Medullary thyroid carcinoma with multiple hepatic metastases: treatment with transcatheter arterial embolization and percutaneous ethanol injection. (1/62)

A 54-year-old man with medullary thyroid carcinoma in the thyroid gland was unable to undergo total thyroidectomy because the tumor had invaded the mediastinum. Radiation therapy and chemotherapy were given. Seven years later, intractable diarrhea and abdominal pain appeared, and computed tomography demonstrated hypervascular tumors in the thyroid gland and in the liver. The tumors were successfully treated with percutaneous ethanol injection to a lesion in the thyroid gland and transcatheter arterial embolization followed by percutaneous ethanol injection to tumors in the liver. Transcatheter arterial embolization and percutaneous ethanol injection may be valuable in treating medullary thyroid carcinoma.  (+info)

The preparation of protected fragments of lysozyme for semisynthesis. (2/62)

This paper reports the development of methods for preparing tryptic fragments of hen's-egg lysozyme in an appropriate state of protection for use in the chemical synthesis of modified polypeptides. 1. We describe the cleavage of the disulphide bridges of the enzyme and the simulatneous protection of the liberated thiol groups by S-sulphonation. Lysozyme resisted the usual conditions for this reaction. We have confirmed the stability of the S-sulphonyl group to the conditions met in peptide synthesis. 2. We describe the reversible protection of the amino groups of the enzyme by reaction with various anhydrides of 1,2-dicarboxylic acids. We conclude that 2-methylmaleic anhydride and exo-cis-3,6-endoxo-delta4-tetrahydrophthalic anhydride are unsuitable for our purpose but that maleic anhydride can, in spite of certain drawbacks, be used. 3. We describe the tryptic cleavage of the thiol- and amino-protected protein and the separation of the fragments. 4. We describe the reversible protection of the carboxylic acid groups (including the specific deprotection of the alpha-carboxyl group), the imidazolyl group and the aloph-amino groups of the fragments. Several alternative groups have been evaluated for most of these purposes. The side-chain amides did not present any serious problem of libility, 5. We describe experiments on the stability of the side chain of tryptophan, both protected by formylation and unprotected, to the acid conditions needed for the deprotection of the other functional groups in the peptide. We conclude that protection of tryptophan is unnecessary. We suggest that most of the methods described are of general application in peptide semisynthesis by fragment condensation. An Appendix is included to which points 6-ll appertain...  (+info)

A quantitative comparison of induction and challenge concentrations inducing a 50% positive response in three skin sensitization tests; the guinea pig maximization test, adjuvant and patch test and Buehler test. (3/62)

The sensitivities of three skin sensitization tests such as the Guinea pig maximization test (GPMT), Adjuvant and patch test (APT) and Buehler test (BT), were quantitatively compared with reference to induction and challenge concentrations. Four chemical which had different physico-chemical properties (octanol-water partition coefficient (logP) and reactivity with NH2-group) were used in order to clarify the effect of the physico-chemical properties of chemicals on the sensitivity of the different methods. The induction concentrations inducing a 50% positive response (IC50) demonstrated extreme variation with the three methods. For example, the BT/GPMT ratio of IC50 values for 2,4-dinitrochlorobenzene was 33, whereas that for maleic anhydride was 300,000. The results were thought to be caused by difference properties such as the logP and reactivity of chemicals. This correlation was confirmed by using 2-dodecen-1-yl succinic anhydride, which had the same reactivity but higher logP than that of maleic anhydride. On the other hand, the challenge concentrations inducing 50% positive responses (CC50) were less affected by the methods and the BT/GPMT ratios for CC50 values were all within a 10-fold range. These results suggest that the sensitivity might be strongly different with reference to induction concentration, but not challenge concentration among the three methods.  (+info)

Only multimeric hensin located in the extracellular matrix can induce apical endocytosis and reverse the polarity of intercalated cells. (4/62)

When an intercalated epithelial cell line was seeded at low density and allowed to reach confluence, it located the anion exchanger band 3 in the apical membrane and an H+-ATPase in the basolateral membrane. The same clonal cells seeded at high density targeted these proteins to the reverse location. Furthermore, high density cells had vigorous apical endocytosis, and low density cells had none. The extracellular matrix of high density cells was capable of inducing apical endocytosis and relocation of band 3 to the basolateral membrane in low density cells. A 230-kDa extracellular matrix (ECM) protein termed hensin, when purified to near-homogeneity, was able to reverse the phenotype of the low density cells. Antibodies to hensin prevented this effect, indicating that hensin is necessary for conversion of polarity. We show here that hensin was synthesized by both low density and high density cells. Whereas both phenotypes secreted soluble hensin into their media, only high density cells localized it in their ECM. Analysis of soluble hensin by sucrose density gradients showed that low density cells secreted monomeric hensin, and high density cells secreted higher order multimers. When 35S-labeled monomeric hensin was added to high density cells, they induced its aggregation suggesting that the multimerization was catalyzed by surface events in the high density cells. Soluble monomeric or multimeric hensin did not induce apical endocytosis in low density cells, whereas the more polymerized hensin isolated from insoluble ECM readily induced it. These multimers could be disaggregated by sulfhydryl reagents and by dimethylmaleic anhydride, and treatment of high density ECM by these reagents prevented the induction of endocytosis. These results demonstrate that hensin, like several ECM proteins, needs to be precipitated in the ECM to be functional.  (+info)

Enhanced antitumor potency of polyethylene glycolylated tumor necrosis factor-alpha: a novel polymer-conjugation technique with a reversible amino-protective reagent. (5/62)

