Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 24
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Ann Ist Super Sanita ; 34(2): 213-9, 1998.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9810744

ABSTRACT

Research in the field of assisted reproduction technologies (ART) is today very active internationally and is aimed both at improving success chances of already consolidated techniques (in fact these chances are still considerably low), and at elaborating new methods like ICSI (intracytoplasmic sperm injection), oocyte cryoconservation, ovary tissue cultures. Some other techniques, connected to ART, are here considered, like preimplantation diagnosis, early sex determination, gene therapy in utero and cloning. All these subjects of research are here briefly mentioned in relation to the ethical debate which they have stirred or which they should stir according to the authors. These debates are in part mirrored in the different legislations.


Subject(s)
Bioethics , Insemination, Artificial/standards , Cloning, Organism , Cryopreservation , Embryo Transfer/standards , Fertilization in Vitro/legislation & jurisprudence , Fertilization in Vitro/standards , Genetic Therapy , Humans , Insemination, Artificial/legislation & jurisprudence , Insemination, Artificial/methods , Ovum , Preimplantation Diagnosis , Research , Sex Determination Analysis
2.
Brain Res ; 657(1-2): 315-9, 1994 Sep 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7820635

ABSTRACT

IDPN-induced changes in a variety of sensory, motor and autonomic nerves were studied by whole-mount immunocytochemistry. A full range of proximo-distal accumulations of neurofilament-like material was found, from paranuclear round bodies in perikarya to distal and preterminal axonal dilations. Conversely, both terminal areas and nodal-paranodal regions of myelinated axons showed striking, sharply localized loss of neurofilament-immunostaining. The latter change, when transport of neurofilaments is halted by IDPN, may indicate their local processing and/or differential transport at nodal-paranodal regions.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System/chemistry , Intermediate Filaments/chemistry , Motor Neurons/chemistry , Nervous System Diseases/metabolism , Neurons, Afferent/chemistry , Animals , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Nervous System Diseases/chemically induced , Neurotoxins , Nitriles , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
3.
Toxicology ; 75(1): 39-50, 1992 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1455423

ABSTRACT

Sixty-day-old virgin female Swiss CD1 mice were treated with 1.5% 2,5-hexanedione in their drinking water; control mice received tap water; duration of treatment was either 4 or 6 weeks. Under these conditions the treated mice did not show any clinical symptoms although electromyography revealed some signs of polyneuropathy. Protein and DNA content per mg of ovarian tissue in treated mice were not significantly different from controls. Histological examination of ovarian sections at the light microscope level showed no significant alterations after exposure. A morphometric study revealed a statistically significant reduction in the number of growing oocytes after 6 weeks of treatment. For fertility studies three groups of 15 female mice each were treated for 0, 4 or 6 weeks as above and then permanently housed with untreated proven breeder male mice (one male per female); cages were checked daily for newly born mice. All litters appeared normal by gross examination. During the first 14 weeks of continuous mating the mean litter size (number of newborns per litter) remained about 11.4 in all groups; this number subsequently began to decrease. Control and 4-week treatment regression curves did not differ statistically, while the slope of the 6-week line was significantly steeper, indicating a faster decrease in litter size over time and a shortening of fertile life in the latter group of treated females.


Subject(s)
Fertility/drug effects , Hexanones/toxicity , Ovary/drug effects , Animals , Body Weight/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electromyography , Female , Male , Mice , Microscopy , Nervous System Diseases/chemically induced , Ovary/cytology , Time Factors
4.
Exp Brain Res ; 87(2): 363-70, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1769389

ABSTRACT

A variety of visceral nerves were studied by intermediate filament immunocytochemistry in rats intoxicated with acrylamide. In such animals, oesophageal and diaphragmatic motor end-plates were invaded and deformed by neurofilament protein-like material, while afferent fibres of diaphragmatic neuromuscular spindles and myelinated sensory fibres of the iris showed striking terminal accumulation of similar material. Conversely, the rich population of thin afferent fibres of the iris showed no obvious abnormality, while pre-terminal changes were seen along the extrinsic nerve fibres supplying the cornea and myenteric ganglia. Multiple lesions were demonstrated in gut nerves of acrylamide-treated rats, while scattered "enteric glial cells" showed abnormally coarse morphology and a striking increase in glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivity. A distinct, delicately varicose appearance was revealed by neurofilament protein-immunostaining in bladder nerve fibres of normal rats, which was changed to one of coarse dilations by acrylamide. In conclusion, apparently selective changes were found along different types of axons, indicating marked heterogeneity in cytoskeletal organisation among visceral nerves. Taken together with the proposed inhibition by acrylamide of neurofilament proteins degradation, the above findings may suggest a non-uniform distribution of neurofilament degradation sites along distal regions of different axons.


