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Proteins in cerebrospinal fluid and plasma of fetal sheep during development.

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TLDR
Protein concentration in plasma was lowest in the youngest fetuses and did not rise much until the second half of gestation during which time it doubled, and there was a further rather larger increase between the late fetal (125 days) stage and the adult.
Abstract
1. The concentration of total protein in c.s.f. and plasma has been measured in fetal sheep of different gestational ages and in the adult. In c.s.f. it was highest (approximately 840 mg/100 ml.) in the youngest fetuses (35 days) and declined steeply by 60 days (260 mg/100 ml.). It decreased less markedly in the last half of gestation to reach about 50 mg/100 ml. at 125 days which is twice the adult value. Protein concentration in plasma was lowest in the youngest fetuses and did not rise much until the second half of gestation during which time it doubled. There was a further rather larger increase between the late fetal (125 days) stage and the adult.2. Albumin, fetuin, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), transferrin and lipoprotein were identified in c.s.f. and plasma.3. The concentrations of albumin, AFP and fetuin in c.s.f. and plasma at different gestational ages were measured using immunodiffusion and radioimmuno-assays.4. Albumin was the major protein in plasma at all ages studied (35-128 days gestation and adult). Its concentration increased throughout gestation whereas that of fetuin was similar at all fetal ages and that of AFP declined markedly during the second half of gestation. In the adult, fetuin was only about 0.1% of the total protein in plasma and AFP was not detectable.5. In 35-40 day fetuses albumin, AFP and fetuin accounted for 90% of the total protein concentration in plasma and for about 70-80% of the total protein concentration of c.s.f. As gestation progressed the concentration of all three proteins in c.s.f. declined. But the concentration of AFP and fetuin fell more rapidly and to a greater extent than that of albumin; neither AFP nor fetuin could be detected in adult c.s.f.6. The c.s.f.: Plasma ratio was above 50% for AFP and above 60% for fetuin at 35 days compared with about 25% for albumin at the same fetal age. The c.s.f.: plasma ratios for all three proteins declined with increasing fetal age and were not significantly different from each other by about mid gestation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Development and functions of the choroid plexus-cerebrospinal fluid system

TL;DR: The choroid plexus is the principal source of cerebrospinal fluid, which has accepted roles as a fluid cushion and a sink for nervous system waste in vertebrates and uncovered new, active roles for this dynamic system in the regulation of neural stem cells, critical periods and the overall health of the nervous 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).
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Barrier mechanisms in the brain, II. Immature brain.

TL;DR: It is shown that ‘the’ blood–brain barrier is immature in foetuses and newborns, and this results in down-regulation in the ability of the immune system to attack invading cells.
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The blood–CSF barrier explained: when development is not immaturity

TL;DR: It is argued that the developmental blood–CSF barrier restricts the passage of lipid‐insoluble molecules by the same mechanism as in the adult (tight junctions) rendering the paracellular pathway an unlikely route of entry.
References
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Journal Article

Protein Measurement with the Folin Phenol Reagent

TL;DR: Procedures are described for measuring protein in solution or after precipitation with acids or other agents, and for the determination of as little as 0.2 gamma of protein.
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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.
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Immunization, isolation of immunoglobulins, estimation of antibody titre.

TL;DR: High titred monospecific antibodies are obtained in rabbits injecting as little as 25 μg pure antigen per kg body weight, and antibody titres as measured by 4 different titration methods are compared using anti‐human IgG from rabbits as a model.
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Serum alpha-fetoprotein, albumin, and gamma-G-globulin in the human conceptus.

TL;DR: Serum concentrations of alpha fetoprotein in the human conceptus were investigated and compared to the concentrations of albumin and gamma G-globulin and ratios in amniotic fluid were much higher than those in bladder urine from 11-13.2 weeks of gestation which indicates the possible existence of an additional source of amniotics fluid albumin besides urine.
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