Carbetocin, a long-acting oxytocin analog, was administered by intravenous and intramuscular injection to 40 women 24 to 48 hours postpartum. Intravenous injection of 8 to 30 micrograms produced a tetanic uterine contraction within 2 minutes, lasting about 6 minutes, followed by rhythmic contractions for a further 60 +/- 18 minutes. Intramuscular injection of 10 to 70 micrograms also produced tetanic contraction in less than 2 minutes, lasting about 11 minutes, and followed by rhythmic contractions for an additional 119 +/- 69 minutes. The prolonged duration of activity after intramuscular compared with the intravenous carbetocin was significant (p = 0.020). Carbetocin produced mild lower abdominal cramping in most patients and severe pain in three patients who received 50 or 100 micrograms intravenously or 70 micrograms intramuscularly. Approximately half of the patients also experienced flushing and warmth. Although carbetocin has not yet been studied immediately postpartum, its prolonged uterine activity suggests that carbetocin may offer advantages over oxytocin in management of the third stage of labor.
Excised, unfertilized cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) ovules were cultured for 1-5 days postanthesis and embryo-sac development was studied with the electron microscope. In some ovules the two polar nuclei fuse and the diploid endosperm nucleus goes through a limited number of free nuclear divisions after 2-3 days in culture. Each nucleus has two nucleoli, in contrast to nuclei of fertilized triploid endosperm which have three nucleoli. Precocious cell walls form between the endosperm nuclei on the 3rd day in culture. The morphology of the plastids, mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), dictyosomes and microbodies, and the amount of starch and lipid in the diploid cellular endosperm are similar to those of the central cell. A few large helical polysomes appear close to plastids and mitochondria. After 2 days in culture, one of the two synergids in the unfertilized cultured ovules shows degenerative changes which in fertilized ovules are associated with the presence of the pollen tube, i.e., increase in electron density, collapse of vacuoles, irregular darkening and thickening of mitochondrial and plastid membranes, disappearance of the plasmalemma and the membranes of the plasmalemma and the membranes of the RER. The second synergid remains unchanged in appearance. The egg cell does not shrink or divide or show structural changes characteristic of the cotton zygote. Embryo-sac development is arrested on the 4th and 5th days in culture. The nucellus continues growth and at 14 days crushes the degenerate embryo sac.
ABSTRACT:Fractions containing myelin of varying degrees of compaction were prepared from human white matter. Protein kinase activity in these fractions was measured by using both endogenous and exogenous myelin basic protein (MBP) as substrates. In both cases, less compact myelin fractions possessed higher levels of protein kinase activity than the compact myelin fraction. In addition, the specific activity of phosphorylated basic protein was greater in the loosely compacted fractions than in compact multilamellar myelin. When basic protein in compact myelin or the myelin fractions was phosphorylated by the endogenous kinase, approximately 70% of the [32P]phosphate was incorporated at a single site, identified as Ser-102. The remaining 30% was found in three other minor sites. Electron microscopy of less compact myelin showed it was composed of fewer lamellae which correlated with a relative decrease in the proportion of cationic charge isomers (microheteromers) when MBP was subjected to gel electrophoresis at alkaline pH. The shift in charge microheterogeneity of basic protein to the less cationic isomers in the less compact myelin fractions correlated with an increase in protein kinase activity and a greater specific activity of phosphorylated basic protein.
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