Search results for "interactions."

showing 10 items of 1865 documents

A novel CXCR4 antagonist counteracts paradoxical generation of cisplatin-induced pro-metastatic niches in lung cancer.

2021

Platinum-based chemotherapy remains widely used in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) despite experimental evidence of its potential to induce long-term detrimental effects, including the promotion of pro-metastatic microenvironments. In this study, we investigated the interconnected pathways underlying the promotion of cisplatin-induced metastases. In tumor-free mice, cisplatin treatment resulted in an expansion in the bone marrow of CCR2+CXCR4+Ly6Chigh inflammatory monocytes (IMs) and an increase in lung levels of stromal SDF-1, the CXCR4 ligand. In experimental lung metastasis assays, cisplatin-induced IMs promoted the extravasation of tumor cells and the expansion of CD133+CXCR…

MaleReceptors CXCR4Stromal cellLung NeoplasmsSettore MED/08 - Anatomia PatologicaMonocytesMetastasisMiceCarcinoma Non-Small-Cell LungCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryGeneticsMedicineSettore MED/05 - Patologia ClinicaAnimalsHumansDrug InteractionsAC133 AntigenNeoplasm MetastasisLung cancerMolecular BiologyPharmacologyCisplatinCXCR4 antagonistchemotherapy combination therapy inflammatory monocytes lung cancer stem cells metastasis peptide anti-CXCR4 SDF-1/CXCR4 axisbusiness.industrymedicine.diseasePrimary tumorXenograft Model Antitumor AssaysExtravasationChemokine CXCL12medicine.anatomical_structureRAW 264.7 CellsA549 CellsCancer researchNeoplastic Stem CellsMolecular MedicineBone marrowCisplatinbusinessPeptidesmedicine.drugMolecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
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Mechanism-based predictions of interactions.

1994

Abstract Exposure to more than one toxic compound is common in real life. The resulting toxic effects are often more than the simple sum of the effects of the individual compounds. It is unlikely that it will ever be possible to test all combinations. It is therefore highly desirable to improve or develop means for reasonably approximating predictions of interactions. In order to be valid and extrapolatable, these predictions are most promising if they are mechanism-based. Examples will be given for possibilities of mechanism-based predictions of interactions which exceed trivialities of simple increases by enzyme induction of enzymatic rates of a given biotransformation pathway leading to …

MaleSalmonella typhimuriumEndogenous FactorsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisMetaboliteMechanism basedRats sprague dawleyXenobioticsRats Sprague-Dawleychemistry.chemical_compoundStilbenesBenzo(a)pyreneAnimalsIn real lifeDrug InteractionsPhosphorylationEpoxide HydrolasesMutagenicity TestsMechanism (biology)Public Health Environmental and Occupational HealthRatschemistryBiochemistryEnzyme InductionMicrosomes LiverBiochemical engineeringXenobioticMutagenicity TestResearch ArticleEnvironmental Health Perspectives
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Adolescent pre-exposure to ethanol or MDMA prolongs the conditioned rewarding effects of MDMA

2011

Adolescents often take ethanol (EtOH) in combination with MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxymethylamphetamine). In the present work we studied the effect of repeated intermittent adolescent pre-exposure to both drugs on the behavioral and neurochemical effects of MDMA in mice. Sixteen days after pre-treatment, the rewarding and reinstating effects of MDMA in the conditioned place preference (CPP) paradigm were evaluated, along with the levels of biogenic amines, basal motor activity and corticosterone response to different challenges. Pre-exposure to EtOH, MDMA or EtOH+MDMA did not affect the CPP induced by 10mg/kg of MDMA. However, adolescent exposure to EtOH or MDMA increased the duration of the co…

MaleSerotoninmedicine.medical_specialtyDopamineN-Methyl-34-methylenedioxyamphetaminePoison controlExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStriatumMotor ActivityChoice BehaviorHippocampusDrug Administration ScheduleExtinction PsychologicalMiceBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundNeurochemicalRewardCorticosteroneInternal medicineConditioning Psychologicalmental disordersAnimals Outbred StrainsmedicineAnimalsDrug InteractionsCerebral CortexEthanolIllicit DrugsMDMAExtinction (psychology)Hydroxyindoleacetic AcidCorpus StriatumConditioned place preferenceMonoamine neurotransmitterEndocrinologychemistryAnesthesia34-Dihydroxyphenylacetic AcidCorticosteronePsychologypsychological phenomena and processesmedicine.drugPhysiology & Behavior
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Sex-related effects in the superhydrophobic properties of damselfly wings in young and old Calopteryx splendens.

