A geometric representation of the carotid bifurcation is presented with data obtained from biplane angiograms of normal branches and branches exhibiting less than 5% vessel diameter reduction. Three features are identified that are of importance in the interpretation of ultrasonic Doppler velocity information and in the design of engineering flow models for evaluation of carotid branch hemodynamics: the variability of the bifurcation angles, the degree of tortuosity, and the nonplanar nature of the branches. In addition, data collected demonstrate the potential usefulness of the common carotid artery as a reference diameter in evaluating stenosis of the carotid bulb.
The capacity of various growth factors to induce c-fos expression is diminished with senescence. Because adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP)-mediated responses are also blunted with aging, we wondered whether cAMP-induced c-fos gene expression might be impaired with senescence. Using IMR fibroblasts, we found that prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) and forskolin, stimulators of cAMP accumulation in young and senescent cells, increased abundance of c-fos and junB mRNA more in young than senescent cells. The abundance of the cAMP response element binding protein (CREB), a transcription factor which enhances gene expression when phosphorylated by protein kinase A, was markedly decreased in both whole cell and nuclear extracts of senescent cells, in both Western blotting and in gel retardation assays. Also, PGE1-induced phosphorylation of CREB by protein kinase A was markedly attenuated in senescent cells. There is a marked decrement in expression of CREB with senescence, and the results suggest the possibility that the diminished expression of CREB may contribute to altered cAMP-mediated regulation of gene expression with senescence.
In a previous study (Frazier et al., 1990), it was demonstrated that two patients with type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus had antibodies in their serum which reacted with four 29 kDa pancreas-specific proteins on two-dimensional immunoblots. This paper reports on the purification and identification of these pancreatic proteins. The protein with the pI closest to pH7 was purified through the use of ammonium sulfate fractionation and ion-exchange chromatography. Gel filtration chromatography established that the protein's molecular weight was closer to 25 kDa. Amino acid composition and sequence analyses demonstrated homology between the protein and chymotrypsin. It is suggested that an abnormal regulation of chymotrypsin activity might be related to antibodies formed in some diabetic patients.
Sera containing antibodies to beta-endorphin from 2 patients with major depressive disorder were shown to have antidiotypic antibodies that specifically inhibited reactivity between anti-beta-endorphin IgG and beta-endorphin. Autologous and homologous antiidiotypic anti-anti-beta-endorphin IgG antibodies were isolated by affinity chromatography. The purified antiidiotypic antibody did not bind beta-endorphin but competed with [125I]beta-endorphin for rat brain opiate receptors. Normal IgG that was similarly treated had negligible competitive effects. The antibody bound to the membrane preparation; such binding was inhibited by opiate receptor ligands. Binding of the antiidiotype to a 60,000-dalton protein from rat brain was detected by Western immunoblot analysis. This protein corresponds in molecular weight to proteins proposed to be components of opiate receptors. These findings imply that immune reactivity to neuropeptides could contribute to psychiatric impairment.
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