Chronic villitis of unknown etiology (CVUE) and massive chronic intervillositis (MCI) are placent... more Chronic villitis of unknown etiology (CVUE) and massive chronic intervillositis (MCI) are placental lesions associated with infiltration of mononuclear cells in the chorionic villi and the intervillous spaces, respectively. It is not well known whether immune cells in CVUE and MCI have similar phenotypic characteristics. A cross-sectional study of third trimester placentas was conducted to identify immune cell subpopulations in CVUE and MCI (n = 17/group). CVUE was diagnosed with H&E staining and antibody to CD3 in serial sections; and MCI, by the presence of massive infiltration of mononuclear cells in the intervillous spaces. Immune cells, ICAM-1 expression and nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation were determined immunohistochemically. CVUE and MCI showed similar infiltrates, mainly CD68+ and CD3+ cells. Most cells (>80%) were CD45RB+, and one third were CD45RO+ in both lesions. There were slightly more CD8+ than CD4+ cells in both CVUE and MCI. More than 90% of cells in CVUE a...
Human atherosclerosis requires decades to develop spontaneously, and its development customarily ... more Human atherosclerosis requires decades to develop spontaneously, and its development customarily is not monitored by serial biopsies. Atherosclerosis in allografts develops within months, and biopsy specimens are usually obtained from the grafts. We have used immunocytochemical techniques to study biopsy specimens of cardiac and renal allografts for parameters of vascular changes. The antibodies used in this investigation were specific for T lymphocytes, macrophages, IgM, and complement, and detailed studies were done with the use of antibodies specific for components of the hemostatic, fibrinolytic, and natural anticoagulant pathways. The results indicated a lack of association between the appearance of cellular infiltrates and measurable alterations in vascular endothelium and smooth-muscle cells. Although infiltrating macrophages and lymphocytes were identified in biopsy specimens with vascular change, such changes were also observed in biopsy specimens that were devoid of cellul...
Metabolic and electrical coupling through gap junction channels is implicated in cell differentia... more Metabolic and electrical coupling through gap junction channels is implicated in cell differentiation, tissue homeostasis, and electrotonic propagation of signals in excitable tissues. The characterization of gating properties of these channels requires electrophysiological recordings at both single- and multiple-channel levels. Hence, a system that is able to control connexin expression by external means would provide a useful tool. To regulate the expression of connexins in cells, plasmids encoding a transactivator and/or a lac-operon IPTG response-dependent Cx43 target gene were transfected into communication-deficient N2a neuroblastoma cells. Immunoblotting, dye coupling, and electrophysiological methods revealed that expression of Cx43 in selected clones could be tightly regulated. After 15-20 h of acute induction with IPTG, cell-to-cell communication reached its peak with junctional conductances of 15-30 nS. Chronic induction at specific doses of IPTG produced constant, contro...
The Journal of heart and lung transplantation : the official publication of the International Society for Heart Transplantation
Biopsy specimens from 80 cardiac allografts were studied immunocytochemically with nine antibodie... more Biopsy specimens from 80 cardiac allografts were studied immunocytochemically with nine antibodies selected to identify cellular, immunologic, and vascular aspects of rejection. Results from these experiments were converted to a numeric base and used to calculate rejection indexes for each of these aspects of rejection. Pretransplantation biopsy specimens of donor hearts were studied to determine normal values, and clinical, catheterization, and conventional biopsy findings were used to classify patients as stable or unstable. The standard deviation of cellular and immunologic reaction indexes were overlapping for stable and unstable patients, but the vascular indexes for these patient groups were significantly different, suggesting that vascular damage defines clinical instability in cardiac allograft recipients. To study the vascular index in the absence of cellular infiltrates, biopsy specimens from 80 allografted hearts were selected to represent 40 patients with cellular infilt...
