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1.
Equine Vet J ; 51(1): 131-135, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29758109

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Laminitis has a considerable impact on the equine industry. Endocrinopathic laminitis is the most common form and affected horses often have hyperinsulinaemia due to an underlying metabolic disorder. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to determine if insulin weakens the structural integrity of digital lamellae and to develop an ex vivo model for the study of hyperinsulinaemia-induced lamellar failure. STUDY DESIGN: Ex vivo experiment. METHODS: Biomechanical testing was used to assess the structural integrity of lamellar explants exposed to either medium alone (control) or medium supplemented with insulin. Lamellar explants comprised of hoof wall, lamellar tissue and distal phalanx were harvested from four adult horses with no evidence of inflammatory disease or pre-existing disease of the digit. Following an equilibration period, explants were incubated in medium or medium supplemented with insulin (2.5 µg/ml) for 8 h prior to biomechanical testing to obtain load (N), stress (MPa), elongation to failure (mm), and Young's modulus (MPa) for each explant. Significant differences were assessed using a mixed linear model with horses as a random factor and control or insulin-treated group as a fixed factor. RESULTS: Lamellar explants incubated in medium supplemented with insulin failed at significantly lower load (P = 0.0001) and lower stress (P = 0.001) and had greater elongation to failure (P = 0.02). MAIN LIMITATIONS: In addition to the ex vivo nature of the study, location-dependent variability in explant structural integrity and variable diffusion of nutrients due to explant size may have been limitations. However, the study design attempted to account for these limitations through random assignment of explants to treatment groups independent of location and by evaluating stress to failure. CONCLUSIONS: Insulin weakens the structural integrity of equine lamellar explants and an ex vivo model for evaluation of hyperinsulinaemia-induced lamellar failure was established. The summary is available in Spanish - see Supporting Information.


Subject(s)
Foot Diseases/veterinary , Hoof and Claw/drug effects , Horse Diseases/drug therapy , Hypoglycemic Agents/pharmacology , Insulin/pharmacology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Culture Media , Female , Foot Diseases/drug therapy , Foot Diseases/etiology , Foot Diseases/physiopathology , Forelimb , Hoof and Claw/physiology , Horse Diseases/etiology , Horse Diseases/physiopathology , Horses , Hyperinsulinism/complications , Hyperinsulinism/physiopathology , Hyperinsulinism/veterinary , Linear Models , Male , Random Allocation , Stress, Physiological , Toe Phalanges/drug effects , Toe Phalanges/physiology
2.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1106(1): 40-4, 1992 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1581334

ABSTRACT

The interaction of cholesterol with conformationally restricted analogs of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol (DPPG) in the liquid-crystalline phase has been studied in vesicles. These analogs contain one of three cyclopentane triols in place of the glycerol moiety found in natural phospholipids and make possible an analysis of whether a limitation of the conformational mobility in the glycerol backbone region affects the interaction with cholesterol. When cholesterol was incorporated into vesicles from cyclopentanoid phospholipids in which the acyl group vicinal to the head group is trans, the first-order rate constant for Cl- efflux is decreased similarly to that in vesicles from 'natural' DPPC or DPPG (about 50%). However, when the head group is in the unnatural 2 position, cholesterol has a much smaller effect on the rate of Cl- efflux (a decrease of about 20%). Cholesterol decreased the rate constants for valinomycin-mediated 86Rb+ efflux from vesicles of the cyclopentanoid PC analogs and of DPPC to a similar extent. The half-time values for spontaneous intervesicle cholesterol exchange were not markedly different using vesicles prepared with the natural glycerophospholipids and with the cyclopentano-phospholipids, suggesting that the geometrical orientation of the acyl chains or the head group has little influence on cholesterol desorption from the lipid/water interface.


