Although Hatano high-avoidance and low-avoidance rats (HAA and LAA, respectively) have been selectively bred for good versus poor avoidance learning, HAA rats are known to be more reactive to stress than LAA rats. In this study, HAA and LAA female rats were compared during reproductive aging by observing estrous cycles from 8 to 11 months of age. Furthermore, these rats were allowed to live out their natural lifespans, that is, until 24 months of age, in order to compare their survival and to clarify the relationship between reproductive aging and tumor development. At eight months of age, 2 of 35 HAA rats and 20 of 35 LAA rats had abnormal estrous cycles. The median lifespan of the HAA rats (673 days) was shorter than that of the LAA rats (733 days). The incidence of pituitary neoplasia was higher in the HAA rats than in the LAA rats. These results suggest that HAA female rats (i.e., stress-reactive rats) have a shorter lifespan than LAA female rats (i.e., stress-nonreactive rats) and develop pituitary neoplasia, which was one of the causal factors in their accelerated mortality. However, the onset of an age-matched abnormal cycle did not correspond with their lifespan.
Objectives: We first aimed to identify the histopathological changes occurring immediately after renal denervation (RDN) with radiofrequency energy, and then to assess the feasibility of determining procedural success using currently available clinical intravascular imaging techniques.Background: Catheter-based RDN has been used as an alternative therapy for hypertension.
We have developed a new method for obtaining information on whole tissues by light microscopy (LM) and ultrastructural features by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). This method uses serial sections of a stented artery embedded in resin. Stents were implanted in porcine coronary arteries in this study. The heart was perfusion fixed in a 2% paraformaldehyde and 1.25% glutaraldehyde mixed solution. The stented artery was then removed, fixed in 1% osmium, embedded in Quetol 651 resin, and sectioned serially. For LM, the black color of osmium was removed from the section by immersion in periodic acid and hydrogen peroxide after deplasticization. These sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and Elastica–Masson trichrome stain. For TEM, thin sections were re-embedded in Quetol 812 resin by the resupinate method and cut into ultrathin sections. A clear, fine structure was obtained, and organelles, microvilli, and cell junctions in the endothelium were easily observed. The combined observation of adjacent specimens by LM and TEM enabled us to relate histopathological changes in the millimeter scale to those in the nanometer scale.
-5-Fluorocytosine (5-FC) is an antimycotic and teratogenic compound. Oral administration of 5-FC to pregnant rats on gestation days (GD) 9 and 13 was shown to induce thoracolumbar supernumerary ribs (TSR, 14th rib) and abnormal digits, respectively, in fetuses. This study investigated the effects of 5-FC on homeobox genes, which control the anterior-posterior-axis. 5-FC (75 mg/kg) was administered orally on GD9 and GD13, and tissues collected from cranial and caudal regions of TSR sites were analyzed. Following 5-FC administration on GD9, the levels of expression of Hoxa10, which determine the position of the thoracic and lumbar vertebrae, were decreased at GD13. Analysis of hindlimbs 6 hours after administration on GD13 showed decreases in expression of Hoxa11, Hoxd12, and Hoxd13, the Hox genes responsible for limb formation from the proximal to distal, and from the anterior to posterior directions. The present findings showed that altered expression of Hox genes contributes to 5-FC teratogenicity.
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