Cartilage Metabolism during Growth Retardation following Irradiation of the Head of the Neonatal Rat
Autor: | Rosalinda C. Roberts, O.F. Zuniga, C.A. Sondhaus, Regina A Jansons, H.D. Mosier, Lyle C. Dearden, C.B. Good |
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Rok vydání: | 1983 |
Předmět: |
DNA Replication
Male medicine.medical_specialty Connective tissue Stimulation Cartilage metabolism General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology chemistry.chemical_compound Sex Factors Internal medicine medicine Animals Weaning Bone Development Cartilage Body Weight Somatomedin Rats Kinetics medicine.anatomical_structure Endocrinology chemistry Biochemistry Protein Biosynthesis Female Leucine Thymidine |
Zdroj: | Experimental Biology and Medicine. 172:99-106 |
ISSN: | 1535-3699 1535-3702 |
DOI: | 10.3181/00379727-172-41534 |
Popis: | The heads of 2-day-old male and female rats were irradiated with a single dose of 600 rads X irradiation, a dose which is known to stunt body weight, tibial length, and tail length, in order to ascertain its effect on synthesis by cartilage of sulfated proteoglycans, DNA, chondroprotein, and collagen as determined by utilization of (/sup 35/S)sulfate, (Me-/sup 3/-H)thymidine, (1-/sup 14/C)leucine, and (3,4-/sup 3/H)proline, respectively. Data have been collected at 20-21, 23, 41-45, and 70-71 days of age. In comparison to controls, growth in body weight, tibial length, and tail length was significantly retarded in irradiated rats of both sexes. Although slow catch-up growth was observed with respect to tail length in both sexes and tibial length in females, a significant deficit in body weight in irradiated rats in both sexes remained at 70-71 days. Cartilage metabolism as evidenced by incorporation of the labeled substances showed no significant disturbance just prior to weaning (20-21 days) or after completion of the principal growth surge (70-71 days). Reduced sulfate and thymidine incorporation attributable to a brief period of undernutrition associated with weaning occurred in head-irradiated rats immediately following weaning (23 days). Increased isotope incorporation occurred at 41-45 days of age in cartilagemore » of irradiated rats incubated with labeled sulfate, leucine, and proline; it did not increase with labeled thymidine. We conclude that neonatal head irradiation slows the rate of growth through the age of most rapid postnatal growth in normal rats. The pattern of cartilage metabolism during this time can be the result either of stimulation by a factor other than somatomedin, or selective inhibition of cartilage thymidine incorporation acting in combination with somatomedin.« less |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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