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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 96 (1987), S. 243-249 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: cholera toxin ; ionophore ; calcium ; brush-border membrane vesicles
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary The physiological relevance of an apparent ionophore activity of cholera toxin towards Ca2+ has been examined in several different systems designed to measure affinity, specificity, rates of ion transfer, and effects on intracellular ion concentrations. Half-maximal transfer rates across porcine jejunal brush-border vesicles were obtained at a concentration of 0.20 μM Ca2+. When examined in the presence of competing ions the transfer process was blocked by very low concentrations of La3+ or Cd2+. Sr2+, Ba2+ and Mg2+ were relatively inefficient competitors for Ca2+ transport mediated by cholera toxin. The relative affinities observed would be compatible with a selectivity for Ca2+ transfer at physiological ion concentrations, as well as an inhibition of this ionophore activity by recognized antagonists of cholera toxin such as lanthanum ions. Entry rates of Ca2+ into brush-border vesicles exposed to cholera toxin were large enough to accelerate the collapse of a Ca2+ gradient generated by endogenous Ca, Mg-ATPase activity. The treatment of isolated jejunal enterocytes with cholera toxin caused a significant elevation in cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations as measured by Quin-2 fluorescence. This effect was specifically prevented by prior exposure of the cholera toxin to excess ganglioside GM1. We conclude that cholera toxin has many of the properties required for promoting transmembranes Ca2+ movement in membrane vesicles and appears to be an effective Ca2+ ionophore in isolated mammalian cells.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1433-2965
    Keywords: Key words:Anticoagulant – Bone density – Coumarin – Meta-analysis – Osteoporosis – Vitamin K
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: Oral anticoagulants are putative risk factors for osteoporosis, but observational cross-sectional studies describing their effects on bone mineral density have reported conflicting results, prospective studies are not available, and randomized trials are not feasible. To determine the association between exposure to oral anticoagulants and changes in bone density, we systematically reviewed nine original cross-sectional studies on the effect of long-term exposure to any oral anticoagulant on bone density in adults. The effect size was assessed by standardized mean difference (SMD, exposed minus unexposed) and pooled by skeletal site; results are reported in standard deviation units. Bone density was significantly decreased among exposed subjects in the ultradistal radius (SMD, –0.39; 95% CI, –0.67 to –0.10) but not in the distal radius (SMD, –0.47; 95% CI, –0.97 to 0.04), lumbar spine (SMD, –0.27; 95% CI, –0.59 to 0.05), femoral neck (SMD, 0.03; 95% CI, –0.22 to 0.29) or femoral trochanter (SMD, –0.18; 95% CI, –0.48 to 0.11). The evidence should be considered with caution, but it is consistent with a negative association of oral anticoagulants with bone density in the ultradistal radius, although not in the spine or hip. This suggests that long-term oral anticoagulation might be associated with no more than a modest increase in osteoporotic fracture risk, but this should be verigied in future longitudinal studies.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Osteoporosis international 9 (1999), S. 469-475 
    ISSN: 1433-2965
    Keywords: Key words:Cohort study – Epidemiology – Estrogen replacement therapy – Forearm fracture – Hip fracture – Osteoporosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: To assess the ability of distal forearm fractures to predict future fractures, we conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study among the 1288 residents (243 men, 1045 women) of Rochester, Minnesota age 35 years or older who experienced their first distal forearm fracture in 1975–94. During 9664 person-years of follow-up, 548 patients experienced 1109 subsequent fractures, excluding 195 that occurred on the same day as the index forearm fracture. The cumulative incidence of any subsequent fracture was 55% by 10 years and 80% by 20 years following the initial distal forearm fracture. Compared to expected fracture rates in the community, the risk of a hip fracture following the index forearm fracture was increased 1.4-fold in women (95% CI, 1.1–1.8) and 2.7-fold in men (95% CI, 0.98–5.8). In women, the risk of hip fracture differed by age, as we had found in a previous study. Women over age 70 had a 1.6-fold increase (95% CI, 1.2–2.0) in subsequent hip fracture risk whereas women who sustained their first forearm fracture before age 70 years did not have significantly increased risk. By contrast, vertebral fractures were significantly increased at all ages, with a 5.2-fold increase (95% CI, 4.5–5.9) in risk among women and a 10.7-fold increase (95% CI, 6.7–16.3) among men following a first distal forearm fracture. The increased risk in men suggests that a sentinel forearm fracture should not be ignored. Among the women, we also found a missed opportunity for intervention as hormone replacement therapy was underutilized.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Key words Cl ; channels ; CFTR ; cAMP ; Forskolin ; Insect chloride channels ; Sf9 cells ; Patch clamp
