scholarly journals Studies on the Growth of Tissues In Vitro

1939 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 232-249
Author(s):  
C. M. POMERAT ◽  
E. N. WILLMER

1. Growth of chick periosteal fibroblasts is inhibited by 0.002 M solutions of glyceraldehyde, benzaldehyde, butyl aldehyde, propyl aldehyde and methyl glyoxal. 2. The growth is not inhibited by sodium pyruvate, lactate, propionate, glycerate or benzoate. 3. Sodium pyruvate does not affect the growth under the conditions of the experiments, nor does it alter the inhibition brought about by glyceraldehyde. 4. Growth is inhibited by sodium fluoride and sodium iodoacetate in the concentrations in which these inhibit glucolysis. Growth inhibition does not correspond to inhibition of phosphorylation. 5. Growth is not inhibited by 0.008 M phlorizin. 6. Growth is not immediately inhibited by an atmosphere containing 95% CO and 5% O2. 7. Growth is not immediately inhibited by 0.002 M sodium azide, 0.002 M HCN or by 0.01 M sodium malonate. Azide and cyanide reduce the growth rate after some hours. 8. Growth is not accelerated by the addition of 0.006 M sodium fumarate. 9. Growth is inhibited by 0.01 M sodium ferricyanide. 10. The relationship between carbohydrate metabolism and growth by cell division is discussed in the light of these results.

1973 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 397-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. B. Thomas ◽  
Gay Medley ◽  
C. A. Lingwood

The cytostatic effects of puromycm, [6N]O2'-dibutyryl 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate, and adenosine on asynchronous and synchronous cultures of the murine mastocytoma, P815Y, have been studied. Cell growth was arrested after a minimum of one further division. A model is proposed for the inhibition of cell division in which the periods of inhibition and growth arrest are separated in time by one cell cycle.


Parasitology ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 107 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. C. Beebee ◽  
A. L.-C. Wong

SUMMARYPrototheca richardsi, an unpigmented heterotrophic alga, causes growth inhibition in amphibian larvae and has proved refractory to culturein Vitro.P. richardsireplication is dependent on regular passaging through tadpole digestive systems; uptake of thymidine by free-livingProtothecacells and incorporation into DNA are very low by comparison with leucine uptake and incorporation into protein, but DNA synthesis is detectable in cells isolated from tadpole intestines. DNA replication was elicited 6–8 h after ingestion in protothecans fed to tadpoles and subsequently re-isolated from them, providing that the tadpoles were fed subsequent to the ingestion. It appears that passaging through tadpole intestines provides an essential stimulus to maintaining an active cell division cycle inP. richardsi.


2020 ◽  
Vol 65 (8) ◽  
pp. 516-520
Author(s):  
M. G. Shvydkaya ◽  
A. M. Zatevalov ◽  
S. D. Mitrokhin ◽  
D. T. Dzhandarova ◽  
A. Yu. Mironov

Moxifloxacin and imunofan peptide concentrations - dependent Clostridium difficile growth rate was analyzed in vitro. In the course of our study, it was revealed imunofan peptide at concentrations 0.05, 0.25 μg/ml has antimicrobial characteristics against toxigenic C. difficile strain. At the same time, with the peptide and the antibiotic combined interaction, we observed moxifloxacin concentration 0-1.5 MIC stimulates C. difficile growth, regardless of the imunofan concentration. Concentrations of maximum growth inhibition for C. difficile were also established with the combined effects peptide imunofan and antibiotic moxifloxacin - 1.5 μg/ml and 2.5 MIC, respectively.


1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 192-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. LaJean Chaffin

The mean size and percentage of budded and unbudded cells of Candida albicans grown in batch culture over a wide range of doubling times have been measured. Cell volume decreased with increased doubling time and a nonlinear approach to an asymptotic minimum was observed. When cells were separated by age according to bud scars, each age showed a similar decrease. During each cell division cycle, size increased slowly during both budded and unbudded periods so that each generation was significantly larger than the preceeding. There was no difference in size between the parent portion of budded cells and unbudded cells of the same age. Time-lapse photomicroscopy of cells growing on solid medium showed that cells divide asymmetrically with larger parents having a shorter subsequent cycle time than the smaller daughter, although the time utilized for bud formation was similar. When cells were shifted from a medium supporting a low growth rate and small size to a medium supporting a faster growth rate and larger size, both budded and unbudded cells increased significantly in size. As the doubling time increased, both the budded and unbudded portions of parental and daughter cycles increased.


Parasitology ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Bryant

The growth of male and female parasitic stages of Nematospiroides dubius from male and female ASH/CS1 mice was measured in terms of dry weight. No sex-linked resistance of mice to infection with N. dubius was apparent, as growth was the same in both sexes of host. The growth rate did not alter when moulting occurred.All parasitic stages of N. dubius consumed oxygen in vitro and oxygen was also shown to be necessary for motility and survival.The relationship between body size and metabolic rate was established for male and female parasitic N. dubius and the b values indicated that aerobic metabolism is of functional importance to this species.The size/metabolism relationship for the whole life-cycle was established.


