scholarly journals THE PASSAGE OF PROTEINS FROM THE VASCULAR SYSTEM INTO JOINTS AND CERTAIN OTHER BODY CAVITIES

1939 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Granville A. Bennett ◽  
Morris F. Shaffer

1. Experiments designed to study, in the rabbit, the passage of foreign proteins from the blood stream into synovial fluid and to compare such passage with that taking place into the aqueous humor, spinal fluid, and urine are described. 2. Crystalline egg albumin and horse serum proteins regularly appeared in the knee joints within short periods of time following their intravenous injection. 3. These proteins also appeared promptly in the aqueous humor but in lower concentrations. In the spinal fluid they appeared only rarely and in minimal amounts. 4. Crystalline egg albumin was readily eliminated from the body via the urine. It was also removed rapidly from the knee joint and anterior chamber of the eye. 5. Horse serum proteins appeared only occasionally in the urine. Their concentration in the blood serum remained relatively high for several days. Their increased concentration in the joint fluids in the longer experiments indicates that the rate of entrance exceeded the rate of removal. 6. Foreign proteins of the type employed were all found in the joint fluids in higher concentrations than they were in the other body fluids examined. 7. The possible significance of this study with respect to normal joint physiology and to certain abnormal joint conditions has been commented upon.

1924 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 659-675 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene L. Opie

When proteins such as horse serum or crystalline egg albumin which have been selected because they produce the phenomena of immunity are introduced into a normal animal they diffuse widely in the tissue, enter the blood stream, and are disseminated throughout the body. The same substances introduced into an immune animal are fixed at the site of entry and are not found in the blood. When protein is injected into the skin of an immune animal acute inflammation (Arthus phenomenon) occurs at the site of injection and brings about destruction of the foreign substance.


It is customary for Croonian lecturers, after expressing their thanks to the President and Council for the honour that they have received in being asked to give this lecture, to devote some time to a justification of their subject in terms of Mrs Croone’s suggestion that the lecture should deal with the advancement of natural knowledge on local motion. The first of these tasks, Mr President, I perform humbly and with deep gratitude, but at the same time with some surprise that Council in its wisdom should have chosen one so ill-fitted for the honour you have laid upon him. The second task is easier since my lecture will deal with the nerves which control the muscles surrounding the hollow organs of the body, blood vessels and bowels, and further justification as a theme dealing with local motion the most captious critic could not desire. Three years ago my former colleague Bernard Katz gave the Croonian Lecture on ‘ Transmission of impulses from nerve to muscle’ in which he described our present knowledge of the mechanism of the chemical mediation interposed between nerve and skeletal muscle and summarized his own brilliant contributions to this, to me, fascinating subject. Today I am dealing again with transmission from nerve to muscle, but in a different system and, I am afraid, at a quite different and lower intellectual level than that of Katz. The idea of chemical transmission from nerve to effector cell came first to T. R. Elliott in 1904 as a result of his observation, in an extensive comparative study, of the close similarities between the actions of adrenaline injected intravenously and the effects of stimulating nerves belonging to the sympathetic system. These nerves we should now call in Dale’s (1933) terminology the adrenergic nerves, those transmitting their effects whether excitatory or inhibitory by the liberation at their endings of a ‘minute charge’ of the catecholamine adrenaline or one of its analogues. The cells upon which these nerves exert their action are the smooth muscle cells controlling the movements of the hollow viscera, intestines, reproductive tract and so on, and of the muscle cells of the vascular system that regulate the diameter of the blood vessels. These are processes that do not demand high precision of timing nor do they apparently require the instant turning on and off of transmitter action with which we have grown familiar in the junction between nerve and skeletal muscle. At this junction, as Katz showed, liberation and action of acetylcholine and its inactivation by the specific enzyme cholinesterase are over in a few milliseconds, and there is no reason to believe that the liberated transmitter in the untreated junction can ever diffuse more than a few microus from its site of action. It is hemmed in by barriers of specific cholinesterase, and these are reinforced by barriers of the non-specific enzyme in blood and tissue fluids. This narrow coarctation of the transmitter acetylcholine in space and time seems, however, to be confined to places where precise timing is required, such as at the neuromuscular junction and in the ganglionic and central nervous synapse. When it is liberated as the transmitter from nerves to blood vessels, or to secretory glands, it can escape some way from its site of liberation and persist long enough to be detected by skeletal muscles sensitized by denervation, as is seen in the Sherrington, Rogowitz and Vulpian-Heidenhain phenomena. I have laboured a little this question of diffusion and action at a distance of transmitter because it constitutes prima facie one of the most striking differences between the adrenergic and the cholinergic transmitters in at least the mammalian body. It was indeed because the liberated adrenergic transmitter escaped into the blood stream and could be detected by another tissue or organ, sometimes, but not necessarily, specially sensitized, that W. B. Cannon and his colleagues in the 30’s were able to add so much to our knowledge of sympathetic innervation. Nevertheless, in spite of the relative stability of the adrenergic transmitter and its ready detection in the blood stream, little had been discovered about the quantitative aspects of its liberation and metabolism some 50 years after its existence had been postulated, whereas we now have, and have had for 30 years, quite reasonably complete information about the liberation, storage and metabolism of the unstable and ephemeral acetylcholine.


