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99


Evidence for apoptosis in Alzheimer's disease [Meeting Abstract]

Marcus, DL; Thomas, CG; Levin, R; Golomb, J; Recht, P; Freedman, ML
ISI:A1996UG20700651
ISSN: 1081-5589
CID: 52966

Accelerated atherosclerosis in South Asian expatriates living in New York [Meeting Abstract]

Kathuria, N; Koenig, K; Schwartzbard, A; Mele, KA; Levin, RI
ISI:A1996UG20700671
ISSN: 1081-5589
CID: 52967

Adenosine A(2) receptor occupancy promotes fibroblast and endothelial cell migration and wound healing [Meeting Abstract]

Cronstein, BN; Montesinos, C; Gadangi, P; Longaker, M; Ostad, E; Recht, PA; Levin, RI
ISI:A1996UG20700174
ISSN: 1081-5589
CID: 52942

Effects of amlodipine on glomerular filtration, growth, and injury in experimental hypertension

Dworkin, L D; Tolbert, E; Recht, P A; Hersch, J C; Feiner, H; Levin, R I
The objective of this study was to determine whether the calcium antagonist amlodipine could slow the progression of chronic renal disease. We examined the effects of amlodipine on kidney structure and function in two experimental models of hypertension. In the first study, adult, male Munich Wistar rats underwent uninephrectomy and were given weekly injections of desoxycorticosterone and 1% saline for drinking. Rats ingested normal chow or chow containing amlodipine for 8 weeks. The drug reduced systemic blood pressure, but glomerular filtration rate, kidney weight, proteinuria, and morphological evidence of glomerular injury were not affected. In the second study, male spontaneously hypertensive rats underwent uninephrectomy at 5 weeks of age and were followed for 6 months, during which they received no therapy or amlodipine. The drug dose was determined in preliminary studies to be the highest dose not associated with marked growth retardation. Again, although systemic blood pressure was significantly reduced by amlodipine, proteinuria and the prevalence of glomerulosclerosis were similar in amlodipine-treated and control spontaneously hypertensive rats. Micropuncture studies revealed that glomerular pressure remained elevated in amlodipine-treated spontaneously hypertensive rats. Kidney weight and glomerular volume were also similar in amlodipine-treated and control rats. Amlodipine also failed to inhibit platelet aggregation. Therefore, antihypertensive therapy with amlodipine fails to reduce glomerular pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats as well as glomerular size and injury in spontaneously hypertension rats and desoxycorticosterone-salt hypertension. Although other dihydropyridine calcium antagonists have been found to reduce experimental glomerular injury, these data suggest that amlodipine may not prevent hypertensive nephrosclerosis.
PMID: 8567047
ISSN: 0194-911x
CID: 3893442

SODIUM OXALATE, A SPECIFIC ENDOTHELIAL TOXIN OF UREMIA CHRONICALLY ELEVATES INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM ONLY IN ENDOTHELIAL-CELLS [Meeting Abstract]

LEVIN, RI; RECHT, PA; BUCKLEY, MT; MANDEVILLE, JTH; JAFFE, EA; MAXFIELD, FR
ISI:A1995TB48000761
ISSN: 0009-7322
CID: 86675

Identification of C1q as the heat-labile serum cofactor required for immune complexes to stimulate endothelial expression of the adhesion molecules E-selectin and intercellular and vascular cell adhesion molecules 1

Lozada C; Levin RI; Huie M; Hirschhorn R; Naime D; Whitlow M; Recht PA; Golden B; Cronstein BN
To examine the role of complement components as regulators of the expression of endothelial adhesive molecules in response to immune complexes (ICs), we determined whether ICs stimulate both endothelial adhesiveness for leukocytes and expression of E-selectin and intercellular and vascular cell adhesion molecules 1 (ICAM-1 and VCAM-1). We found that ICs [bovine serum albumin (BSA)-anti-BSA] stimulated endothelial cell adhesiveness for added leukocytes in the presence of complement-sufficient normal human serum (NHS) but not in the presence of heat-inactivated serum (HIS) or in tissue culture medium alone. Depletion of complement component C3 or C8 from serum did not prevent enhanced endothelial adhesiveness stimulated by ICs. In contrast, depletion of complement component C1q markedly inhibited IC-stimulated endothelial adhesiveness for leukocytes. When the heat-labile complement component C1q was added to HIS, the capacity of ICs to stimulate endothelial adhesiveness for leukocytes was completely restored. Further evidence for the possible role of C1q in mediating the effect of ICs on endothelial cells was the discovery of the presence of the 100- to 126-kDa C1q-binding protein on the surface of endothelial cells (by cytofluorography) and of message for the 33-kDa C1q receptor in resting endothelial cells (by reverse transcription-PCR). Inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide blocked endothelial adhesiveness for leukocytes stimulated by either interleukin 1 or ICs in the presence of NHS. After stimulation with ICs in the presence of NHS, endothelial cells expressed increased numbers of adhesion molecules (E-selectin, ICAM-1, and VCAM-1). Endothelial expression of adhesion molecules mediated, at least in part, endothelial adhesiveness for leukocytes, since leukocyte adhesion was blocked by monoclonal antibodies directed against E-selectin. These studies show that ICs stimulate endothelial cells to express adhesive proteins for leukocytes in the presence of a heat-labile serum factor. That factor appears to be C1q
PMCID:41160
PMID: 7545301
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 7927