Subject(s)
Acrylamides/toxicity , Afferent Pathways/drug effects , Autonomic Nervous System/drug effects , Bronchi/innervation , Diaphragm/innervation , Digestive System/innervation , Nerve Fibers/drug effects , Neurons/drug effects , Trachea/innervation , Ureter/innervation , Urinary Bladder/innervation , Acrylamide , Afferent Pathways/pathology , Animals , Autonomic Nervous System/pathology , Eye/innervation , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Male , Nerve Fibers/ultrastructure , Neurofilament Proteins/analysis , Neurons/pathology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Tubulin/analysis
5.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 38(16): 2703-11, 1989 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2764990

ABSTRACT

The effects of 2,5-hexanedione (2,5 HD) on skeletal proteins of red blood cells (RBCs) were investigated both in vitro (human RBCs) and in vivo in male Sprague-Dawley rats which had been treated with the drug for several days. We found that 2,5 HD induced the following major changes in the electrophoretic pattern of the skeletal proteins: (i) the appearance of high-molecular weight bands, (ii) a dose-dependent decrease in spectrin Bands 1 and 2, and (iii) a dose-dependent increase in the amount of hemoglobin (Hb) associated with the membrane. Membranoskeletons, prepared from resealed ghosts which had been previously treated with 2,5 HD, were able to bind an increased amount of Hb from untreated RBCs, thus suggesting a drug-induced modification of the membrane. Extraction of spectrin and actin from ghosts did not remove the membrane-bound Hb and, furthermore, Hb bound to 2,5 HD-treated membranes mainly bearing Band 3 and free of peripheral proteins. These data suggested a 2,5 HD-induced modification of an intrinsic membrane protein, probably Band 3. This hypothesis was consistent with the observation that 2,5 HD also induced a modification of Band 3 aminogroups, as evidenced by a dose-dependent decrease in the binding of eosin probes. Furthermore, RBCs treated in vitro with 2,5 HD bound an increased amount of autologous immunoglobulins (IgG). As reported by Kay and Low et al. the binding of autologous IgG is a phenomenon associated with the aging process of RBCs and may involve a modification of Band 3. Our data show that RBCs treated with 2,5 HD acquired various characteristics of senescent cells such as spectrin cross-linking, Hb-membrane binding and increased IgG binding, and suggest that 2,5 HD treatment might affect RBC survival.


Subject(s)
Blood Proteins/drug effects , Erythrocytes/drug effects , Hemoglobins/metabolism , Hexanones/pharmacology , Ketones/pharmacology , Animals , Blood Proteins/metabolism , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Erythrocyte Aging/drug effects , Erythrocyte Membrane/metabolism , Erythrocytes/cytology , Erythrocytes/metabolism , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Male , Protein Binding/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
6.
Brain Res ; 444(2): 383-8, 1988 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3129144

ABSTRACT

In rats intoxicated with 2,5-hexanedione, nerve fibres supplying virtually all visceral organs showed large numbers of densely immunoreactive accumulations of neurofilament-like material, of fusiform, elongated, smoothly tapering morphology. In the gut, round to oval, morphologically different lesions were also present, and abnormal neurofilament-immunoreactive accumulations were revealed in oesophageal terminal end-plates. An extensive damage to autonomic nerve fibres, which are largely non-myelinated, was thus revealed in 2,5-hexanedione intoxication. The observed diversity in lesion morphology may suggest heterogeneity in cytoskeletal and/or associated proteins among autonomic neurons.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System/immunology , Hexanones/pharmacology , Intermediate Filament Proteins/immunology , Ketones/pharmacology , Animals , Autonomic Nervous System/pathology , Esophagus/innervation , Hexanones/poisoning , Immunochemistry , Intestines/innervation , Male , Nerve Fibers/immunology , Nerve Fibers/pathology , Neurofilament Proteins , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Viscera/innervation
7.
Arch Toxicol ; 61(2): 138-44, 1987 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3439886

ABSTRACT

Adult male rats were subjected to 4 weeks' respiratory treatment with n-hexane (5000 ppm, 16h/day, 6 days/week); motor conduction velocity was significantly decreased in tail nerves at all weekly intervals and did not approach normal values in the 4 weeks following interruption of treatment. Plasma acetylcholinesterase (AChE) levels were significantly increased at all weekly intervals during treatment (25-40%); 2 weeks after the end of treatment they had returned to baseline. Oral treatment with 2,5-hexanedione (HD) (1% in drinking water) caused a similar increase in plasma levels; this increase was statistically significant also when compared with pair-fed (PF) control rats. A sucrose density gradient analysis showed only one peak of AChE activity at approximately 10 S (as in normal plasma). The levels of butyrylcholinesterase were unaltered in plasma of both n-hexane-and HD-treated rats. Both the fast-contracting EDL and the slow-contracting soleus muscles lost weight in HD-treated rats with respect to free-fed (AL) and PF controls. AChE levels responded differently to HD treatment in the two muscle types: in EDL total extracts, AChE activity increased considerably with respect to AL controls (+ 70%, p less than 0.001), while the levels of the 16 S and 4 S molecular forms were unaltered. The increased levels of AChE found in plasma of rats intoxicated with n-hexane or with its metabolite HD may originate from muscle and correspond to an increased secretion of this molecular form.