Development ◽  
1954 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-37
Author(s):  
R. J. O'Connor

Although there is considerable evidence that carbohydrate metabolism plays an important part in the process of cell division (see Bullough, 1952), conclusions have differed regarding the relative importance of glycolysis and catabolism involving respiration. In the adult mouse epidermis Bullough & Johnson (1951) found that cell division was dependent upon the respiratory oxidation of pyruvate by the tricarboxylic acid cycle. On the other hand, Pomerat & Willmer (1939) showed that, in tissue culture, agents that inhibited respiration had little immediate effect on cell division, while Laser (1933) found that growth of cultured fibroblasts could continue when respiration was greatly diminished by low oxygen tensions. Further, Warburg (1930) concluded that cell growth is associated with glycolysis. A similar difference in the relationship of mitotic activity to the respiratory and glycolytic forms of carbohydrate metabolism was indicated by changes occurring in the midbrain and the red-blood cells of the chicken embryo during embryonic development.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (7) ◽  
pp. 1331-1335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuhei Fujii ◽  
Johan A. Hellebust

The growth rate of Dunaliella tertiolecta in a high MgSO4 (0.94 M) medium was lower than that in a NaCl medium of the same osmolality. Growth inhibition of D. tertiolecta in the high MgSO4 medium was partially relieved in response to increases in extracellular Ca2+ concentrations (1 – 11 mM). This growth recovery effect by supplemental Ca2+ was eliminated by the simultaneous additions of ethylene glycol-bis-(β-aminoethyl ether)-N′,N′-tetraacetic acid. The measurements of intracellular cations revealed that the intracellular concentration of Ca2+ increased with increases in the extracellular Ca2+ concentration. From the kinetic analysis of the relationship between the extracellular Ca2+ concentration and the growth in media containing various concentrations of Mg2+, Ca2+ was found to interact competitively with Mg2+ with regard to growth of D. tertiolecta in MgSO4 media. These results indicate that high concentrations of Mg2+ inhibit the uptake of Ca2+ into cells, resulting in the observed growth inhibition in MgSO4 media. Key words: Dunaliella, magnesium, calcium, antagonistic effect.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A865-A865
Author(s):  
Hitesh Mistry ◽  
Fernando Ortega ◽  
Fernando Ortega ◽  
Johanna Lahdenranta ◽  
Punit Upadhyaya ◽  
...  

BackgroundA new class of modular synthetic drugs, termed Bicycle tumor-targeted immune cell agonists (Bicycle TICAs), based on constrained bicyclic peptides has been developed as agonists of immune costimulatory receptors in cancer therapeutics.1 One example is BT7480 which binds simultaneously to Nectin-4 on tumor cells and CD137 on primed immune cells with activation (agonism) of CD137 being dependent on co-ligation of Nectin-4.MethodsIn vitro CD137 reporter activity and cytokine secretion data were generated using Bicycle TICAs including BT7480. These Bicycle TICAs could display a concentration-dependent activation (e.g. CD137 activation increases IFN-gamma production) reaching a maximal activity, which then decreases as the drug concentration increases.2 We developed a mathematical model to analyse this behaviour.We also modelled plasma and tumor pharmacokinetics of BT7480 in CT26-Nectin-4 tumor-bearing mice. A two-compartment model described the drug plasma profile after intravenous dosing and the tumor profile was described by a one effect compartment model. A tumor growth inhibition model for BT7480 was used to describe the preclinical data by placing the model within a mixed effect framework to estimate the population model parameters, i.e., tumor size at time 0 and tumor size growth rate, and to predict the parameter values for each mouse. We assessed how the tumor growth rate values correlate with the immune system markers collected.ResultsWe assessed the predictions of the in vitro model against the experimental observations and found that the position of the turning point could be predicted from the dissociation constants (Kd's). The combined BT7480 pharmacokinetic model shows that the elimination rate from plasma is faster than that from the tumor. We hypothesized that this results from BT7480 binding to Nectin-4 in the tumor. Also, we found that the level of tumor infiltrating CD8+ T-cells fully captures the treatment effect of BT7480 on tumor growth. Therefore, we established a likely causal link: from pharmacokinetic/dose to CD8+ T-cell infiltration changes and ultimately to tumor growth inhibition.ConclusionsA PK/PD modelling framework was developed that predicts preclinical biomarker level and tumor growth inhibition in response to changes in the BT7480 dose and dosing schedule. In addition, plasma and tumor drug concentration levels can be associated with the target concentration estimated using in vitro data.2 Namely, the product of the square-root of the two target Kds is likely to be the free drug concentration at which maximal activity of the trimer [T-Cell—BT7480—Tumor-Cell] is achieved.ReferencesUpadhyaya P. Anticancer immunity induced by a synthetic tumor-targeted CD137 agonist. Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer 2021;9:e001762.Perelson AS. Receptor clustering on a cell surface. III. theory of receptor cross-linking by multivalent ligands: description by ligand states. Mathematical Biosciences 1981;53:1–39.


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