Home About us Contact | |||
Relative Deficit (relative + deficit)
Selected AbstractsAntibody response to influenza infection of mice: different patterns for glycoprotein and nucleocapsid antigensIMMUNOLOGY, Issue 4 2003Robert Sealy Summary Our previous studies of C57BL/6 mice intranasally infected with influenza virus (A/PR8) revealed a spike of virus-specific immunoglobulin A (IgA)-secreting antibody-forming cells (AFC) in the mediastinal lymph node (MLN) 7 days post-infection. Here we show that these AFC are directed only against viral glycoprotein, and not nucleocapsid antigens. The early IgA spike associates with a decline in glycoprotein-specific AFC during week 2 post-infection. In contrast to the glycoprotein-specific AFC, nucleocapsid-specific, IgA-secreting AFC develop gradually in the MLN and persist for more than 3 weeks post-infection. As peripheral lymph node reactions wane, the nucleocapsid-specific AFC appear as long-sustained populations in the bone marrow. Microanatomical examination of the respiratory tract in infected mice shows foci of infection established in the lung 2 days post-infection, from which virus spreads to infect the entire lining of the trachea by day 3. At this time, viral haemagglutinin can be seen within the MLN, probably on projections from infected dendritic cells. This feature disappears within a day, though viral antigen expression continues to spread throughout the respiratory tract. Total IgA- and IgG-secreting AFC appear histologically in large numbers during the first week post-infection, significantly preceding the appearance of germinal centres (revealed by peanut agglutinin staining in week 2). To explain these results, we suggest that the initial immunogenic encounter of B cells with viral antigens occurs about 3 days post-infection in the MLN, with antigens transported by dendritic cells from airway mucosa, the only site of viral replication. Viral glycoproteins expressed as integral membrane components on the surface of infected dendritic cells [probably in the absence of cognate T helper (Th) cells] promote members of expanding relevant B-cell clones to undergo an IgA switch and terminal local plasmacytoid differentiation. Anti-glycoprotein specificities are thus selectively depleted from progeny of activated B-cell clones which are channelled to participate in germinal centre formation (perhaps by cognate T helper cells when they become sufficiently frequent). One product of the germinal centre reaction is the long-sustained, bone marrow-resident population, which is accordingly rich in anti-nucleoprotein, but not anti-glycoprotein specificities. Of note, we find that AFC responses toward influenza virus and Sendai virus differ, even though viral replication is limited to the airway mucosa in each case. The response towards Sendai virus exhibits neither the early appearance of anti-glycoprotein AFC expressing IgA in draining lymph nodes, nor the subsequent relative deficit of this specificity from bone marrow AFC populations. [source] The effect of aging on distraction osteogenesis in the ratJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 3 2001J. Aronson The effect of age on bone formation in the limb lengthening model of distraction osteogenesis (DO) was investigated in two studies using Sprague,Dawley (SD) rats from two colonies at various ages (CAMM: 9 vs 24 months, Harlan: 4 vs 24 months). External fixators were placed on the right tibiae of 30 male SD rats (20 CAMM, 10 Harlan) and mid-diaphyseal osteotomies were performed. Distraction was performed at 0.2 mm bid for 20 days (CAMM) or 14 days (Harlan). The experimental (DO) and control (contra-lateral) tibiae were removed for high-resolution radiography and decalcified histology. Videomicroscopy was used to quantitate radiodensity, histology (matrix type) and relative areas of cell proliferation, which was identified by proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunochemistry. Both studies demonstrated an age-related decrease in the percent mineralized bone (radiodensity) in the distraction gap (CAMM 9 vs 24 months: 68% vs 51%, P < 0.003; Harlan 4 vs 24 months: 95% vs 36%, P < 0.001) and no significant colony or distraction time-specific difference was seen between the two colonies of 24-month-old rats. Histology was performed on the Harlan rats. The DO gaps in the 24-month-old rats demonstrated less endosteal new bone compared to the 4-month-old rats (P < 0.01), but equivalent periosteal new bone. In 4-month-old rats, PCNA-immunostained cells were organized along the primary matrix front (where the first deposition of osteoid occurs) extending across both periosteal and endosteal