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 1985
Peters et al. 8. Bulbring E, Goodford PJ, Setekleiv J. The action of adrenaline on sodium and pot... more Peters et al. 8. Bulbring E, Goodford PJ, Setekleiv J. The action of adrenaline on sodium and potassium movements in the smooth muscle of the guinea-pig taenia coli. Br J Pharmacol Chemother 1966;28:296. 9. Stafford A. Adrenaline, anti-adrenaline drugs and potassium movements in rabbit auricles. Br J Pharmacol 1962;19:274. 10. Craig AB, Honig CR. Hepatic metabolic and vascular responses to epinephrine: a unifying hypothesis. Am J Physiol 1963;205: 1132. June 15, 1984 Am. J. Obstet. Gynecol. 11. Kroeger EA, Marshall JM. Beta-adrenergic effects on rat myometrium: mechanisms of membrane hyperpolarization. Am J Physiol 1973;225-6: 1339. 12. Harrington JT, Isner JM, Kassirer JP. Our national obsession with potassium. Am J Med 1982;73: 155. 13. Moravec MA, Hurlbert BJ. Hypokalemia associated with terbutaline administration in obstetrical patients. Anesth Analg (Cleve) 1980;59:917.
The heterodimeric vitronectin receptor (VNR) and platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (GPIIb/IIIa) are ... more The heterodimeric vitronectin receptor (VNR) and platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (GPIIb/IIIa) are two members of the integrin family of cell adhesion receptors that share the same beta subunit (GPIIIa). These proteins are involved in binding to vitronectin, fibrinogen and fibronectin and in cytoskeleton-membrane interactions. The present study shows that the human placental syncytiotrophoblast brush border membrane contains a heterodimer of subunit Mr values of 140,000 and 90,000 (non-reduced) or 125,000 and 100,000 (reduced). This protein was recognized by a monoclonal antibody to GPIIIa, rabbit antisera to the VNR and a human alloantiserum to GPIIIa. Brush border VNR-related protein bound to an immobilized peptide containing the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence and, less avidly, to immobilized fibrinogen. Only a small fraction of brush border VNR was associated with a cytoskeleton fraction. Membrane-bound brush border GPIIIa was distinct from that of platelets in its resistance to digestion by...
Pathophysiology of Haemostasis and Thrombosis, 1993
The natural anticoagulant pathway involving heparan sulfate proteoglycan and antithrombin III (AT... more The natural anticoagulant pathway involving heparan sulfate proteoglycan and antithrombin III (ATIII) was studied in serial biopsies from 90 cardiac allograft recipients. The ATIII component of this pathway was identified immunocytochemically on venous endothelium and arterial smooth muscle cells and intima of normal donor hearts and stable allografts. Unstable grafts lacked vascular ATIII and contained fibrin deposits. Neither stable nor unstable grafts had ATIII-reactive capillary endothelium. Grafts with absent vascular ATIII could (1) result in death, (2) revert to an arterial/venous ATIII distribution or (3) develop ATIII-reactive capillary endothelium. The development of ATIII-reactive capillaries was associated with a survival advantage, and such reactivity seemed to be promoted by heparin.
Background. Development of coronary artery disease in cardiac allograft recipients is the major c... more Background. Development of coronary artery disease in cardiac allograft recipients is the major cause of graft failure after the first year of transplantation. Unfortunately, there is no noninvasive method of identifying patients at greatest risk of developing this disease. We have asked whether serum concentrations of cardiac troponin-T predict development of coronary artery disease.
Tissue factor (TF) plays a central role in the initiation of blood coagulation that frequently is... more Tissue factor (TF) plays a central role in the initiation of blood coagulation that frequently is enhanced in renal allografts. The identification and localization of TF was studied immunocytochemically in biopsies from normal and transplanted human kidneys and classified according to its distribution. The clinical status of each allograft was then correlated with the TF classifications. From these correlations, four distributional types of TF were identified. In normal kidneys, TF was localized to glomerular epithelium and basement membranes. Glomerular TF expression did not colocalize with mesangial or endothelial HLA-DR reactivity as determined by double antibody techniques. Tissue factor in donor kidneys also was identified in the renal capsule and in the adventitia of large arteries. These structures were not reactive in long-term transplanted grafts. Some cadaver kidneys prepared for transplantation had depleted glomerular TF, and exhibited TF reactivity within stromal tissues. Long-term allografts with progressive loss of renal function and kidneys with advanced rejection exhibited diminished TF reactivity of glomerular epithelium and basement membranes. This was frequently associated with fibrin deposition within the glomeruli and in the intertubular microcirculation. These findings indicate that the evaluation of TF in transplanted kidneys is related to the prognosis of graft survival.