2013

Numerous sex-related morphological adaptations are connected to reproductive behavior in animals. For example, females of some insect species can submerge during oviposition, which may lead to sex-related adaptations in the hydrophobicity (water-repellency) due to specialization of certain morphological structures. On the other hand, ageing can cause changes in hydrophobicity of the surface, because the morphological structures can wear with age. Here, we investigated sex-and age-related differences in wing hydrophobicity and in morphology (spine density, wax cover characteristics, size of females' pseudopterostigma) potentially related to hydrophobicity of Calopteryx splendens damselflies.…

MaleSexual ReproductionAgingAnatomy and PhysiologyOdonataInsectOdonataBehavioral EcologyDamselflyMorphogenesisWings AnimalBiomechanicsYoung femaleYoung malemedia_commonSex CharacteristicsMultidisciplinarySexual DifferentiationEcologyAnimal BehaviorEcologyPhysicsQRSex relatedBiomechanical PhenomenaMedicineFemaleHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsResearch ArticleBiotechnologyanimal structuresmedia_common.quotation_subjectScienceMaterials ScienceBiophysicsBiologyBiomaterialsAnimalsBiologyAnalysis of VarianceEvolutionary BiologyWingCryoelectron MicroscopyReproductive SystemReproductive behaviorbiology.organism_classificationNanostructuresEvolutionary EcologyWaxesZoologyEntomologyDevelopmental BiologyPLoS ONE
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Modification of depressant and disinhibitory action of flurazepam during short term treatment in the rat

1972

Employing a fixed-interval schedule of reinforcement (temporal discrimination), alternated punished (fixed-ratio) and unpunished (variable-ratio) schedules of reinforcement, a Conditioned Avoidance Response, and studying its interaction with Pentobarbital on general anaesthesia, it has been shown that flurazepam hydrochloride after a single treatment induces very intense depressant effects and slight disinhibitory effects. Short term treatment at longer than daily intervals reduces the depressant effect and unmasks the disinhibitory effect. The phenomenon is probably caused by selective tolerance concerning the depressant action. The results are discussed from the point of view of the signi…

MaleShort term treatmentPentobarbitalReinforcement ScheduleTime FactorsFlurazepammedicine.drug_classAvoidance responsePharmacologyFlurazepam HydrochlorideAvoidance LearningEthylaminesmedicineAnimalsHypnotics and SedativesDrug InteractionsReinforcementPentobarbitalPharmacologyDrug ToleranceFluorineBenzazepinesRatsAction (philosophy)DepressantPsychologymedicine.drugPsychopharmacologia
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Effects of the flavonol quercetin on the bioavailability of simvastatin in pigs

2009

The influence of the dietary flavonol quercetin on the pharmacokinetics of the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor simvastatin was investigated in pigs. Simvastatin (0.25mg/kg body weight) was orally administered to six pigs either without or with quercetin (10mg/kg). In addition, simvastatin was administered to three pigs that had received a diet supplemented with the flavonol over a period of 1 week. Daily quercetin intake was 10mg/kg in these animals. Co-ingestion of quercetin with the statin did not alter area under the concentration time curve (AUC(0-->infinity)), time to achieve maximum plasma concentration (t(max)) or half-life (t(1/2)) of simvastatin. However, there was a trend towards a re…

MaleSimvastatinStatinFlavonolsSwinemedicine.drug_classBiological AvailabilityPharmaceutical SciencePharmacologyFood-Drug Interactionschemistry.chemical_compoundPharmacokineticsBlood plasmapolycyclic compoundsmedicineAnimalsIngestionheterocyclic compoundscardiovascular diseasesCross-Over StudiesbiologyChemistrynutritional and metabolic diseasesBioavailabilitySimvastatinHMG-CoA reductasebiology.proteinQuercetinlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Quercetinmedicine.drugEuropean Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
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The site of fertilisation determines dorsoventral polarity but not chirality in the zebra mussel embryo

1998

The dorsoventral polarity of unequally cleaving spiralian embryos becomes established at an early stage. The factors determining the position of the dorsoventral axis are still unknown. We present data showing that the sperm entry point (SEP) in both normal development and under experimental conditions determines the position of the first cleavage furrow in Dreissena embryos. The position of the spindles at second cleavage is directed by the site of fertilisation also, and the large, dorsal D quadrant of the 4-cell stage always forms opposite the SEP. The spiral chirality at third cleavage seems to be independent of both the fertilisation point and the arrangement of the quadrants. Dextral …

