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Results 701 - 750 of 1581
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Spicer Zachary - - 2003
A steady supply of oxygen is an absolute requirement for mammalian cells to maintain normal cellular functions. To answer the challenge that oxygen deprivation represents, mammals have evolved specialized cell types that can sense changes in oxygen tension and alter gene expression to enhance oxygen delivery to hypoxic areas. These ...
Chrastina A - - 2003
Oxygen plays a central role in respiration of the cells and thus in generation of energy by aerobic metabolism. The cells precisely detect oxygen level and changes in oxygen perfusion leads to induction of various responses enabling to adapt to unfavorable conditions. CA IX carbonic anhydrase is a hypoxia-inducible tumor-associated ...
Morré Dorothy M - - 2003
Our laboratories have described a novel class of ectoproteins at the cell surface with both NADH or hydroquinone oxidase (NOX) and protein disulfide-thiol interchange activities (ECTO-NOX proteins). The two activities exhibited by these proteins alternate to generate characteristic patterns of oscillations where the period length is independent of temperature. The ...
Dierickx P J - - 2002
The cytotoxicity of the MEIC (Multicentre Evaluation of In vitro Cytotoxicity) reference chemicals was investigated by measuring the increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation in rat hepatoma-derived Fa32 cells. ROS formation was measured with 2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate as a fluorescent probe. The results were quantified by determining the ROS50. This is ...
Yun Jong K - - 2002
Vascular cell adaptive response to hypoxic stress includes enhanced production of sphingomyelin metabolites that regulate cell growth. Here, we examined the vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cell adaptive response to hypoxia (2 and 5% O(2)) and demonstrated that acute (</=16h) hypoxic stress significantly stimulated VSM cell growth compared to cells grown ...
Obara Daiji - - 2002
Phosphorylation of Akt induced under hypoxic or ischemic conditions has been reported only for residue Ser(473). We examined whether Akt can be phosphorylated at Thr(308), another phosphorylation site on Akt, and can exhibit neuroprotective effects under conditions of hypoxia/reoxygenation, comparing pheochromocytoma-12 (PC12) cells transfected with constitutively active Akt (Myr-pCMV cells) ...
Schulz Heide N - - 2002
Gradients of oxygen and sulfide measured towards individual cells of the large nitrate-storing sulfur bacterium Thiomargarita namibiensis showed that in addition to nitrate oxygen is used for oxidation of sulfide. Stable gradients around the cells were found only if acetate was added to the medium at low concentrations.
Kummer Wolfgang - - 2002
The specific tissue of the carotid body is built up of groups of glomus cells, enveloped by glial-type sustentacular cells, and innervated by sensory nerve fibers. These units sense arterial pO(2) and respond to hypoxia by a variety of reactions that include initiation of the arterial chemoreflex, i.e., increasing firing ...
Lamboursain Laurence - - 2002
A very simple off-line respirometer was developed to measure oxygen consumption rates of low respiring and shear-sensitive cell suspensions. The respirometer is composed of a 10 mL glass syringe in which the plunger was substituted with a polarographic dissolved oxygen probe. Mechanical agitation is provided by means of a magnetic ...
Luo Jian - - 2002
The monitoring of reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in injured nervous tissue is critical for both studying the mechanism of secondary damage and evaluating the effectiveness of antioxidants. Flow cytometry is an excellent method to detect ROS in cultured cells and naturally suspended individual cells. However, its use in nervous ...
Liu Shan-Lin - - 2002
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are important for intracellular signaling mechanisms regulating many cellular processes. Manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) may regulate cell growth by changing the level of intracellular ROS. In our study, we investigated the effect of ROS on 7721 human hepatoma cell proliferation. Treatment with H2O2 (1-10 microM) or ...
Romagnoli Simona - - 2002
The temporal and spatial behavior of a number of mutants of the photosynthetic, facultative anaerobe Rhodobacter sphaeroides to both step changes and to gradients of oxygen was analyzed. Wild-type cells, grown under a range of conditions, showed microaerophilic behavior, accumulating in a 1.3-mm band about 1.3 mm from the meniscus ...
Oda Taiko - - 2002
Previously, we reported that (+/-)-IA but not DES produces O2- spontaneously in PBS. We are interested in the possibility that these compounds might produce active oxygen species under mild cell culture conditions. On incubation of RAW 264.7 cells with (+/-)-IA, the signal of 5,5'-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO)-OH adducts increased but no more ...