Chronic villitis of unknown etiology (CVUE) and massive chronic intervillositis (MCI) are placent... more Chronic villitis of unknown etiology (CVUE) and massive chronic intervillositis (MCI) are placental lesions associated with infiltration of mononuclear cells in the chorionic villi and the intervillous spaces, respectively. It is not well known whether immune cells in CVUE and MCI have similar phenotypic characteristics. A cross-sectional study of third trimester placentas was conducted to identify immune cell subpopulations in CVUE and MCI (n = 17/group). CVUE was diagnosed with H&E staining and antibody to CD3 in serial sections; and MCI, by the presence of massive infiltration of mononuclear cells in the intervillous spaces. Immune cells, ICAM-1 expression and nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation were determined immunohistochemically. CVUE and MCI showed similar infiltrates, mainly CD68+ and CD3+ cells. Most cells (>80%) were CD45RB+, and one third were CD45RO+ in both lesions. There were slightly more CD8+ than CD4+ cells in both CVUE and MCI. More than 90% of cells in CVUE a...
Human atherosclerosis requires decades to develop spontaneously, and its development customarily ... more Human atherosclerosis requires decades to develop spontaneously, and its development customarily is not monitored by serial biopsies. Atherosclerosis in allografts develops within months, and biopsy specimens are usually obtained from the grafts. We have used immunocytochemical techniques to study biopsy specimens of cardiac and renal allografts for parameters of vascular changes. The antibodies used in this investigation were specific for T lymphocytes, macrophages, IgM, and complement, and detailed studies were done with the use of antibodies specific for components of the hemostatic, fibrinolytic, and natural anticoagulant pathways. The results indicated a lack of association between the appearance of cellular infiltrates and measurable alterations in vascular endothelium and smooth-muscle cells. Although infiltrating macrophages and lymphocytes were identified in biopsy specimens with vascular change, such changes were also observed in biopsy specimens that were devoid of cellul...
Metabolic and electrical coupling through gap junction channels is implicated in cell differentia... more Metabolic and electrical coupling through gap junction channels is implicated in cell differentiation, tissue homeostasis, and electrotonic propagation of signals in excitable tissues. The characterization of gating properties of these channels requires electrophysiological recordings at both single- and multiple-channel levels. Hence, a system that is able to control connexin expression by external means would provide a useful tool. To regulate the expression of connexins in cells, plasmids encoding a transactivator and/or a lac-operon IPTG response-dependent Cx43 target gene were transfected into communication-deficient N2a neuroblastoma cells. Immunoblotting, dye coupling, and electrophysiological methods revealed that expression of Cx43 in selected clones could be tightly regulated. After 15-20 h of acute induction with IPTG, cell-to-cell communication reached its peak with junctional conductances of 15-30 nS. Chronic induction at specific doses of IPTG produced constant, contro...
The Journal of heart and lung transplantation : the official publication of the International Society for Heart Transplantation
Biopsy specimens from 80 cardiac allografts were studied immunocytochemically with nine antibodie... more Biopsy specimens from 80 cardiac allografts were studied immunocytochemically with nine antibodies selected to identify cellular, immunologic, and vascular aspects of rejection. Results from these experiments were converted to a numeric base and used to calculate rejection indexes for each of these aspects of rejection. Pretransplantation biopsy specimens of donor hearts were studied to determine normal values, and clinical, catheterization, and conventional biopsy findings were used to classify patients as stable or unstable. The standard deviation of cellular and immunologic reaction indexes were overlapping for stable and unstable patients, but the vascular indexes for these patient groups were significantly different, suggesting that vascular damage defines clinical instability in cardiac allograft recipients. To study the vascular index in the absence of cellular infiltrates, biopsy specimens from 80 allografted hearts were selected to represent 40 patients with cellular infilt...