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The Sf9 insect Spodoptora frugiperda cell line was used for heterologous expression of the cloned human cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) cDNA, or the cloned β-galactosidase gene, using the baculovirus Autographa califonica as the infection vector. Using application of the patch-clamp technique, evidence for functional expression of CFTR was obtained according to the following three criteria. Firstly, whole-cell currents recorded 2 days after infection with CFTR revealed a statistically significant increase of membrane conductance, ≈25 times above that of mock-infected control cells, with the reversal potential of the major current component being governed by the chloride equilibrium potential (E Cl). Secondly, in contrast to uninfected cells and cells infected with β-galactosidase, the membrane conductance to chloride of CFTR-injected cells was stimulated by cytosolic adenosine 3´,5´-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP), which was raised by exposing the cells to 10 μM forskolin. Thirdly, recordings of currents through single channels in excised outside-out membrane patches of CFTR-infected cells revealed channels which were clearly different from the native insect chloride channel. Excised outside-out patches of CFTR-infected and forskolin-stimulated cells exhibited wave-like gating kinetics of well-resolved current transitions. All-point Gaussian distributions revealed contributions from several (five to nine) identical channels. Such channels, in excised outside-out patches, studied with a pipette [Cl−] = 40 mM and a bath [Cl−] = 150 mM, rectified the current in agreement with simple electrodiffusion and with a single-channel Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz permeability, P Cl = 1.34⋅10−14 ± 0.23⋅ 10−14 cm3/s (n = 5), corresponding to a physiological single-channel conductance of 2.8 ± 0.5 pS (V M = E Cl) and a limiting conductance, γ150/150, = 7.7 ± 1.3 pS ([Cl−]Bath = [Cl−]Cell = 150 mM). Currents recorded from multichannel excised outside-out patches could shift from the above mode of resolvable unitary conductance transitions to one which was too fast to reveal the dwell-times of closed and open states. During periods characterized by noisy currents, the variance (σ2) of current fluctuations about their stationary mean value depicted a U-shaped function of membrane potential, with a minimum value at a pipette potential where the chloride current was shown to be zero. Thus, it can be concluded that the current fluctuations are caused by fast gating of channels specific for chloride ions. Switching back and forth between the two gating modes of clusters of chloride channels occurred from moment to moment in excised patches when the membrane potential was held at a constant value indicating cooperative gating as a result of interaction between neighbouring chloride channels.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 107 (1989), S. 137-144 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: Cl conductance ; conductance activation ; intestinal secretion ; cystic fibrosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary Requirements for the activation of Cl conductance have been investigated in pig jejunal brush border vesicles. The stability of ATP as a substrate for protein kinase activity, the stability of the phosphoprotein product of protein kinase action, and the choice of buffer system used for vesicle preparation were studied as variables which affected the outcome of in vitro activation attempts. Arsenate was selected as the most effective agent in protecting ATP from hydrolysis by the phosphatase activity in this vesicle system. Brush border vesicle protein appeared to prevent the accumulation of phosphoprotein in a cAMP-dependent protein kinase reaction, and vesicle protein only had phosphate acceptor activity when KF was added as a presumptive inhibitor of phosphoprotein phosphatase. A Cl conductance response to a potassium gradient and valinomycin was present in vesicles prepared in buffers containing tetramethylammonium. Cl− conductance activity was not increased in this system by the addition of ATP, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. There was no Cl conductance response to a potassium gradient in vesicles buffered with imidazolium-acetate. Incorporation of ATP, AsO 4 3− , and F− into these nonconductive vesicles by homogenization, followed by addition of dibutyryl cAMP, produced substantial conductance activity. Maximal activation of Cl− conductance was obtained with vesicles prepared in imidazolium-acetate buffering, using precautions to stabilize ATP and phosphoprotein prior to conductance measurements.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 129 (1992), S. 323-328 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: exocrine chloride secretion ; intestinal secretion ; CFTR
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary Antibody raised in mice was used in attempting to identify proteins responsible for the conductive chloride transport that can be measured in porcine ileal brush border membrane vesicles. Ileal brush-border membrane vesicle protein from pig was separated into five different molecular mass fractions by preparative SDS polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis. Separated protein fractions were used to immunize mice. Antibody was screened for reactivity with antigen by Western blotting, and for effects on conductive chloride transport in ileal brush border membrane vesicles. Immunization with brush-border protein from fraction I proteins (〉110 kDa) produced polyclonal antisera which specifically inhibited the conductive component of chloride uptake by ileal brush border vesicle preparations. Western blotting of the antigen showed the presence of several protein species of molecular mass 〉100 kDa that were recognized by immune serum. Spleen cells from a mouse producing antiserum that inhibited conductive chloride transport were fused with a myeloma cell line. The resulting hybridoma colonies produced antibody that reacted with at least seven distinct protein bands by Western blot assay and inhibited chloride conductance in brush-border membrane vesicles.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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