1938 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 941-947 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Yoffey ◽  
Eugene R. Sullivan ◽  
Cecil K. Drinker

1. In a number of cats, dogs, monkeys, and in a rabbit, the cervical lymph ducts were cannulated and protein solutions dropped into the nose, and the lymph was examined afterwards for the presence of the protein employed. 2. Egg albumin was found in the lymph in all cases with one exception. Horse serum was never detected. Serum albumin did not come through in the cats, but did in a rabbit. 3. With a 1 per cent solution of T-1824 in horse serum no dye appeared in the lymph. This is regarded as confirming Gregersen and Gibson's (2) view that T-1824 combines with the serum proteins.


1939 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morris F. Shaffer ◽  
Granville A. Bennett

1. Within 24 hours following intravenous inoculation with rabbit virulent strains of pneumococcus Type III, most rabbits develop infections of one or both knees. The frequency of bilateral knee joint involvement increases as the duration of the disease is prolonged. 2. The spinal fluid, aqueous humor, and bladder urine remain sterile at a time when the knee joints contain pneumococci. Subsequently, however, they may be invaded. 3. The administration of a single dose of type specific horse immune serum, at a period when in all probability one or both knee joints contain organisms, appears to be ineffective in bringing about resolution of the infections process in these sites, even though horse serum constituents may be demonstrated serologically to be present within the joint cavities.


1956 ◽  
Vol s3-97 (38) ◽  
pp. 235-249
Author(s):  
R. B. CLARK

The four longitudinal vessels of the circulatory system of Nephtys californiensis are dorsal, sub-intestinal, and neural, the latter being paired. There is a complete longitudinal circulation; the dorsal vessel communicates with the sub-intestinal by way of the proboscidial circulation and with the neural by way of the circum-oral vessels. In each middle and posterior segment segmental vessels from each of the longitudinal trunks carry blood to and from the parapodia and body-wall. The segmental circulation is completed by a circum-intestinal vessel connecting the dorsal and subintestinal vessels in each segment and an intersegmental branch connecting the dorsal and sub-intestinal segmental vessels. A trans-septal branch of the neural segmental vessel communicates with the sub-intestinal segmental vessel. This arrangement is modified in anterior segments which house the muscular, eversible pharynx, and no blood-vessels cross the coelom except by running through the body-wall. On anatomical grounds and by comparison with other polychaetes it seems likely that segmental is subordinate to longitudinal circulation. There are no endothelial capillaries such as have been described in some other polychaetes; instead there are numerous blindending vessels the walls of which are composed of the same three layers as other vessels and which are probably contractile. The dorsal vessel, where it is in contact with the ventral surface of the supra-oesophageal ganglion, forms a plexus in close association with a modified part of the brain capsule and a special axonal tract within the ganglion. It is thought that by way of this ‘cerebro-vascular complex’, hormones produced in the neurosecretory cells of the brain pass into the blood-stream.


1949 ◽  
Vol 90 (5) ◽  
pp. 425-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heinz Kruse ◽  
Philip D. McMaster

Intensely blue dye-azoproteins have been prepared by diazotization and coupling of the highly indiffusible blue dye T-1824, Evans blue, with various serum proteins and egg albumin. The products, whether purified by precipitation with alcohol or by chromatography, have a constant dye-to-protein ratio and tests have shown them to be essentially free from unlinked dye. An extremely diffusible dye, echt-säure-blau, has also been coupled to bovine γ-globulin. These materials are adapted to physiological experimentation. They seem to behave in the bodies of mice like other proteins; they fail to appear in either the bile or urine of normal animals, and they are strongly antigenic. When these soluble antigenic azoproteins are injected into the blood stream of mice for the first time they enter reticulo-endothelial cells in almost every organ of the body; the final distribution is like that of intravenously injected, finely divided particulate matter. The azoproteins appear in the cells which classical immunological studies have shown to be active in removing particulate antigenic materials or bacteria from the blood or body fluids. The Kupffer cells of the liver and sinus and reticular cells in lymph nodes, especially the great mesenteric node, are particularly active in the removal of the blue antigens from the blood, but many other R-E cells are active to a lesser degree. The storage of the antigenic material is in the cytoplasm only; it has not been seen within nuclei, nor has it been seen within cells of the brain. Serological methods disclose that the blue material seen within Kupffer cells of the liver after as long a period as 2 days is still antigenic in its reactions. The blue azoproteins, therefore, serve excellently as tracer antigens, especially since they can be seen directly in fresh and fixed tissue preparations and in the body fluids.


