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The effect of hyperthermia on the induction of cell death in brain, testis, and thymus of the adult and developing rat.

Vania R. Khan, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2002 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 1, pp 73-90
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TLDR
Results show that a fever-like increase in temperature triggered apoptosis in dividing cell populations of testis and thymus, but not in mature, postmitotic cells of the adult cerebellum, suggesting that actively dividingcell populations are more prone to cell death induced by hyperthermia than fully differentiated postmitosis neural cells.
Abstract
Stressful stimuli can elicit 2 distinct reactive cellular responses, the heat shock (stress) response and the activation of cell death pathways. Most studies on the effects of hyperthermia on the mammalian nervous system have focused on the heat shock response, characterized by the transient induction of Hsps, which play roles in repair and protective mechanisms. This study examines the effect of hyperthermia on the induction of cell death via apoptosis, assayed by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick-end labeling and active caspase 3 cytochemistry, in the adult rat brain, testis, and thymus. Results show that a fever-like increase in temperature triggered apoptosis in dividing cell populations of testis and thymus, but not in mature, postmitotic cells of the adult cerebellum. These differential apoptotic responses did not correlate with whole-tissue levels of Hsp70 induction. We further investigated whether dividing neural cells were more sensitive to heat-induced apoptosis by examining the external granule cell layer of the cerebellum at postnatal day 7 and the neuroepithelial layers of the neocortex and tectum at embryonic day 17. These proliferative neural regions were highly susceptible to hyperthermia-induced apoptosis, suggesting that actively dividing cell populations are more prone to cell death induced by hyperthermia than fully differentiated postmitotic neural cells.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4

TL;DR: Using an improved method of gel electrophoresis, many hitherto unknown proteins have been found in bacteriophage T4 and some of these have been identified with specific gene products.
Journal Article

Cleavage of structural proteins during the assemble of the head of bacterio-phage T4

U. K. Laemmli
- 01 Jan 1970 - 
TL;DR: Using an improved method of gel electrophoresis, many hitherto unknown proteins have been found in bacteriophage T4 and some of these have been identified with specific gene products as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of programmed cell death in situ via specific labeling of nuclear DNA fragmentation.

TL;DR: The extent of tissue-PCD revealed by this method is considerably greater than apoptosis detected by nuclear morphology, and thus opens the way for a variety of studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Roles moleculaires des proteines de choc thermique dans le fonctionnement des organismes a des temperatures normales et suite a des chocs thermiques; differents genes impliques.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Fas Death Factor

TL;DR: Fas ligand (FasL), a cell surface molecule belonging to the tumor necrosis factor family, binds to its receptor Fas, thus inducing apoptosis of Fas-bearing cells.
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Does apoptosis cause fever?

Results show that a fever-like increase in temperature triggered apoptosis in dividing cell populations of testis and thymus, but not in mature, postmitotic cells of the adult cerebellum.