Search results for " strain"
showing 10 items of 868 documents
Electroretinographic response in WAG/Rij rats after low-intensity cyclic light exposure.
1993
In order to investigate the combined influence of age and light, the b-wave and oscillatory potentials (OPs) of the electroretinogram (ERG) were recorded in 1.5-, 7- and 12-month-old WAG/Rij rats, reared under homogenous low-intensity cyclic light exposure. Wistar albino rats of the same ages, reared under the same conditions, served as controls. The b-wave amplitude decreased, and its implicit time increased in the older age groups significantly more in WAG/Rij than in Wistar rats. Statistical analysis indicated that the b-wave amplitude is a more suitable parameter than implicit time in differentiating the ERG variations of one rat strain from the other. The added amplitude of the OPs als…
Effects of age and life-time physical training on fibre composition of slow and fast skeletal muscle in rats.
1987
The effects of age and endurance training on muscle fibre characteristics were studied in a slow (m. soleus, MS) and in a fast (m. rectus femoris, MRF) skeletal muscle. Wistar rats at ages of 1, 2, 4, 10, and 24 months were used as experimental animals. The trained rats were put to run on a motor-driven treadmill 5 d/wk beginning from the age of 1 month. The body weights of the animals increased continuously throughout their lives. The muscle weights increased up to the age of 10 months, after which they tended to decrease. The trained adult rats had lower body weights as well as lower muscle weights than the untrained adult rats. The amount of the intramuscular lipid decreased with age, es…
Effects of age, and protein malnutrition followed by a balanced diet on the non-parallel change in digestive enzymes in the pancreas and their secret…
1988
1. Ninety male Wistar rats were divided into two groups. A control group (C) was fed on a balanced diet, containing 200 g protein/kg for 51 d. An experimental group (E) was fed on a low-protein diet containing 50 g protein/kg for 28 d (PM), and then on a balanced diet for 23 d (BR). At different days of PM and BR, the pancreas and the pancreatic juice were collected 40 min after injection of 0.1 mCi [3H]leucine. The amounts of amylase (EC3.2.1.1), trypsinogen 2 (EC3.4.21.4), chymotrypsinogen 1 (EC3.4.21.1) and lipase (EC3.1.1.3) were determined after separation by the isoelectric focussing technique. Incorporation of [3H]leucine into the four hydrolases of pancreatic juice and pancreas was …
Effects of experimental type 1 diabetes and exercise training on angiogenic gene expression and capillarization in skeletal muscle.
2006
Diabetes alters microvascular structure and function and is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. In diabetic skeletal muscle, impaired angiogenesis and reduced VEGF-A expression have been observed, whereas in healthy muscle exercise is known to have opposite effects. We studied the effects of type 1 diabetes and combined exercise training on angiogenic mRNA expression and capillarization in mouse skeletal muscle. Microarray and real-time PCR analyses showed that diabetes altered the expression of several genes involved in angiogenesis. For example, levels of proangiogenic VEGF-A, VEGF-B, neuropilin-1, VEGFR-1, and VEGFR-2 were reduced and the levels of antiangiogenic thrombospon…
Decreased level of cardiac antioxidants in endurance-trained rats.
1989
Han-Wistar rats were exposed to a 194-200 h swimming protocol which caused a significant increase in the cardiac weight. The levels of various tissue antioxidants were assayed from the myocardium of the right ventricle and from the left ventricle (subendo- and subepimyocardium). This endurance training decreased the activities of catalase in the right ventricle and in the subendo- and subepimyocardium and Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase in the subendomyocardium as well as the concentration of vitamin E in the right ventricle and in the subendomyocardium. Also, the activity of thioredoxin reductase decreased in each part of myocardium and that of glutathione reductase in the right ventricle and i…
Endurance training and antioxidants of lung
1984
Mice and rats were adjusted to daily treadmill training programs, which were heavy enough to increase the oxidative capacity of skeletal muscles. Endurance training did not affect the activities of catalase and glutathione peroxidase and the concentration of vitamin E in the lungs of mice and rats. Thus increased ventilation and oxygen utilization induced by exercise training do not modify lung antioxidants, in contrast to hyperoxia and hypoxia.
Acute ammonia toxicity is mediated by the NMDA type of glutamate receptors
1992
AbstractPrevious experiments in our laboratory suggested that ammonium toxicity could be mediated by the NMDA type of glutamate receptors. To assess this hypothesis we tested if MK-801, a specific antagonist of the NMDA receptor, is able to prevent ammonium toxicity. Mice and rats were injected i.p. with 12 and 7 mmol/kg of ammonium acetate, respectively, 73% of the mice and 70% of the rats died. However, when the animals were injected i.p. with 2 mg/kg of MK-801, 15 min before ammonium injection, only 5% of the mice and 15% of the rats died. The remarkable protection afforded by MK-801 indicates that ammonia toxicity is mediated by the NMDA receptor.
Different muscarinic receptors mediate autoinhibition of acetylcholine release and vagally-induced vasoconstriction in the rat isolated perfused heart
1990
Experiments were carried out on rat isolated perfused hearts with both vagus nerves attached. The acetylcholine stores were labelled with [14C]-choline. The effects of muscarinic receptor antagonists on the [14C]-overflow and increase in perfusion pressure evoked by vagus nerve stimulation (10 Hz, 4-10 mA) were studied in order to determine the muscarinic receptor type involved in autoinhibition of acetylcholine release and vagally-induced vasoconstriction in the rat heart. Stimulation of the vagus nerves (1200 pulses) caused an increase in [14C]-overflow and in perfusion pressure which was significantly reduced by hexamethonium 500 mumol/l and abolished by tetrodotoxin 0.3 mumol/l or perfu…
Small rises in plasma choline reverse the negative arteriovenous difference of brain choline.
1990
The concentrations of free choline in blood plasma from a peripheral artery and from the transverse sinus, in the CSF, and in total brain homogenate, have been measured in untreated rats and in rats after acute intraperitoneal administration of choline chloride. In untreated rats, the arteriovenous difference of brain choline was related to the arterial choline level. At low arterial blood levels (less than 10 microM) as observed under fasting conditions, the arteriovenous difference was negative (about -2 microM), indicating a net release of choline from the brain of about 1.6 nmol/g/min. In rats with spontaneously high arterial blood levels (greater than 15 microM), the arteriovenous diff…
Nicotinic cholinoceptors in the rat pineal gland as analyzed by Western blot, light- and electron microscopy
1992
Abstract The monoclonal antibody WF6, raised against purified Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) was used to study the distribution of cholinoceptors in the rat pineal gland by means of Western blot analysis, light- and electron microscopy. The immunoblot analysis using homogenized pineal gland revealed a labeled protein band of apparent molecular weight 40 kDa which was identified as α-subunits of a nAChR. In the light microscope, approximately one-fourth of the pinealocytes exhibited cytoplasmic immunoreactivity (IR) of varying density. In the electron microscope, IR was seen as patchy staining of cell membranes of pinealocyte somata and processes. Presynaptic IR material wa…