Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) induced by ventricular injection of antimyelin oligodendrocyte antibodies in DA rats showed severe clinical signs 4 to 5 days after injection. Immunocytochemically, connexin 43 (Cx43) expression increased in the choroid plexus and in the subventricular and subgranular zones of the hippocampus during the development of acute EAE, and decreased after the beginning of the remission phase of the disease. Quantitative computing analysis showed a significantly increased Cx43 expression in the choroid plexus at the peak of the disease. Plaque-pattern expression of the Cx43 in the choroid plexus (CP) of acute EAE correlated with the increased docking and coupling of the Cx43 hemichannels revealed by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The inner diameter of the gap junction (GJ) channels decreased in the CP of acute EAE, measured by AFM. Cell structure conformational changes showed influences the channels' flexibility in acute EAE.
Cytogenetic analyses were performed on dividing cells from the peritoneal effluent of 26 patients undergoing chronic peritoneal dialysis (CPD). Numerical and structural abnormalities of karyotype served as the diagnostic criteria for “atypical cells.” The following cytogenetic abnormalities were observed in 7 patients: hyperdiploidy (in 6 patients), hypodiploidy (in 2 patients), and marker chromosomes (in 2 patients). In 3 patients more than one chromosome abnormality was present. Dividing cells with normal mitoses were observed in 11 patients, while in the remaining 8 patients no dividing cells could be found. There were no differences in age, sex, duration of dialysis, and peritonitis incidence between patients with pathological mitoses and those without it. The question whether this unexpected finding is a consequence of immunosuppressed uremic status, dialysis procedure, or some other factor remains to be elucidated.
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