SummaryTurbidimetric studies indicate that Zn(II) accelerates fibrin gelation [decreases clotting time (CT)] and increases maximal fibrin clot turbidity. For any given level of fibrinogen (0.2-2.6 mg/ ml), the relative fibrin turbidity of thrombin-induced clots increases with Zn(II) in a concentration dependent manner. Zinc-associated turbidity increases are also observed in the presence of 2 mM Ca(II). With citrate, similar turbidity increases are observed, though at higher cation levels. Thus, turbidimetry indicates that the gel formed with Zn(II) is coarser, or has thicker fibre strands. SEM micrographs confirm that fibre thickness ranges from 260 Å to 2600 Å, when Zn(II) levels range from 0-50 uM. With citrate, TEM micrographs reveal amore than 20 x fold increase in fibre diameter (100 Å->2000 Å) with higher Zn(II) (<1 mM) levels. Based on a fibrin monomer cross-section of ~60 Å, the electron micrographs indicate that depending on the Zn(II) levels, fibrin strands are composed of between 2 to 40 monomeric fibrin molecules. Thus, at physiologically relevant levels, Zn(II) can drastically modulate fibrin ultrastructure.
1. Zinc-protoporphyrin-IX (ZnPP-IX) is an inhibitor of the enzyme heme-oxygenase-2 (HO-2) and consequently has been used to examine the role of carbon monoxide production in neural tissues. We have measured voltage-gated Ca current in AtT-20 pituitary cells using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique and have assessed the effects of extracellularly applied ZnPP-IX and related compounds. 2. Ca currents evoked by depolarizing steps from a holding potential of -90 mV were of the high-threshold, slowly inactivating type. Fifty-six percent of this current was blocked by 10 microM nifedipine and 16% by 3 microM omega-conotoxin with the remainder resistant to both drugs in combination, suggesting that the total Ca current was a mixture of L, N, and possibly P-type conductances. 3. Bath application of ZnPP-IX resulted in an irreversible, dose-dependent attenuation of Ca current. Five micromolar ZnPP-IX produced a 62% reduction of peak current amplitude with no shift in the current-voltage relation, 0.5 microM produced a 19% reduction, and 0.05 microM produced a variable response, either a small transient attenuation or potentiation. 4. The attenuation of Ca current by 5 microM ZnPP-IX could be nearly completely blocked by co-application of superoxide dismutase in the bath (90 U/ml) but not by addition of an inhibitor of cGMP-dependent protein kinase to the internal saline (KT5823, 1 microM). 5. Other inhibitors of heme-oxygenase with similar potency such as tin-protoporphyrin-IX (Sn-PP-IX) and Zn-deuteroporphyrin-bis-glycol (ZnBG) did not attenuate Ca current when applied at 5microM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
The utilization of tannic acid and guanidine hydrochloride as mordants for better osmium binding has been shown to serve as an excellent alternative to metal coating of organ tissue specimens for scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The present report describes the G T G O procedure, a modification of the TAO technique introduced by Murakami er al. (1977, 1978), which we have found successful for the Preparation of air dried peripheral blood leucocytes for SEM studies. Air dried, GTGO-treated leucocytes show excellent preservation of surface features with minimal cell shrinkage. When critical point dried, GTGO-treated cells are examined, they also show less shrinkage than cells prepared with standard glutaraldehyde fixation and critical point drying. T h e potential application of this air drying procedure (GTGO-AD) to other soft biological specimens is currently under investigation. This technique is recommended as a new and effective air drying procedure for the successful Preparation of cells for SEM.
Leukemic cells from the peripheral blood of 52 patients with acute and chronic leukemias were incubated with 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol ester (TPA). Thirty-one cases of lymphocytic leukemia (18 cases of acute lymphoblastic and 13 cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia), 13 cases of acute nonlymphoblastic (myelo or myelomonoblastic) leukemia, and eight cases of blastic crisis of CGL (seven cases of predominantly myeloblastic crisis, and one case of lymphoblastic crisis) were studied. In all cases of lymphoid leukemia, cells formed clumps or aggregates after exposure to TPA, while in all cases of myeloid leukemia cells became adherent to the substrate. Seven of the eight cases of blastic crisis of CGL were predominantly myeloid in type and cells adhered to the substrate, while in a single case of lymphoid crisis in CGL cells formed clumps after TPA exposure. Functional, cytochemical, and ultrastructural studies showed altered cell differentiation and continuing in vitro maturation of leukemic cells after exposure to TPA. In the light of the above results, it is concluded that this simple test employing TPA exposure in vitro serves as a reliable means of distinguishing blasts from different origins in human leukemias.
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