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Blood-cerebrospinal fluid transfer of plasma proteins during fetal development in the sheep.

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TLDR
The penetration of human and sheep plasma proteins from blood into c.s.f. of sheep fetuses (57‐86 days gestation) has been studied and concentrations of marker proteins were estimated by radioactive counting of iodinated human or sheep proteins or by immunoassay of human proteins.
Abstract
1. The penetration of human and sheep plasma proteins from blood into c.s.f. of sheep fetuses (57-86 days gestation) has been studied. The proteins were injected intravenously via cotyledonary vessels. After different time periods the c.s.f. concentrations of marker proteins were estimated by radioactive counting of iodinated human or sheep proteins or by immunoassay of human proteins. 2. Several proteins of similar molecular size penetrated into c.s.f. to a different extent in 60 day fetuses. The steady-state c.s.f.: plasma ratios were about 15% for human AFP, 10% for human transferrin and sheep albumin, 7% for human α1-antitrypsin, and 5% for human albumin. In older fetuses the penetration of protein from blood into c.s.f. was much reduced and no evidence for differential penetration of different proteins was found. 3. The penetration of human AFP, transferrin and sheep albumin from blood into c.s.f. was greater than can be accounted for by passive diffusion. 4. The results of this paper are discussed in relation to those of the preceding paper on the identification and quantification of proteins in fetal c.s.f. and plasma. The hypothesis is put forward that the choroid plexus of the immature (60 days and less) sheep fetus contains a mechanism for the transcellular transfer of plasma proteins which may be selective in nature and of importance for some aspects of brain development.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Barrier Mechanisms in the Developing Brain

TL;DR: New evidence shows that many adult mechanisms, including functionally effective tight junctions are present in embryonic brain and some transporters are more active during development than in the adult, contributing to cerebral damage and later neurological disorders.
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Transferrin and Transferrin Receptor Function in Brain Barrier Systems

TL;DR: A review of the information available on the functions of transferrin and transferrin receptor with respect to Fe transport across the blood–brain and blood–CSF barriers and the cell membranes of neurons and glial cells finds that the majority of Fe transport probably occurs by the second of the above mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of the choroid plexus.

TL;DR: It is argued that barrier mechanisms in the developing brain are different in important respects from those in the adult brain, but these differences do not necessarily reflect immaturity of the system.
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Physiology of blood-brain interfaces in relation to brain disposition of small compounds and macromolecules.

TL;DR: The brain develops and functions within a strictly controlled environment resulting from the coordinated action of different cellular interfaces located between the blood and the extracellular fluids of the brain, which include the interstitial fluid and the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The preparation of 131i-labelled human growth hormone of high specific radioactivity

TL;DR: The loss of immunological reactivity at high specific radioactivities or at high levels of chemical substitution with STAI/sup 127/!iodine is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunochemical quantitation of antigens by single radial immunodiffusion

TL;DR: By standardizing the technical conditions of the experiment it is possible to use this principle for the immunochemical determination of antigens, and the lower limit of the method was found to correspond to 0·0025 μg of antigen, and to an antigen concentrations of 1·25 μg per ml.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fine structural localization of a blood-brain barrier to exogenous peroxidase

TL;DR: These findings localize, at a fine structural level, a "barrier" to the passage of peroxidase at the endothelium of vessels in the cerebral cortex in mice, particularly with reference to a recent study in which similar techniques were applied to capillaries in heart and skeletal muscle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Junctions between intimately apposed cell membranes in the vertebrate brain

TL;DR: Endothelial and epithelial tight junctions occlude the interspaces between blood and parenchyma or cerebral ventricles, thereby constituting a structural basis for the blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal fluid barriers.
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