We attempted to develop a novel method for the chemical modification of cytokines with synthetic polymers to increase in vivo therapeutic efficacy. A pH-reversible amino-protective reagent, dimethylmaleic anhydride (DMMAn), was used for polymer conjugation of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) with polyethylene glycol (PEG). The novel PEGylated TNF-alpha, PEG-TNF-alpha(+), which was pretreated with DMMAn before PEGylation, had 20% to 40% higher specific activity than PEG-TNF-alpha(-) (not treated with DMMAn) in vitro. Moreover, PEG-TNF-alpha(+) more potently caused tumor necrosis in Meth-A solid tumors in mice than did PEG-TNF-alpha(-). The middle fraction (M) of PEG-TNF-alpha(+), which was of the optimal degree of modification among PEG-TNF-alpha(+)s with different molecular weights, caused the highest degree of tumor hemorrhagic necrosis: 30-fold higher than native TNF-alpha and 2-fold higher than the most potent MPEG-TNF-alpha(-) that also had nearly the same molecular weight. Significantly, improvements in antitumor activity in vivo were more marked than were changes in specific activity. Furthermore, native TNF-alpha caused a dose-dependent body weight loss in mice, whereas no obvious side effects were observed in any PEG-TNF-alpha-treated mice. These results suggest that PEGylation using DMMAn is a useful for clinical cytokine delivery.  (+info)

Disruption of T cell tolerance to self-immunoglobulin causes polyclonal B cell stimulation followed by inactivation of responding autoreactive T cells. (6/62)

Scavenger receptor (SR)-specific delivery by maleylation of a ubiquitous self-protein, Ig, to SR-bearing APCs results in self-limiting induction of autoimmune effects in vivo. Immunization with maleyl-Ig breaks T cell tolerance to self-Ig and causes hypergammaglobulinemia, with increases in spleen weight and cellularity. The majority of splenic B cells show an activated phenotype upon maleyl-Ig immunization, leading to large-scale conversion to a CD138+ phenotype and to significant increases in CD138-expressing splenic plasma cells. The polyclonal B cell activation, hypergammaglobulinemia, and autoreactive Ig-specific T cell responses decline over a 2-mo period postimmunization. Following adoptive transfer, T cells from maleyl-Ig-immune mice taken at 2 wk postimmunization can induce hypergammaglobulinemia in the recipients, but those taken at 10 wk postimmunization cannot. Hypergammaglobulinemia in the adoptive transfer recipients is also transient and is followed by an inability to respond to fresh maleyl-Ig immunization, suggesting that the autoreactive Ig-specific T cells are inactivated peripherally following disruption of tolerance. Thus, although autoreactive T cell responses to a ubiquitous self-Ag, Ig, are induced by SR-mediated delivery to professional APCs in vivo resulting in autoimmune pathophysiological effects, they are effectively and rapidly turned off by inactivation of these activated Ig-specific T cells in vivo.  (+info)

Non-invasive reversal of intraluminal vas deferens polymer injection-induced azoospermia--technology. (7/62)

AIM: The rationale and technique underlying a novel concept of non-invasive removal of an intravasal vas deferens polymeric contraceptive drug to reverse drug injection-induced azoospermia are explained. Thus the conventional methods of surgical exploration to remove vas deferens plugs and intravasal injection of solvents to flush out contraceptive drugs are to be replaced by steps which will be readily accepted by subjects. METHODS: The approach is based upon the non-invasive application of specific forces to various segments of the vas deferens so that non-sclerosing and non-tissue-adherent compounds, in particular styrene maleic anhydride (SMA) can be expelled. Forces are generated by palpation; percutaneous electrical stimulation; vibration application; and percussion. The forces help to propel the intravasal polymer towards the ejaculatory duct for expulsion during ejaculation. All aspects of the total technique are clinically acceptable, simple, atraumatic, unlikely to cause pain and discomfort even without tranquilizers, local or general anaesthetics. The procedure may be repeated several times in different sittings spaced apart by about one week to achieve adequate plug expulsion. RESULTS: Model experiments demonstrated the feasibility of the concept. The polymer was nonadherent and could be moved within the vas deferens by the application of specific forces. Sufficient removal was possible to enable spermatic fluid to be transported along a region previously occupied by the polymer. A corroborating subhuman primate study by an independent investigator has shown that the semen profile becomes normal following the reversal. CONCLUSION: Adoption of the new technique may provide a means of non surgical restoration of normal semen profile after a period of fertility control obtained by intravasal drug injection.  (+info)

Isolation and characterization of denatured serum albumin from rats with endotoxicosis. (8/62)

Due to its rapid breakdown in the body, denatured serum albumin has not been identified in biological samples. In this study we attempted to determine whether denatured albumin could be identified in rats with endotoxicosis. Male Wistar rats were injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 5 mg/kg body weight). Plasma albumin concentration decreased to one-third the normal level at 2 days after the injection. By using the purified IgG against the specific epitope of chemically denatured albumin, two immunoreactive plasma proteins (bands D2 and D3) were identified by native PAGE followed by Western blot analysis. The plasma concentration of these two proteins increased significantly at 1 and 1.5 days after LPS injection. Peptide mass fingerprinting using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI/TOF-MS) identified these two proteins as serum albumin. In order to characterize their conformational nature, ion-exchange chromatography was used to isolate D2 and D3 albumins from rats injected with LPS. Far- and near-UV circular dichroism (CD), tryptophan and 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) fluorescence, and proteolytic susceptibility showed conformational alterations in the D2 and D3 albumins as compared with native albumin. These data indicate the presence of denatured albumin in circulating rat plasma, and this fact may contribute to a further understanding of the molecular mechanisms of albumin breakdown in physiological and pathophysiological conditions.  (+info)