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Tissue culture effect

O. have been shown to inhibit flowering, promote vegetative growth and control organ development in plant tissue culture. Effective concentrations of O. are 100-1000-fold lower than those of other plant hormones, such as auxins, cytokinins and gibberellins. [Pg.466]

Rhesus monkey kidney infected with Semliki Forest arborvirus gave interferon of tltre 1.5 log interferon units/2 ml. (The interferon unit, determined in a volume of 2 ml, is the dilution of interferon which produced a half-maximal score for degree of cytopathic effect In virus-infected tissue culture tubes at the time when the control without interferon first showed the maximal score.)... [Pg.823]

Tamplin et. al. (54) observed that V. cholerae and A. hydrophila cell extracts contained substances with TTX-like biological activity in tissue culture assay, counteracting the lethal effect of veratridine on ouabain-treated mouse neuroblastoma cells. Concentrations of TTX-like activity ranged from 5 to 100 ng/L of culture when compared to standard TTX. The same bacterial extracts also displaced radiolabelled STX from rat brain membrane sodium channel receptors and inhibited the compound action potential of frog sciatic nerve. However, the same extracts did not show TTX-like blocking events of sodium current when applied to rat sarcolemmal sodium channels in planar lipid bilayers. [Pg.82]

Viral vaccines present problems of safety testing far more complex than those experienced with bacterial vaccines. With killed viral vaccines the potential hazards are those due to incomplete virus inactivation and the consequent presence of residual live virus in the preparation. The tests used to detect such live virus consist of the inoculation of susceptible tissue cultures and of susceptible animals. The cultures are examined for cytopathic effects and the animals for symptoms of disease and histological evidence of infection at autopsy. This test is of particular importance in inactivated poliomyelitis vaccine, the vaccine being injected intraspinally into monkeys. At autopsy, sections of brain and spinal cord are examined microscopically for the histological lesions indicative of proliferating poliovirus. [Pg.316]

Yamaguchi and Gao, 1998 Rat femoral-metaphyseal tissues cultured for 48 h with bone resorbing factors PTH, PGE2 or EPS) +/- genistein measured bone calcium content, acid and alkaline phosphatases Genistein (10 Yi O M) inhibited bone resorption. Effect reversed by anti-estrogen, tamoxifen. [Pg.98]

GAO Y H and YAMAGUCHI M (1999c) Anabolic effect of daidzein on cortical bone in tissue culture Comparison with genistein effect. Mol Cell Biochem 194, 93-8. [Pg.102]

YAMAGUCHI M and GAO Y H (1998) Inhibitory effect of genistein on bone resorption in tissue culture. Biochem Pharmacol 55, 71-6. [Pg.106]

The structure/activity relationships for the methisazone, 3a, derivatives against adenoviruses and poxviruses have been shown to be similar [78]. Pearson and Zimmerman [79] demonstrated that all three types of polioviruses are inhibited by 2-acetylpyridine JV-dibutylthiosemicarbazone, which is similar to 3a, by blocking viral RNA synthesis. A 3-substituted triazinoindole derivative of isatin was effective against several strains of rhinovirus in tissue culture the mechanism of action is unknown [80]. [Pg.8]

Other kinds of bloassays have been used to detect the presence of specific allelochemical effects (8), effects on N2 fIxatlon (9), the presence of volatile compounds (10) and of Inhibitory substances produced by marine microalgae (11). Putnam and Duke (12) have summarized the extraction techniques and bioassay methods used In allelopathy research. Recent developments In high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) separation of allelochemlcals from plant extracts dictates the need for bloassays with sensitivity to low concentrations of compounds contained In small volumes of eluent. Einhellig at al. (13) described a bloassay using Lemna minor L. growing In tissue culture cluster dish wells that maximizes sensitivity and minimizes sample requirements. [Pg.198]

TABLE VII. Effect of Catechln on the Growth and Chlorophyll Content of Lemna minor L. Growing In 24-well Tissue Culture Cluster Dishes... [Pg.203]

Alkoxyalkanoate esters have been used as prodrugs to improve the oral bioavailability of antiviral agents such as (+)-cyclaradine (carbocyclic arabino-furanosyl adenine) [41]. (+)-Cyclaradine has been shown to be effective against herpes simplex virus in tissue culture at noncytotoxic concentrations. Two prodrugs of (+)-cyclaradine, namely, (+)-cyclaradine-5 -methoxyacetate (CM) and (+)-cyclaradine-5,-ethoxypropionate (CE) (Fig. 2), may be promising candidates... [Pg.206]

Population studies associate tomato consumption with reduced risk to prostate cancer. The most positive associations have come from cohort studies performed before the prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-screening era, and these studies have suggested that the tomato/lycopene effect was the strongest for clinically relevant prostate cancers (Giovannucci 2007). Small human studies have shown in vivo antioxidant effects for tomato products but evidence for lycopene alone is weak (Chen et al. 2001, Porrini and Riso 2000, Riso et al. 2004, Zhao et al. 2006). Animal and tissue culture studies have been... [Pg.437]

Wang, X. et al. (2010) Quantitative techniques for assessing and controlling the dispersion and biological effects of multiwalled carbon nanotubes in mammalian tissue culture cells. ACS Nano, 4 (12), 7241-7252. [Pg.211]

The results of empirical studies carried out to test the effects of medium additives on foreign protein accumulation in plant tissue culture are summarized below. [Pg.30]

The Li+-induced inhibition of the production of the HSV virus may be related to its actions upon viral DNA polymerase production and activity. Li+ reduces both the synthesis of DNA polymerase in tissue culture and the activity of DNA polymerase in vitro, each by about 50%. It has been proposed that Li+ reduces the biosynthesis of viral polypeptides and nucleic acids, and hence inhibits viral DNA replication by competition with Mg2+, a cofactor of many enzymes [243]. However, the inhibitory effect of Li+ on HSV replication in tissue culture is not affected by Mg2+ levels. A more likely hypothesis is the alteration of the intracellular K+ levels, possibly modifying levels of the high-energy phosphate compounds by replacement of either Na+ or K+ in Na+/K+-ATPase [244]. In tissue culture, HSV replication has been shown to be affected by the... [Pg.39]


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