Gonzalez Constancio - - 2002
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are oxygen-containing molecular entities which are more potent and effective oxidizing agents than is molecular oxygen itself. With the exception of phagocytic cells, where ROS play an important physiological role in defense reactions, ROS have classically been considered undesirable byproducts of cell metabolism, existing several cellular ...
Gramer Michael J - - 2002
Our previous attempt to model the stationary phase of production-scale hollow-fiber bioreactors using a scaled-down micro hollow-fiber bioreactor resulted in a predicted antibody production rate that was three- to fourfold lower than the actual value (Gramer and Poeschl, 2000). Medium limitations were suspected as the reason for the discrepancy. In ...
Pook Sim Hwee - - 2002
PURPOSE: We determined whether changes in cellular reactive oxygen species correlated with mycobacteria internalization and bladder cancer cell death. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Reactive oxygen species and thiols in RT112 and MGH bladder cancer cells were determined using the fluorescence probes 5-(and 6)-carboxy-2', 7' dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate and monobromobimane. Superoxide and nitrite ...
Olive Peggy L - - 2002
Tumor cells at very low oxygen tensions are known to be about three times more resistant to killing by ionizing radiation. Since cells at intermediate oxygen tensions (defined here as greater than 0.1% and less than 2% O(2)) show partial radioresistance, they should be a consideration in tumor treatment. In ...
Avrova N F - - 2002
The metabolic effects of ganglioside GM1 were found to be quite different in brain synaptosomes and phagocytic cells. Incubation of rat brain cortex synaptosomes with GM1 was shown to decrease the production of reactive oxygen species induced by Fe2+-H2O2 system and measured by chemiluminometric method in the presence of luminol. ...
Zhong Hua - - 2002
Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) is a heterodimeric transcription factor composed of alpha and beta subunits, which plays an essential role in cancer cell hypoxia adaptation, glycolysis, and angiogenesis. Normally, HIF-1alpha protein, the dominant subunit of HIF-1, is accumulated in nuclei when cells are exposed to hypoxia (1% O2) and rapidly ...
Wang Feng - - 2002
We have investigated inhibitory mechanisms of hypoxic activation of HIF-1alpha by nitric oxide (NO). Using a Hep3B cell-derived cell line, HRE7 cells, we found that the inhibition of HIF-1alpha activity by NO requires a substantial amount of oxygen, albeit at a lower level. We further investigated the effect of NO ...
Li Chuanyu - - 2002
This study tested the hypothesis that hypoxia exposure predisposed lung epithelial cells to reactive oxygen species-(ROS) mediated cellular injury. Human lung carcinoma cells (ATCC line H441) having epithelial characteristics (including lamellar bodies, surfactant protein [SP]-A, and SP-B) were cultured in air (air/5% CO(2)) or hypoxia (< 1% O(2)/5% CO(2)) for ...
McGrath-Morrow Sharon A - - 2002
High oxygen concentrations are used in the treatment of acute respiratory distress syndrome and hyaline membrane disease. Hyperoxia, however, can damage alveolar epithelial cells through the release of free oxygen radicals. Supplemental glutamine (Gln) has recently been shown to increase survival of A549 cells, a distal epithelial cell line, during ...
Klegeris Andis - - 2002
Complement (C) activation is believed to play an adverse role in several chronic degenerative disease processes, including atherosclerosis, myocardial infarction and Alzheimer's disease. We developed several in vitro quantitative assays to evaluate processes which activate C in human serum, and to assess candidates which might block that activation. Binding of ...
Simon-Plas Françoise - - 2002
A cDNA encoding a protein, NtrbohD, located on the plasma membrane and homologue to the flavocytochrome of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase, was cloned in tobacco. The corresponding mRNA was accumulated when tobacco leaves and cells were treated with the fungal elicitor cryptogein. After elicitation with cryptogein, tobacco cells transformed with ...
Curtin James F - - 2002
Cells are constantly generating reactive oxygen species (ROS) during aerobic metabolism. As a consequence, each cell is equipped with an extensive antioxidant defence system to combat excessive production of ROS. Oxidative stress occurs in cells when the generation of ROS overwhelms the cell's natural antioxidant defences. There is a growing ...
