [(18)F]-4-fluorobenzamido-N-ethylamino-maleimide ([(18)F]-FBEM) to radiolabel cells ex vivo for in vivo positron emission tomography (PET) in order to assess cell trafficking in mice. In contrast to commonly used imaging agents, [(18)F]-FBEM forms a covalent bond with thiol groups present on the cells surface. The stability of the probe in aqueous medium was tested at different pH values and cross-experiment showed that thiol-labeling efficiency was retained (at least) up to pH 9. The labeling procedure did not affect significantly the cell viability. To illustrate the procedure, PET images of living mice injected intravenously with labeled T lymphocytes were obtained. They showed the expected cell homing in the spleen that was absent in mice injected with free label.
We examined the maintenance of functional and morphological integrity of precision-cut rat liver slices cultured in various incubation systems and conditions for 72 h. Slices were incubated (37 degrees C) for 6, 24, 48, and 72 h in supplemented Williams E medium in 6-well plastic culture plates on a gyratory shaking platform (WPCS) or in a rotating organ culture system (ROCS) using 5% CO2--95% air (WPCS/air or ROCS/air) or 5% CO2--70% O2--25% N2 (WPCS/O2 or ROCS/O2). Biochemical and functional parameters of slices maintained in WPCS/air or WPCS/O2 were almost totally inhibited after 24 h, in keeping with the extensive and diffuse coalescing coagulative necrosis typical of post-ischemic injury affecting almost all the slice surface after 48 h. As compared to freshly isolated slices, slices maintained in ROCS/air for 72 h showed stable ATP and GSH content, increased protein synthesis, and a slight steady decrease in GST activity, while ATP and GST activity remained stable and protein synthesis and GSH content increased in slices incubated in ROCS/O2 for 72 h. The extent of coagulative necrosis was markedly lower in longitudinal sections from slices incubated for 72 h in ROCS/O2 than in ROCS/air. Transversal sections from slices kept in ROCS/air for 72 h showed a thick central band of necrotic cells edged by two peripheral layers of viable hepatocytes, whereas most of the slice was composed of viable hepatocytes lined by two thin layers of necrotic cells after 72 h in ROCS/O2. ROCS/O2 emerged as the system best preserving the histological and functional integrity of rat liver slices in long-term culture.
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