Subject(s)
Cholinesterases/analysis , Hexanes/toxicity , Hexanones/toxicity , Ketones/toxicity , Animals , Centrifugation, Density Gradient , Cholinesterases/blood , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Liver/enzymology , Male , Monitoring, Physiologic , Motor Activity/drug effects , Muscles/enzymology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Respiration/drug effects
8.
Exp Mol Pathol ; 46(2): 199-216, 1987 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3556533

ABSTRACT

Testicular damage was induced in rats by respiratory treatment with n-hexane at a concentration of 5000 ppm. The earliest lesions were observed immediately after 24 hr of continuous treatment, and involved primary spermatocytes from the leptotene to the middle pachitene stages and spermatids at late stages of maturation; at the same time numerous exfoliated, injured germ cells reached the epididymis. After the 24-hr treatment was suspended, damage to the seminiferous epithelium increased for the first 7 days, while the epididymis showed also focal infiltration by inflammatory cells; recovery was completed from Days 14 to 30. Intermittent treatment (16 hr/day, 6 days/week) at the same concentration of 5000 ppm for up to 6 weeks induced progressive increases in testicular and epididymal lesions, which, after 5 weeks (when most animals began to show clinical symptoms of polyneuropathy), reached aplasia of the germinal epithelium involving also the spermatogonia. Recovery from clinical symptoms was not paralleled by a regression of testicular pathology. On the contrary, after interruption of the treatment, the testicular lesions became increasingly severe, up to complete atrophy of the seminiferous tubules, suggesting an irreversible sterility of the treated animals. Pair-fed controls did not show histological alterations of the testis or epididymis.


Subject(s)
Hexanes/toxicity , Testis/drug effects , Administration, Inhalation , Animals , Drug Administration Schedule , Epididymis/drug effects , Epididymis/pathology , Male , Microscopy, Electron , Rats , Seminiferous Tubules/drug effects , Seminiferous Tubules/pathology , Testis/pathology , Time Factors
9.
Arch Toxicol ; 50(3-4): 203-15, 1982 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7149986

ABSTRACT

Exposure to n-hexane, a component of many industrial solvent mixtures, is known to cause polyneuropathy in man. The concentration of metabolites in urine following exposure may be useful in biological monitoring. In a comparative study experimental animals (rat, rabbit and monkey) were subjected to single inhalatory treatments of 6, 12 and 24 h with 5,000 ppm of pure n-hexane. At the end of the treatments and at intervals thereafter, urine, and in rats also blood, were collected and analyzed for n-hexane and its metabolites. While the urine of rats contained 2-hexanol, 3-hexanol, methyl n-butyl ketone, 2,5-dimethylfuran, y-valerolactone and 2,5-hexanedione, rabbit and monkey urine were found to contain only 2-hexanedione, rabbit and monkey urine were to contain only 2-hexanol, 3-hexanol, methyl n-butyl ketone and 2,5-hexanedione. Within 72 h of the end of exposure, the principal metabolite was 2,5-dimethylfuran in rats and 2-hexanol in rabbits and monkeys. In all three species the excretion rates of methyl n-butyl ketone, 3-hexanol and 2-hexanol peaked several hours earlier than 2,5-hexanedione (and gamma-valerolactone and 2,5-dimethylfuran in rats). In all species 2,5-hexanedione was still detectable in urine 60 h following exposure. n-Hexane metabolites in rat blood were 2-hexanol, methyl-n-butyl ketone, 2,5-dimethylfuran and 2,4-hexanedione. The first two, as well as n-hexane itself, were found in maximum concentration immediately after termination of exposure, while 2,5-dimethylfuran and 2,5-hexanedione, with the longer exposure times, peaked some hours later. The data from urine collected at the end of exposure were compared with those obtained in a parallel study in humans occupationally exposed to a mixture of hexane isomers. Humans chronically exposed to 10-140 ppm n-hexane had 2,5-hexanedione concentrations in urine ranging from 0.4 to 21.7 mg/l, i.e., in the same proportion as rats exposed once for 6 or 12 h to 5,000 ppm.