1951 ◽  
Vol 94 (4) ◽  
pp. 323-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip D. McMaster ◽  
Heinz Kruse

Methods have been devised whereby the persistence of foreign antigens in mice can be detected. A highly diffusible, blue azo dye, echt-säure-blau was coupled to bovine γ-globulin and human serum albumin and injected into the animals. In this way deep blue tracer antigens were obtained. These were promptly stored in cells widely distributed throughout the body, especially in the reticulo-endothelial elements of the liver, spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes. The dye as such was not stored but rapidly excreted. A blue coloration in the organs just mentioned was still perceptible after 85 to 120 days in the case of the azoglobulin and 36 to 44 days in that of the azoalbumin. To determine whether these substances had actually persisted, as well as to learn how long uncoupled globulin and albumin remained after injection, recourse was had to the phenomenon of reversed passive anaphylaxis, which was found to be characterized by extraordinary changes in the vessels of the ears (EVR) in the mouse, plainly visible under the microscope when called forth by an antiserum specific for the antigen to which the animal had been sensitized. So sensitive is the vascular response that as little as 0.5 to 0.1 µg. of protein as antigen, previously injected into the peritoneal cavity of a 30 gm. mouse, can be detected a few days later by an intravenous injection of antiserum. By means of the EVR the globulin antigen has been detected in the blood and livers of injected mice for as long as 56 and 101 days, respectively; the albumin and azoalbumin for only 21 and 36 days. In the mesenteric lymph nodes of injected mice the albumin and azoalbumin antigens were found after 42 and 44 days, respectively. The hepatic tissue and that of the mesenteric lymph nodes of mice injected with azoalbumin, containing in consequence stored blue material, when transferred to recipient mice yielded positive tests for antigen (EVR) as long as blue color could be perceived in these tissues with the unaided eye, or at low magnification. After the color had disappeared from the tissues the transfer tests were found to be negative. This fact speaks for the antigenicity of the colored material. In summary it is plain that certain antigenic proteins, after introduction into the blood stream of mice, are stored in certain tissues and that they may persist there for weeks or even months, far longer than has generally been supposed. This persistence of antigen within the body, especially after detectable amounts of antigen have apparently disappeared from the blood, provides a reason for prolonged antibody formation, a phenomenon for which no adequate explanation has hereto been offered.


2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (01/02) ◽  
pp. 77-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Aleksandrowicz ◽  
K. Wolf ◽  
D. Falzarano ◽  
H. Feldmann ◽  
J. Seebach ◽  
...  

SummaryPathogenesis of viral haemorrhagic fever (VHF) is closely associated with alterations of the vascular system. Among the virus families causing VHF, filoviruses (Marburg and Ebola) are the most fatal, and will be focused on here. After entering the body, Ebola primarily targets monocytes/ macrophages and dendritic cells. Infected dendritic cells are largely impaired in their activation potency, likely contributing to the immune suppression that occurs during filovirus infection. Monocytes/macrophages, however, immediately activate after viral contact and release reasonable amounts of cytokines that target the vascular system, particularly the endothelial cells.Some underlying molecular mechanisms such as alteration of the vascular endothelial cadherin/catenin complex, tyrosine phosphorylation, expression of cell adhesion molecules, tissue factor and the effect of soluble viral proteins released from infected cells to the blood stream will be discussed.


1919 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 605-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harold L. Amoss ◽  
Frederick Eberson

The lower monkeys as represented by Macacus rhesus are resistant to a high degree to infection with cultures of the meningococcus introduced into the general blood. The lower monkeys are less resistant to infection when the meningococcus cultures are injected directly into the subarachnoid space by lumbar puncture. Relatively virulent cultures, which have been passed through several monkeys, acquire the power of surviving in the circulating blood of the monkeys for a maximum period of about 72 hours. Nothing has, however, been observed to indicate that the injected meningococci actually multiply in the blood. It has not been found possible to direct the meningococci circulating in the blood into the cerebrospinal meninges of monkeys. In this effort an aseptic meningitis was induced by injecting horse serum, saline solution, or protargol into the subarachnoid space preceding the introduction of the meningococci into the blood. In rabbits the meningococci were able to pass into the spinal fluid from the blood when a physical break in the continuity was made; however, under the conditions of chemical inflammation of the meninges the rabbit reacted just as the monkeys, and the organisms did not pass. Because of the high insusceptibility of the monkey to infection with meningococcus, it is not believed that the experiments throw any new light on the mode of invasion of the body in man by that microorganism. The experiments do not lend any support to the notion that an intraspinal injection of the antimeningococcus serum, early in the course of invasion of meningococcus in man, and possibly at a period at which the meninges do not yet show evidences of inflammation, favors its diversion from the blood stream into the subarachnoid space.


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