To test the hypothesis that the genetic lesion causing muscular dystrophy might be reflected in an abnormal intracellular elemental content, the elemental content of individual cardiac and skeletal muscle fibers in 50-day-old male control and cardiomyopathic BIO 53.58 hamsters was determined. The technique of electron probe x-ray microanalysis of freeze-dried tissue was employed. No electrolyte content differences were found between control and diseased animals for nuclei, myofibrillar cytoplasm, or mitochondrially-enriched cytoplasm of cardiac myocytes. Sulfur was elevated in dystrophic cardiac myocytes and was the only element significantly different in heart tissue of control and cardiomyopathic animals. Sulfur was also elevated in dystrophic soleus muscle fibers. The pattern of electrolyte content of these cells reflected a mixture of normal cells and damaged cells with altered electrolyte content. In this hamster model, alteration of electrolyte content of myocytes appears to be a result of the disease process and not an inherent characteristic of muscular dystrophy. The elevated sulfur in dystrophic hamster myocytes reflects a biochemical lesion which deserves further study.
Previous studies have shown that suramin reveals specific PDGF binding sites on U-2 OS human osteosarcoma cells. Studies presented here indicate that U-2 OS cells pretreated with suramin internalize and degrade 125I-PDGF and respond to PDGF by increased tyrosine kinase activity and amino acid transport. However, DNA synthesis in these cells is not reduced by incubation with the PDGF blocking agent suramin and is not stimulated by exogenous PDGF. These data indicate that U-2 OS cells possess functional PDGF receptors but that high levels of DNA synthesis in these cells is unrelated to the binding of secreted PDGF to these cell surface receptors. Thus, it is unlikely that the PDGF mitogen produced by U-2 OS cells stimulates proliferation through an autocrine mechanism involving secretion and subsequent binding to PDGF receptors.
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