Sahoo Debendra K - - 2002
The influence of oxygen on glycerol production by an osmophilic yeast, Candida magnoliae I(2)B, was studied in a bioreactor. Oxygen transfer rates (OTRs) and volumetric oxygen transfer coefficients (k(L)a) were determined at different aeration and agitation rates. Cell growth as well as glycerol production was strongly affected by oxygen supply. ...
Richard Doriane - - 2002
Butyric acid (BA) induces differentiation of human leukemia, including HL-60 cells. By using a fluorescent probe, we showed that reactive oxygen species (ROS) were generated in BA-treated cells. BA-induced differentiation was accompanied with an increased secretion of pro-matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9. Both phenomena were inhibited by antioxidants. Tissue inhibitors of MMP ...
Balin Arthur K - - 2002
Elevated oxygen tensions are inhibitory to the growth of skin fibroblasts. Skin fibroblasts grow better at oxygen tensions below 137 mm Hg regardless of seeding density. A wide range of oxygen tensions, including those in the physiological range, strongly modulate the growth of human skin fibroblasts. There were no significant ...
Degli Esposti Mauro - - 2002
This article examines recent methods for measuring reactive oxygen species produced in isolated mitochondria and within live cells, with particular emphasis on the detection of hydrogen peroxide. Protocols for reliable measurements of mitochondrial hydrogen peroxide are presented, while the advantages and pitfalls of these and other methods are discussed. New ...
Tilakaratne H K - - 2002
Low pO(2) is perhaps the most significant factor in artificial pancreas failure. In these environments, not only is the beta cell production of insulin reduced, but the cell death rate is also significantly higher. Mathematical models are developed to test the feasibility of facilitated oxygen transport in enhancing O(2) flux ...
Sparrow Janet R - - 2002
PURPOSE: The lipofuscin fluorophore A2E is known to be an initiator of blue-light-induced apoptosis in retinal pigment epithelial cells (RPE). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of oxidative mechanisms in mediating the cellular damage. METHODS: Human RPE (ARPE-19) cells that had accumulated A2E were exposed to ...
Junn Eunsung - - 2002
alpha-Synuclein is a major component of Lewy bodies found in the brains of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Two point mutations in alpha-synuclein (A53T and A30P) are identified in few families with dominantly inherited PD. Yet the mechanism by which this protein is involved in nigral cell death remains poorly ...
Rauen Ursula - - 2002
Hypothermia is a well-known strategem to protect biological material against injurious or degradative processes and is widely used in experimental and especially in clinical applications. However, hypothermia has also proved to be strongly injurious to a variety of cell types. Hypothermic injury to mammalian cells has long been attributed predominantly ...
Wang Zhi-Ping - - 2002
AIM: To investigate the effect of reactive oxygen species on the proliferation of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in patients with bladder cancer and their cytolysis to bladder tumor cells. METHODS: Sodium nitroprusside (SNP) was used as nitric oxide (NO) donor. The superoxide anion (O2-.) was generated in the complete medium ...
Bhunia Anil Kumar - - 2002
Sialic acid containing glycosphingolipids (gangliosides) are expressed on the surface of all mammalian cells and have been implicated in regulating various biological phenomena; however, the detailed signaling mechanisms involved in this process are not known. We report here a novel aspect of disialoganglioside, GD3-mediated regulation of cell proliferation and cell ...
Honda Shigeru - - 2002
AIMS: To determine if mild hyperoxia induces senescence in retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells in vitro. METHODS: RPE340 cells and WI38 cells were grown in 20% oxygen and 40% oxygen until proliferative exhaustion. A combined senescence associated beta galactosidase (SABG) and 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) double labelling technique was performed at different ...
Catapano G - - 2002
Oxygen is essential for the survival of isolated liver cells and its concentration is known to affect their viability and function. Recent reports have also shown that ammonia is eliminated at a rate depending on its concentration and that high ammonia concentrations may be cytotoxic to rat liver cells. Nonetheless, ...
Iyankan L - - 2002
The effect of Brucella on the generation of microbicidal reactive oxygen and nitrogen metabolites by bovine peripheral polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs) was investigated. The PMNs were recovered from the peripheral blood of control calves and experimental calves previously vaccinated against brucellosis. Significantly larger quantities of NO and H2O2 were generated by ...