Subject(s)
1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/metabolism , Cholesterol/metabolism , Phosphatidylglycerols/metabolism , Calcium/metabolism , Kinetics , Molecular Conformation , Rubidium/metabolism , Valinomycin/pharmacology
3.
Chem Phys Lipids ; 50(1): 43-50, 1989 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2758524

ABSTRACT

The well-known reduction in the permeability properties of liposomes of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) by sterols has also been demonstrated for its sulfonium analog (DMPSC) in which the N+(CH3)3 group of choline is replaced by S+(CH3)2. We have now compared the effects of 25 mol% 24-methylenecholesterol and cholesterol on the initial rates of urea permeation into dipalmitoyl-PC (DPPC) and dipalmitoyl-PSC (DPPSC) liposomes above the gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature and found a greater reduction with 24-methylenecholesterol/DPPSC than with cholesterol/DPPSC liposomes but little difference between the two sterols in DPPC liposomes. Fluorescence polarization studies, using diphenylhexatriene as a probe, show that polarization (P) values are considerably higher in DMPSC liposomes containing 20 and 30 mol% 24-methylenecholesterol than in DMPC liposomes containing 20 and 30 mol% cholesterol. Higher P values were also obtained in DMPSC liposomes containing other 24-alkyl-substituted sterols (beta-sitosterol, ergosterol and campesterol) than in DMPC liposomes containing the same sterols. Reduced permeability rates in PSC liposomes containing 24-alkyl-substituted sterols are correlated with higher polarization values, reflecting an increased degree of order and/or motion in these liposomes compared with liposomes from the corresponding PC. These results suggest that alkyl substitution at C-24 of the sterol molecule results in tighter interactions with the sulfonium analog of PC than with PC.


Subject(s)
Liposomes/analysis , Phosphatidylcholines/analysis , Sterols/pharmacology , Urea/analysis , Cholesterol/analogs & derivatives , Cholesterol/pharmacology , Fluorescence Polarization , Permeability , Structure-Activity Relationship
4.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 855(2): 265-70, 1986 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3947623

ABSTRACT

The kinetics of spontaneous chloride ion efflux and valinomycin-mediated rubidium-86 efflux from vesicles prepared from synthetic phospholipids with carbon-phosphorus linkages were investigated at temperatures above the gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition. The rate constants for the movement of chloride and rubidium ions were reduced by incorporation of cholesterol into bilayers of phosphono- and phosphinocholines. Nonisosteric phosphonolipids in which the oxygen was removed from the glycerol side of phosphorus without substitution by a methylene group interacted less with cholesterol than the analogous isosteric derivatives, as judged from the magnitude of the decrease in the rate constants for chloride and rubidium ion efflux. The experiments reported in this study suggest that steric factors in the glycerol side of the phosphorus function are important in phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol interaction. However, the oxygen atom on the choline side of the phosphorus in the phosphatidylcholine molecule is not required for strong phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol interaction, since isosteric glycerophosphinocholines interacted as well as the corresponding isosteric glycerophosphonocholines. Furthermore, steric requirements on the choline side of phosphorus are not important in this interaction since phosphinates whose head-group structures are -P(O-)CH2CH2N+(CH3)3 and -P(O-)CH2CH2CH2N+(CH3)3 interacted equally well with cholesterol, as estimated by these permeability studies.


Subject(s)
Cholesterol , Glycerylphosphorylcholine/analogs & derivatives , Liposomes , Chlorides , Kinetics , Organophosphonates , Phosphinic Acids , Phospholipids , Rubidium , Structure-Activity Relationship , Valinomycin
5.
J Biol Chem ; 260(7): 4098-102, 1985 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3980469

ABSTRACT

The rates of exchange of [4-14C]cholesterol between lipid vesicles prepared with different phospholipids and with different sizes have been measured. The first-order rate constants were higher using vesicles prepared from phosphatidylcholines with highly branched or polyunsaturated fatty acyl chains than with saturated diacyl or di-O-alkyl chains. The rate measurements indicate that the affinity of cholesterol for phospholipid does not vary significantly on change of the type of linkage (ether or ester) in phosphatidylcholine (PC) or of the positions of the fatty acyl chains in 1,2-diacyl-PC bearing one saturated and one unsaturated chain; furthermore, egg phosphatidylglycerol and egg phosphatidylethanolamine appear to have comparable affinities for cholesterol. However, the molecular packing in the bilayer and nearest-neighbor interactions involving cholesterol appear tightened more by N-palmitoylsphingomyelin than by dipalmitoyl-PC; on incorporation of 44 mol % of these phospholipids (which have the same fatty acyl chain composition) into either small or large unilamellar vesicles prepared with egg phosphatidylglycerol, the exchange rates were strikingly slower when the donor species contained sphingomyelin compared with PC. The rate of cholesterol exchange was 100% faster with small unilamellar vesicles than with large unilamellar vesicles as donors, suggesting that the looser packing in the highly curved small vesicles facilitates cholesterol desorption. The cholesterol exchange rate did not vary with the size of the acceptor vesicles, which indicates that desorption is the rate-limiting step in the exchange process in the presence of excess acceptors.