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 1985
Peters et al. 8. Bulbring E, Goodford PJ, Setekleiv J. The action of adrenaline on sodium and pot... more Peters et al. 8. Bulbring E, Goodford PJ, Setekleiv J. The action of adrenaline on sodium and potassium movements in the smooth muscle of the guinea-pig taenia coli. Br J Pharmacol Chemother 1966;28:296. 9. Stafford A. Adrenaline, anti-adrenaline drugs and potassium movements in rabbit auricles. Br J Pharmacol 1962;19:274. 10. Craig AB, Honig CR. Hepatic metabolic and vascular responses to epinephrine: a unifying hypothesis. Am J Physiol 1963;205: 1132. June 15, 1984 Am. J. Obstet. Gynecol. 11. Kroeger EA, Marshall JM. Beta-adrenergic effects on rat myometrium: mechanisms of membrane hyperpolarization. Am J Physiol 1973;225-6: 1339. 12. Harrington JT, Isner JM, Kassirer JP. Our national obsession with potassium. Am J Med 1982;73: 155. 13. Moravec MA, Hurlbert BJ. Hypokalemia associated with terbutaline administration in obstetrical patients. Anesth Analg (Cleve) 1980;59:917.
The heterodimeric vitronectin receptor (VNR) and platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (GPIIb/IIIa) are ... more The heterodimeric vitronectin receptor (VNR) and platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (GPIIb/IIIa) are two members of the integrin family of cell adhesion receptors that share the same beta subunit (GPIIIa). These proteins are involved in binding to vitronectin, fibrinogen and fibronectin and in cytoskeleton-membrane interactions. The present study shows that the human placental syncytiotrophoblast brush border membrane contains a heterodimer of subunit Mr values of 140,000 and 90,000 (non-reduced) or 125,000 and 100,000 (reduced). This protein was recognized by a monoclonal antibody to GPIIIa, rabbit antisera to the VNR and a human alloantiserum to GPIIIa. Brush border VNR-related protein bound to an immobilized peptide containing the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence and, less avidly, to immobilized fibrinogen. Only a small fraction of brush border VNR was associated with a cytoskeleton fraction. Membrane-bound brush border GPIIIa was distinct from that of platelets in its resistance to digestion by...
Pathophysiology of Haemostasis and Thrombosis, 1993
The natural anticoagulant pathway involving heparan sulfate proteoglycan and antithrombin III (AT... more The natural anticoagulant pathway involving heparan sulfate proteoglycan and antithrombin III (ATIII) was studied in serial biopsies from 90 cardiac allograft recipients. The ATIII component of this pathway was identified immunocytochemically on venous endothelium and arterial smooth muscle cells and intima of normal donor hearts and stable allografts. Unstable grafts lacked vascular ATIII and contained fibrin deposits. Neither stable nor unstable grafts had ATIII-reactive capillary endothelium. Grafts with absent vascular ATIII could (1) result in death, (2) revert to an arterial/venous ATIII distribution or (3) develop ATIII-reactive capillary endothelium. The development of ATIII-reactive capillaries was associated with a survival advantage, and such reactivity seemed to be promoted by heparin.
Background. Development of coronary artery disease in cardiac allograft recipients is the major c... more Background. Development of coronary artery disease in cardiac allograft recipients is the major cause of graft failure after the first year of transplantation. Unfortunately, there is no noninvasive method of identifying patients at greatest risk of developing this disease. We have asked whether serum concentrations of cardiac troponin-T predict development of coronary artery disease.
Tissue factor (TF) plays a central role in the initiation of blood coagulation that frequently is... more Tissue factor (TF) plays a central role in the initiation of blood coagulation that frequently is enhanced in renal allografts. The identification and localization of TF was studied immunocytochemically in biopsies from normal and transplanted human kidneys and classified according to its distribution. The clinical status of each allograft was then correlated with the TF classifications. From these correlations, four distributional types of TF were identified. In normal kidneys, TF was localized to glomerular epithelium and basement membranes. Glomerular TF expression did not colocalize with mesangial or endothelial HLA-DR reactivity as determined by double antibody techniques. Tissue factor in donor kidneys also was identified in the renal capsule and in the adventitia of large arteries. These structures were not reactive in long-term transplanted grafts. Some cadaver kidneys prepared for transplantation had depleted glomerular TF, and exhibited TF reactivity within stromal tissues. Long-term allografts with progressive loss of renal function and kidneys with advanced rejection exhibited diminished TF reactivity of glomerular epithelium and basement membranes. This was frequently associated with fibrin deposition within the glomeruli and in the intertubular microcirculation. These findings indicate that the evaluation of TF in transplanted kidneys is related to the prognosis of graft survival.
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Papers by C. Labarrere