MaleSperm-Ovum InteractionsDorsumEmbryo NonmammalianMicroscopy VideoNocodazoleCentrifugationEmbryoSpindle ApparatusCell BiologyAnatomyBiologyCleavage (embryo)BivalviaCell biologySinistral and dextralSperm entryAnimalsFemaleCleavage furrowCell DivisionFertilisationBody PatterningDevelopmental BiologyZygote
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EFFECT OF TRIAENOPHORUS CRASSUS (CESTODA) INFECTION ON BEHAVIOR AND SUSCEPTIBILITY TO PREDATION OF THE FIRST INTERMEDIATE HOST CYCLOPS STRENUUS (COPE…

2000

Some parasites have been shown to manipulate host behavior so that parasite transmission to the next host is enhanced. Infection with Triaenophorus crassus Forel (Cestoda) caused alterations in the activity and microhabitat selection of the first intermediate host Cyclops strenuus Fischer (Copepoda) in the laboratory. Infected copepods made more starts to swim but spent less time swimming than uninfected copepods. These changes were independent of the intensity of infection. In a water column illuminated from above, infected copepods approached the surface, whereas uninfected ones remained close to the bottom. In the dark both infected and uninfected copepods stayed near the bottom. Finally…

MaleTime FactorsLightCestodaZoologyDisease VectorsMotor ActivityHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesfoodCoregonus lavaretusCrustaceaAnimalsHelminthsParasite hostingSwimmingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInfectivityAnalysis of VarianceBehavior Animalbiologyfood.dishHost (biology)EcologyIntermediate hostCestode Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanPhotobiologyPredatory BehaviorCestodaFemaleParasitologyhuman activitiesSalmonidaeJournal of Parasitology
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Mouse photoreceptor synaptic ribbons lose and regain material in response to illumination changes

2004

Abstract Chemical synapses equipped with ribbons are tonically active, high-output synapses. The ribbons may play a role in the trafficking of synaptic vesicles. Recent findings in retinal rod cells of BALB/c mice indicate that ribbons are large and smooth in the dark phase, and, due to the formation and release of protrusions, small during the light phase. As a consequence of these changes, ribbons may traffick fewer vesicles in the light than in the dark phases. The aim of the present study was to find out whether the above ribbon changes in this mouse strain are strictly illumination-dependent and which signalling processes may be involved. Here, we show that ribbons form protrusions and…

MaleTime FactorsLightRibbon diagramDark AdaptationBiologyRibbon synapseModels BiologicalSynaptic vesicleRetinaPhotoreceptor cellCalcium ChlorideMiceOrgan Culture TechniquesmedicineAnimalsDrug InteractionsPhotoreceptor CellsCyclic GMPEgtazic AcidCalcimycinLightingChelating AgentsMelatoninSynaptic ribbonMice Inbred BALB CRetinaIonophoresGeneral NeurosciencefungiDarknessThionucleotidesCircadian Rhythmbody regionsMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSynapsesSynaptic plasticityBiophysicssense organsNeurosciencePhotic StimulationVisual phototransductionEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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Comparative infectivity of Fasciola hepatica metacercariae from isolates of the main and secondary reservoir animal host species in the Bolivian Alti…

2000

Fascioliasis due to Fasciola hepatica (Linnaeus, 1758) is an endemic disease on the Northern Bolivian Altiplano, where human prevalences and intensities are the highest known, sheep and cattle are the main reservoir hosts, and pigs and donkeys the secondary ones. Investigations were carried out to study the viability of metacercariae experimentally obtained from eggs shed by naturally infected Altiplanic sheep, cattle, pigs and donkeys. A total of 157 Wistar rats were infected with doses of 5, 10, 20 and 150 metacercariae. Metacercariae aged for different number of weeks were used to analyse the influence of age on their viability. The number of worms successfully developed in each rat was …

MaleVeterinary medicineBoliviaFascioliasisSwineCattle DiseasesSheep DiseasesHost-Parasite InteractionsSpecies SpecificityHepaticaparasitic diseasesFasciola hepaticaHelminthsAnimalsHumansRats WistarInfectivitySwine DiseasesSheepbiologyEcologyHost (biology)Age FactorsEquidaeLiver flukeFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationLaboratory ratRatsSpecific Pathogen-Free OrganismsParasitologyCattleDonkeyFolia parasitologica
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