Acute pyelonephritis, a complication of Escherichia coli bacteriuria, must represent a bacterial invasion through the kidney epithelium. To study this process, we overlaid bacterial suspensions onto monolayers of cultured human kidney proximal tubular epithelial cells and measured cytotoxicity by release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Thirty-four isolates cultured from patients with acute pyelonephritis were screened for the ability to cause pyelonephritis in CBA mice by transurethral challenge. The eight most virulent strains
Three antisera to the C-terminally extended form of gastrin or the C-terminal flanking peptide of progastrin were used in an attempt to investigate the post-translational processing of progastrin at the cellular level by light and electron microscopical immunocytochemistry. In the normal human gastric antrum, the G-cell secretory granules were found to contain both gastrin and the C-terminal progastrin determinants (progastrin 87-93, 87-95 and 93-101). Immunostaining of serial sections at the light microscopical level revealed that duodenal gastrin-containing cells also express the C-terminal progastrin determinants, as well as gastrin-34. In foetal tissue, cells containing C-terminal gastrin and the C-flanking peptide of progastrin were first seen at 8 weeks of gestation, in the duodenum. They were not found in the stomach until the 11th week. In hyperplastic G-cells and in gastrin-producing tumour cells, the level of C-terminal peptide immunoreactivity was variable and often lower than that seen in normal antrum and only minimal immunoreactivity could be detected using electron immunocytochemistry. This was interpreted as representing altered post-translational processing of progastrin in modified G-cells.
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