surfaces. In 24-month-old rats, PCNA + cells were organized in zones along the periosteal new bone fronts only and irregularly scattered throughout the endosteal gap within a fibrovascular non-ossifying matrix. These results indicate that 24-month-old rats have a relative deficit in endosteal bone formation which may not be related to cell proliferation but rather to cell organization. This model reflects the clinical situation where radiographic findings in older patients demonstrate significant delays in mineralization during DO. We believe this model of DO in aged rats presents unique in vivo opportunities to test hypotheses concerning (1) the effects of aging on bone repair, (2) the effects of pharmacological agents on bone repair in a geriatric setting, and (3) to study the mechanisms underlying DO. © 2001 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. [source] Age distributions, birth weights, nephrogenic rests, and heterogeneity in the pathogenesis of Wilms tumorPEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, Issue 3 2006Norman E. Breslow PhD Abstract Background The National Wilms Tumor Study (NWTS) constitutes a unique resource for study of clinical, pathologic, and epidemiologic features of Wilms tumor (WT). Procedure Data from NWTS-3,4,5 were compiled for 7,455 patients with tumors of favorable (FH) or anaplastic (AH) histology. The associations of birth weight (BW) and age-at-onset with gender, intralobar (ILNR), and perilobar (PLNR) nephrogenic rests, tumor focality, congenital malformation syndromes, and tumor histology were analyzed using descriptive statistics and linear regression. Results Mean BWs for male and female patients without PLNR were 3.52 and 3.36 kg, respectively, and for those with PLNR were 0.12 kg and 0.15 kg heavier. Mean age was 45 months for males with no rests whose tumors were unifocal and of triphasic favorable histology. ILNR or multifocality decreased the mean age by 18 and 10 months, respectively, whereas female gender, blastemal/FH or AH increased it by 3, 10, and 16 months. Over 90% of multifocal tumors occurred in the presence of demonstrated ILNR or PLNR or both. The apparent bimodality of the age distributions and later mean ages-at-onset for females with both unifocal and multifocal tumors were explained in part by the relative deficit in females of ILNR versus PLNR-associated tumors. Conclusions These observations support the view that there are multiple pathways to Wilms tumorigenesis. They will facilitate selection of informative subgroups of patients for molecular analysis that may serve to identify the putative pathway for the majority of patients who cannot be classified provisionally on the basis of ILNR or PLNR. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2006;47:260,267. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Axonal loss occurs early in dominant optic atrophyACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 3 2010Dan Milea Abstract. Purpose:, This study set out to investigate retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness and best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) in relation to age in healthy subjects and patients with OPA1 autosomal dominant optic atrophy (DOA). Methods:, We carried out a cross-sectional investigation of RNFL thickness and ganglion cell layer density in 30 healthy subjects and 10 patients with OPA1 DOA using optical coherence tomography (OCT). We then performed a regression analysis of RNFL thickness and BCVA versus age. Results:, Both healthy subjects and DOA patients demonstrated a gradual reduction in RNFL thickness with age; the relationship was best described statistically by a model that assumed a constant offset between the two groups. Best corrected VA decreased significantly with age in DOA patients, in whom BCVA was correlated with peripapillary RNFL thickness in the inferior and superior peripapillary quadrants and with total macular thickness at eccentricities of 500,3000 ,m. The observations were best described by a constant offset of 41.9 ,m separating the two groups and an annual decrease in RNFL thickness of 0.48 ,m (p < 0.0001). In patients with DOA, increasing age was associated with decreasing BCVA (p = 0.046). Conclusions:, This cross-sectional study found evidence of comparable age-related decreases in RNFL thickness in healthy subjects and in DOA patients, where the deficit in DOA patients is best described using a model that assumes the deficit between the groups does not vary with age. The gradual reduction of BCVA with age may be a consequence of a relative deficit in RNFL thickness that is established before the second decade of life. [source] |