Subject(s)
Hexanes/metabolism , Macaca mulatta/metabolism , Macaca/metabolism , Animals , Biotransformation , Half-Life , Hexanes/urine , Hexanones/metabolism , Male , Rabbits/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains/metabolism , Species Specificity
10.
Clin Toxicol ; 18(12): 1357-67, 1981 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6277548

ABSTRACT

Rats were intermittently exposed (9 to 10 h/d, 5 to 6 d/week) to controlled concentrations of single analytical grad solvents in ambient air. After periods ranging from 7 to 30 weeks the animals were perfused with glutaraldehyde and samples of nerves were processed for light microscopy of sections and of teased fibers. Animals treated with n-hexane at 5000 ppm (14 weeks) or 2500 ppm (30 weeks) developed the typical giant axonal degeneration already described in rats treated continuously with 400 to 600 ppm of the same solvent for 7 weeks or more. No such alterations were found in rats subjected to the following intermittent respiratory treatments: n-hexane 500 ppm (30 weeks) or 1500 ppm (14 weeks), cyclohexane 1500 or 2500 (30 weeks), n-pentane 3000 ppm (30 weeks), n-heptane 1500 ppm (30 weeks), 2-methylpentane 1500 ppm (14 weeks), and 3-methylpentane 1500 ppm (14 weeks). The following metabolites were found in the urine of rats according to treatment (in parenthesis): 2-methyl-2-pentanol (2-methylpentane); 3-methyl-2-pentanol and 3-methyl-3-pentanol (3-methylpentane), 2-hexanol, 3-hexanol, gamma-valerolactone, 2,5-dimethylfuran, and 2,5-hexanedione (n-hexane). 2-Hexanol was found to be the main urinary metabolite of n-hexane, while 2,5-hexanedione was present only in a lesser proportion. This feature of rat metabolism suggests that in this species 2,5-hexanedione reaches an effective level at its site of action during intermittent respiratory treatment with n-hexane with difficulty and explains the high concentrations necessary to cause polyneuropathy in rats subjected to this treatment.


Subject(s)
Adhesives/toxicity , Air Pollutants, Occupational/toxicity , Air Pollutants/toxicity , Alkanes/toxicity , Cyclohexanes/toxicity , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/chemically induced , Solvents/toxicity , Air Pollutants, Occupational/urine , Alkanes/urine , Animals , Axons/drug effects , Body Weight/drug effects , Cyclohexanes/urine , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Solvents/urine
12.
Br J Ind Med ; 35(2): 161-7, 1978 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-656341

ABSTRACT

The salient features of this method for biological monitoring of occupational exposure to organophosphorus insecticides are: (a) acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) are determined separately in whole haemolysed blood using specific substrates at appropriate concentrations; (b) 20 microliter of blood drawn from the finger tip is sufficient for both determinations; (c) the blood sample is immediately diluted with a solution of saponin and may thereafter be frozen for storage; (d) diagnostic kits, commercially available for the determination of plasma BuChE, may be employed with modifications; (e) the kinetic procedure is avoided by blocking the enzyme reactions at the end of the incubation period. This paper describes attempts to achieve optimal conditions for the two reactions. Under the conditions finally chosen, the whole blood 'AChE' activity value still includes a small percentage of plasma BuChE activity (12.5% of the total), while the whole blood 'BuChE' activity includes a small percentage of erythrocyte AChE activity (7% of the total). Results of determinations performed with this procedure on 172 healthy subjects are reported.


Subject(s)
Acetylcholinesterase/blood , Butyrylcholinesterase/blood , Cholinesterases/blood , Adolescent , Adult , Cholinesterase Inhibitors , Environmental Exposure , Female , Humans , Insecticides , Male , Methods , Middle Aged , Organophosphorus Compounds , Physostigmine/pharmacology , Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate/pharmacology
13.
J Cell Biol ; 68(3): 462-79, 1976 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1030703

ABSTRACT

The aqueous extract of the venom glands of black widow spiders was fractionated on a column of Sephadex G-200 and then on a column of DEAE-Sephadex A-50 pH 8.2. A protein fraction was obtained that caused a great increase in the frequency of occurrence of miniature end plate potentials at the frog neuromuscular junction, and caused swelling of the nerve terminals and depleted them of their vesicles. The fraction consists of a least four protein components that are similar in their molecular weights (about 130,000) and isoelectric points (ranging from pH 5.2 to 5.5) and are immunologically indistinguishable. It contains no sugar residues and has little or no lipolytic or proteolytic activity. The fraction is toxic to mice and is different from the fractions that act on houseflies, the crayfish stretch receptor and the cockroach heart. It seems pure enough to warrant a detailed study of its site and mode of action.


Subject(s)
Black Widow Spider , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Neuromuscular Junction/drug effects , Proteins/isolation & purification , Spiders , Synaptic Vesicles/drug effects , Venoms/pharmacology , Animals , Anura , Astacoidea/drug effects , Cockroaches/drug effects , Heart/drug effects , Isoelectric Point , Mechanoreceptors/drug effects , Mice , Molecular Weight , Proteins/analysis , Proteins/pharmacology , Proteins/toxicity , Venoms/analysis
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...