The short-term effects of O2 deficiency and sodium azide (NaN3) on the hydraulic conductivity of cortical cells in wheat roots was studied using the pressure probe. Hydraulic conductivities were obtained by measuring either turgor relaxation, or volume relaxation under pressure clamp. Both low O2 concentration and NaN3 increased the half times of pressure and volume relaxations. The increases in T½ were found to be due to a decrease in the hydraulic conductivity (Lp) of the cells. The mean values of Lp from pressure relaxation experiments were 7.75 × 10-1m s-1 Mpa-1 in the fully aerated solution and 1.15 and 2.17 x 10-1m s-1 Mpa-1 in low O2 concentration and 1 mol m-3 NaN3 solutions respectively. The pressure clamp experiments yielded similar results to pressure relaxation experiments for both low O2 concentration and 1 mol m-3 NaN3 treatments. In addition to determination of Lp, pressure and volume relaxation experiments were also used to evaluate osmotic volume of the cells. In aerated solutions the osmotic volume of the cells was about twice that of their geometric volume, but in low O2 concentration and NaN3 solutions the osmotic cell volume was reduced and approximately equal to the geometric volume. The decrease in osmotic volume and part of the reduction in Lp may be explained by the occlusion of plasmodesmata induced by low O2 concentration and NaN3.
To evaluate alternative cervical cancer screening methods, digital colposcopy and collection of cervical exfoliated cells for liquid-based cytology (LBC) and hybrid capture 2 (HC2) testing were performed among 2562 women aged 15 -59 years in three study sites in the People's Republic of China (rural Shanxi province, Shenyang city in Liaoning province and Shenzhen city in Guangdong province). Visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) was also evaluated independently from colposcopy. A total of 74 cases of histologically confirmed cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or worse (CIN2 þ ) were identified, and 16 CIN2 þ cases were imputed among unbiopsied women to correct for verification bias. Corrected sensitivity for CIN2 þ was 37% for VIA, 54% for colposcopy, 87% for LBC with a threshold of atypical cells of undetermined significance (LBCXASCUS), 90% for HC2, 84% for LBC using HC2 to triage ASCUS and 96% for positivity to LBCXASCUS or HC2. For VIA, sensitivity was much lower among women X40 years (12%) than those aged p39 years (50%). Specificity varied from 77% for positivity to LBCXASCUS or HC2, up to 94% for LBC using HC2 to triage ASCUS. In conclusion, LBC, HC2 and their combinations performed well, whereas VIA missed a majority of CIN2 þ , particularly in older women. Digital colposcopy performed better than VIA, but still missed nearly half of CIN2 þ in this study.
Functional recovery after transplantation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)-modified neural stem cells (NSCs) was evaluated in a rat model of cerebral ischaemia damage induced by temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO). Western blotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay demonstrated upregulated BDNF protein expression by rat embryonic NSCs transfected with the human BDNF gene (BDNF-NSCs). BDNF-NSCs stimulated neurite outgrowth in cocultured dorsal root ganglion neurons, suggesting that BDNF increased neurogenesis in vitro. In vivo, BDNF promoted recovery of tMCAO. Phosphate-buffered saline, untransformed NSCs or BDNF-NSCs were introduced into the penumbra zone of the right striatum of tMCAO rats and neurological function deficit was assessed for up to 12 weeks using the neurological severity score (NSS). The NSS was significantly lower in the BDNF-NSC transfected transplant group than in all the other groups from week 10. BDNF-NSCs recovered 1 week after transplantation expressed BDNF protein. Transplanted NSCs had differentiated into mature neurons 12 weeks after transplantation. Transgenic NSCs have potential as a therapeutic agent for brain ischaemia.
The pattern of growth hormone (GH) secretion and rate of somatic growth are markedly sexually dimorphic, but the underlying neuroendocrine mechanisms are far from clear. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that the sexual dimorphism of GH secretion may be due to gender-related differences in the transduction of somatostatin's actions in brain and/or pituitary. To accomplish this, we compared the distributional pattern and level of expression of two somatostatin receptor subtypes, sst1 and sst2, in the brain and pituitary of adult male and female rats by in-situ hybridization using 35S-labelled antisense riboprobes. In the brain, the hybridization pattern and labelling density of sst1 and sst2 mRNA-expressing cells, as revealed by computer-assisted image analysis, in areas including the cerebral cortex, medial habenula (MHb) and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN), were similar in male and female rats. In contrast, there was a marked sex-related difference in sst1 expression in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus; both the number and labelling density of sst1 mRNA-expressing cells were two- to threefold greater in males than in females and this significant increase was homogenous throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the nucleus. No gender-related differences in arcuate sst2 mRNA levels were found. At the level of the anterior pituitary, the labelling density of sst2 mRNA in males was significantly higher than that of females. No sex-related difference in pituitary sst1 mRNA was observed. These results demonstrate a sexual dimorphism in the expression of two somatostatin receptor subtypes, sst1 and sst2, at the level of the arcuate nucleus and anterior pituitary, respectively. Such dimorphism suggests a differential involvement of sst1 and sst2 in GH regulation with respect to gender, and may imply roles for sst2 and sst1 in transducing somatostatin's actions on pituitary somatotrophs and GH-releasing hormone-containing arcuate neurones, respectively, to generate the lower basal and higher GH pulse levels characteristic of the male rat.
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