Subject(s)
Cholesterol/metabolism , Lipid Bilayers/metabolism , Phospholipids/metabolism , Calcium/metabolism , Kinetics , Time Factors
6.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 220(1): 309-13, 1983 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6299198

ABSTRACT

Human growth hormone was injected intravenously into 18 growth hormone-deficient children and growth hormone binding sites in lymphocytes were investigated. Fresh circulating lymphocytes had a low initial value for the binding of growth hormone to solubilized receptors (3.45 +/- 1.46%) but after growth hormone injection, the binding rapidly increased to 14.8 +/- 4.2% at 2 1/2 h and 8.7 +/- 1.8% at 5 h. The sharp increase in binding is due to increase in the number of binding sites. Two control children who received chorionic gonadotropin had no change in lymphocyte growth hormone receptors. The methodological differences between the present study and previous attempts to identify human growth receptors in lymphocytes were (1) lymphocytes were separated and disrupted with Triton X-100 as quickly as possible (to avoid error from receptor leaking out of the cell) and (2) the receptors were assayed at 2 1/2 h after growth hormone administration (previous studies were 12-24 h later). One possible explanation for the data is that growth hormone receptor from liver is taken up by lymphocytes and rapidly released again, thus, contributing to the hormonal receptor economy in humans.


Subject(s)
Growth Hormone/deficiency , Lymphocytes/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Receptors, Somatotropin , Solubility
7.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 678(2): 250-6, 1981 Dec 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7317451

ABSTRACT

The effects of hypophysectomy and subsequent administration of growth hormone and/or L-thyroxine on thermotropic properties of State 3 respiration (ADP-induced), cholesterol, phospholipid and fatty acid composition of phospholipid fraction were examined in myocardial mitochondria of rats. Temperature-dependence of 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate fluorescence was determined in vesicles prepared from lipids of heart mitochondria. Transition temperature obtained from the Arrhenius plots of respiration occurred at 21 and 24 degrees C for heart mitochondria of normal and hypophysectomized rats, respectively. Most notably, after hypophysectomy the rate of respiration was lower below 24 degrees C, but was progressively higher above that temperature when compared to normal rats. The energy of activation was 148 and 36% larger below and above the transition temperature, respectively. Growth hormone restored almost completely the energy of activation and respiratory rates to normal levels. Administration of L-thyroxine, with or without growth hormone, did not significantly change the rate of respiration but decreased the transition temperature to 17.7-17.9 degrees C. Lipid and phospholipid content, as well as percent distribution of phospholipids and their fatty acid composition were not statistically different among the different groups of rats. Only cholesterol content was increased after hypophysectomy. Administration of growth hormone and thyroxine did not significantly change the total unsaturation index of fatty acids, but growth hormone increased the content of arachidonic acid (20 : 4) by 70% but decreased the docosahexaenoic acid (22 : 6) three times which may have a beneficial effect on mitochondrial membranes. These and other results suggest that hormones exert different effects on subcellular organelles in different tissues, like heart and liver.


Subject(s)
Growth Hormone/pharmacology , Intracellular Membranes/metabolism , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Mitochondria, Heart/metabolism , Oxygen Consumption/drug effects , Thyroxine/pharmacology , Anilino Naphthalenesulfonates , Animals , Fluorescent Dyes , Hypophysectomy , Intracellular Membranes/drug effects , Male , Mitochondria, Heart/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Thermodynamics
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