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1.
Comp Cytogenet ; 18: 51-57, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38601956

RESUMO

Polyploidy is a condition in which a cell has multiple diploid sets of chromosomes. Two forms of polyploidy are known. One of them, generative polyploidy, is characteristic of all cells of the organism, while the other form develops only in some somatic tissues at certain stages of postnatal ontogenesis. Whole genome duplication has played a particularly important role in the evolution of plants and animals, while the role of cellular (somatic) polyploidy in organisms remains largely unclear. In this work we investigated the contribution of cellular polyploidy to the normal and the reparative liver growth of Rattusnorvegicus (Berkenhout, 1769) and Homosapiens Linnaeus, 1758. It is shown that polyploidy makes a significant contribution to the increase of the liver mass both in the course of normal postnatal development and during pathological process.

2.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc ; 81(1): 143-62, 2006 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16336746

RESUMO

Recent data concerning ultradian (circahoralian) intracellular rhythms are used to assess the biochemical mechanisms of direct cell-cell communication. New results and theoretical considerations suggest a fractal nature of ultradian rhythms and their self-organisation. The fundamental and innate nature of these rhythms relates to their self-similarity at different levels of cell and tissue organisation. They can be detected in cell-free systems as well as in cells and organs in vivo. Such rhythms are a means of finding an optimal state of cell function rather than achieving a state of absolute stability. As a consequence, oscillations, being irregular and numerous by the set of periods, are resilient to functional overload and injury. Recent data on the maintenance of their fractal structure and, especially on the selection of optimal periods are discussed. The positive role of chaotic dynamics is stressed. The ultradian rhythm of protein synthesis in hepatocytes in vitro was used as a marker of direct cell-cell communication. The system demonstrates cell cooperation and synchronisation throughout the cell population, and suggests that the ultradian rhythms are self-organised. These observations also led to the detection of mechanisms of direct cell-cell communication in which extracellular factors have an essential role. Experimental evidence indicated the involvement of gangliosides and/or catecholamines in this large-scale synchronisation of protein synthesis. The response of all, or a major part, of the cell population is important; after the initial trigger effect, a periodic pattern is retained for some time. The influence of Ca2+-dependent protein kinases on protein phosphorylation can be a final step in the phase modulation of rhythms during cell-cell synchronisation. The intercellular medium plays an important role in self-synchronisation of ultradian rhythms between individual cells. Low cooperative activity of hepatocytes of old rats resulted from altered composition of the intercellular medium rather than direct effects of animal and cellular ageing. Similarly, in the whole body, changes in levels of gangliosides and catecholamines in the blood serum, a natural intercellular medium, can be critical events in age-dependent changes of the serum and accordingly cell-cell synchronisation. Hepatocytes of old rats exhibit some of the properties of young cells following an increase in blood serum ganglioside level, as well as, in in vitro conditions, after the addition of gangliosides to the culture medium. Together with data on ultradian functional and metabolic rhythms, all the material reviewed here allows us to propose a mechanism of direct cell-cell cooperation via the medium in which the cells exist, that supplements the nervous and hormonal central regulation of organ functions. Ultradian intracellular rhythms may thus provide a finer framework within which the integrated dynamics of respiration, heart rate, brain activity, and even behavioural patterns, are brought to an optimal functional pattern. Innate and direct cell-cell cooperation may have been employed as a means of intercellular regulation during the course of metazoan evolution, that preceded nervous regulation and is presently retained in mammals.


Assuntos
Ciclos de Atividade/fisiologia , Comunicação Celular , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Celulares , Animais , Fractais
3.
Dev Growth Differ ; 29(3): 205-210, 1987 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37281042

RESUMO

Karyoplasts obtained from full-grown oocytes of the starfish Aphelasterias japonica have practically no cytoplams and are incapable of maturation. Karyoplasts of oocytes of starfishes Marthasterias glacialis and Acanthaster planci have the cytoplasm (10%-15% of the total karyoplast volume) and are often capable of maturation, fertilization and one or several cleavage divisions. The embryoskaryoplasts completely lose supersensitivity and retain usual sensitivity to cytostatic antagonists of neurotransmitters. The assumption is made that the incapability or limited capability of this embryos for development might be due to a deficiency of certain components of the "prenervous" neurotransmitter systems.

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