The loop-breaking strength of various suture materials was tested over a period of 14 days during which time the sutures were incubated in vitro in saline or canine serum, bile, activated or nonactivated pancreatic juice. Under the conditions of the study, silk and nylon maintained their strength in each environment. Polyglycolic acid maintained its strength in saline, bile or serum, but gradually lost much of its strength when exposed to pancreatic juice. Catgut, both plain and chromic, disintegrated almost completely within 24-48 hours respectively when exposed to enterokinase activated pancreatic juice. Inhibition of trypsin by aprotinin (Trasylol) resulted in preservation of catgut strength but inhibition by soybean inhibitor did not. The latter findings suggest that proteolytic enzymes, other than trypsin, may be responsible for the disintegration.
It is known that the nervous system significantly attenuates systemic inflammatory responses through the parasympathetic nervous system. Furthermore, it has been reported that the alpha 7 subunit of a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor is required for a cholinergic inhibition against cytokine synthesis in a macrophage. As antigen-presenting cells (APCs) play a central role in the generation of primary T cell responses and the maintenance of immunity, in this study, we investigated the expression level of nicotinic receptors of a p53-deficient APC cell line (JawsII) derived from a mouse bone marrow. We showed that stimulation of the JawsII cells with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) led increase of CD80 and CD86 expression while diminishment of the surface nicotinic receptor. On the other hand, stimulation of nicotinic receptor had no effect on these phenomena. Furthermore, we examined the ability of the cells to release cytokine when stimulated with both nicotine and LPS and showed that the stimulation with LPS augmented the secretion of IL-1a, IL-1b, IL-6, and TNF-alpha. These results suggested that nicotinic stimulation had no effect on the diminishment of alpha 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor on JawsII cells by LPS stimulation.
Trichosporin (TS) -B-VIa, a fungal alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) -containing peptide consisting of 19 amino acid residues and a phenylalaninol, produced both 45Ca2+ influx into bovine adrenal chromaffin cells and catecholamine secretion from the cells. The secretion induced by TS-B-VIa at lower concentrations (2-5 microM) was completely dependent on the external Ca2+, while that induced by TS-B-VIa at higher concentrations (10-30 microM) was partly independent of the Ca2+. The concentration-response curves (2-5 microM) for the TS-B-VIa-induced Ca2+ influx and secretion correlated well. The TS-B-VIa (at 5 microM) -induced secretion was not antagonized by diltiazem, a blocker of L-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. The treatment of fura-2-loaded C6 glioma cells with TS-B-VIa (2-5 microM) led to an increase in the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in a concentration-dependent manner but the stimulatory effects of TS-B-VIa on [Ca2+]i were only slightly observed in Ca(2+)-free medium, indicating that TS-B-VIa causes Ca2+ influx from the external medium into the C6 cells. The TS-B-VIa-induced increase in [Ca2+]i in the C6 cells was not antagonized by diltiazem and by SK&F 96365, a novel blocker of receptor-mediated Ca2+ entry. High K+ increased neither [Ca2+]1 in the C6 cells nor Mn2+ influx into the cells, while TS-B-VIa increased Mn2+ influx. Also in other non-excitable cells, bovine platelets, similar results were obtained. These results strongly suggest that the mechanism of Ca2+ influx by TS-B-VIa at the lower concentrations is distinct from the event of Ca2+ influx through receptor-operated or L-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels in both excitable cells (the chrornaffin cells) and non-excitable cells (the C6 cells and the platelets) and that TS-B-VIa per se may form Ca(2+)-permeable ion channels in biological membranes. On the other hand, the peptide at the higher concentrations seems to damage cell membranes.
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