Manning Christopher B - - 2002
Asbestos is a ubiquitous, naturally occurring fiber that has been linked to the development of malignant and fibrotic diseases of the lung and pleura. These diseases may be initiated by injury to epithelial cells and mesothelial cells by asbestos fibers through the formation of reactive oxygen intermediates. Elaboration of oxidants ...
Calvello R - - 2002
fMLP (N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine) is a powerful activator of granulocytes, eliciting different metabolic responses, such as generation of reactive oxygen species, production of arachidonic acid metabolites, and release of lysosomal enzymes. fMLP determines also a dramatic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton; under non-gradient conditions this entails characteristic alterations in cell shape (chemokinesis), ...
Stadtman E R - - 2002
There is a growing body of evidence demonstrating that exposure of cells to reactive oxygen species (ROS) leads to oxidative modification of nucleic acids, proteins, and lipids, and that such modifications can contribute to the development of a number of diseases and aging. This raises the question: If ROS are ...
Zhang Fuming - - 2002
The effect of dissolved oxygen concentration on human secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) glycosylation by the insect cell-baculovirus expression system was investigated in a well-controlled bioreactor. Oligomannose-type N-linked glycans (i.e., Man2 to Man6 and Man3F) were present in SEAP produced by Spodoptera frusiperda Sf-9 (Sf-9) and Trichoplusia ni BTI-Tn-5B1-4 (Tn-5B1-4) insect ...
Stolze, Ineke
Oxygen dependent Erythropoietin (EPO) production is regulated by hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) which consists of the O2-labile α- and the constitutive β-subunit. In human hepatoma cells (HepG2) HNF-4α enhances hypoxia-induced EPO expression. Herein, we investigated EPO gene regulation in human neuroblastoma (NB) cell lines. Methods: EPO production in SH-SY5Y, Kelly ...
Huisman, C.L.
Organic/inorganic hybrid solar cells have been constructed from titanium dioxide and zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc). Only modest photocurrents are observed originating from excitation of the ZnPc. The photocurrent is not stable, but is found to decrease when measured in ambient atmosphere. The combined presence of oxygen, light, and an electric field ...
Lambert, C.
For the first time in intact bacterial cells, the dynamics of the build-up of soluble cytosolic inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) during aeration, and its breakdown during anaerobiosis have been observed with a time resolution of 50 s. Under conditions of 60-80% saturation with pure oxygen, the accumulation of high levels of ...
Fornairon-Bonnefond Caroline - - 2002
Under anaerobic conditions, yeast growth normally requires oxygen in order to favour the synthesis of sterols and unsaturated fatty acids. However, in such conditions, superfluous oxygen consumption by yeast cells is observed. The superfluous oxygen consumed by the yeast cells appears to be not related to classical respiration, but mainly ...
Kim Yong Keun - - 2002
This study was undertaken to evaluate the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and lipid peroxidation in chemical hypoxia in opossum kidney (OK) cells and rabbit renal cortical slices. Chemical hypoxia was induced by incubating cells or slices with antimycin A, an inhibitor of mitochondrial electron transport. Exposure of OK ...
Kunz Lars - - 2002
The understanding of photosensitizer photobleaching is important not only for mechanistic studies, but also for the development of monitoring techniques for clinical dosimetry in photodynamic therapy. In this study, we investigated the intracellular photobleaching of 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(m-hydroxyphenyl)chlorin (mTHPC, Foscan) in the murine macrophage cell line J774A.1, using quantitative fluorescence imaging microscopy, ...
He L - - 2002
Various heme-containing proteins have been proposed as primary molecular O(2) sensors for hypoxia-sensitive type I cells in the mammalian carotid body. One set of data in particular supports the involvement of a cytochrome b NADPH oxidase that is commonly found in neutrophils. Subunits of this enzyme have been immunocytochemically localized ...
Hileman Elizabeth A - - 2001
Superoxide dismutase (SOD) is a critical enzyme responsible for the elimination of superoxide radicals and is considered to be a key anti-oxidant in aerobic cells. Cellular consumption of oxygen is essential for oxidative phosphorylation during ATP generation in the mitochondria, yet this cellular metabolism also leads to the production of ...
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