Colchicine alters the quantitative and qualitative display of selectins on endothelial cells and neutrophils

Cronstein BN; Molad Y; Reibman J; Balakhane E; Levin RI; Weissmann G
Since colchicine-sensitive microtubules regulate the expression and topography of surface glycoproteins on a variety of cells, we sought evidence that colchicine interferes with neutrophil-endothelial interactions by altering the number and/or distribution of selectins on endothelial cells and neutrophils. Extremely low, prophylactic, concentrations of colchicine (IC50 = 3 nM) eliminated the E-selectin-mediated increment in endothelial adhesiveness for neutrophils in response to IL-1 (P < 0.001) or TNF alpha (P < 0.001) by changing the distribution, but not the number, of E-selectin molecules on the surface of the endothelial cells. Colchicine inhibited stimulated endothelial adhesiveness via its effects on microtubules since vinblastine, an agent which perturbs microtubule function by other mechanisms, diminished adhesiveness whereas the photoinactivated colchicine derivative gamma-lumicolchicine was inactive. Colchicine had no effect on cell viability. At higher, therapeutic, concentrations colchicine (IC50 = 300 nM, P < 0.001) also diminished the expression of L-selectin on the surface of neutrophils (but not lymphocytes) without affecting expression of the beta 2-integrin CD11b/CD18. In confirmation, L-selectin expression was strikingly reduced (relative to CD11b/CD18 expression) on neutrophils from two individuals who had ingested therapeutic doses of colchicine. These results suggest that colchicine may exert its prophylactic effects on cytokine-provoked inflammation by diminishing the qualitative expression of E-selectin on endothelium, and its therapeutic effects by diminishing the quantitative expression of L-selectin on neutrophils
PMCID:185287
PMID: 7543498
ISSN: 0021-9738
CID: 56750

Cardiologic evaluation

Chapter by: Levin RI; Kronzon I
in: Emergency diagnostic testing by Flomenbaum, Neal; Goldfrank, Lewis R; Jacobson, Sheldon [Eds]
St. Louis MO : Mosby, 1995
pp. 169-208
ISBN: 0815132484
CID: 4552

Preliminary report: double-blind, placebo-controlled study of fluoxetine in depressed alcoholics

Cornelius, J R; Salloum, I M; Cornelius, M D; Perel, J M; Ehler, J G; Jarrett, P J; Levin, R L; Black, A; Mann, J J
The selective serotonergic agonist fluoxetine has demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of depression and has possible efficacy in the treatment of nondepressed and depressed alcoholics. However, no double-blind, placebo-controlled trials with any selective serotonergic medication have been reported in patients who have both major depression and alcoholism. In this study, 21 patients with DSM-III-R diagnoses of both major depressive disorder and alcohol dependence were randomized to fluoxetine or placebo in a 12-week, double-blind, parallel group trial. The patients reported a high level of current episode (52.4%), prior episode (61.9%), and lifetime (76.2%) suicidal behavior. Total alcohol consumption during the 12-week treatment course was significantly lower in the fluoxetine group than the placebo group, after controlling for baseline differences in consumption. The fluoxetine group demonstrated a four-fold greater improvement in depressive symptoms, but this difference did not reach statistical significance in this small sample. These preliminary findings suggest that fluoxetine has potential for treating the excessive alcohol ingestion of depressed alcoholics and may have potential for treating the depressive symptoms of these patients as well
PMID: 7491382
ISSN: 0048-5764
CID: 148634

Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents inhibit stimulated neutrophil adhesion to endothelium: adenosine dependent and independent mechanisms

Cronstein BN; Van de Stouwe M; Druska L; Levin RI; Weissmann G
All nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) inhibit neutrophil aggregation (homotypic cell-cell adhesion) and do so without affecting expression of CD11b/CD18. Since the first step in acute inflammation is a critical interaction between neutrophils and the vascular endothelium (heterotypic cell-cell adhesion), we determined whether NSAIDs diminish the adherence of neutrophils to the endothelium. At antiinflammatory concentrations (0.5-5 mM) sodium salicylate, an NSAID that does not inhibit prostaglandin synthesis, inhibited stimulated but not unstimulated neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells (IC50 < 1 mM, P < 0.00001). Salicylates have previously been shown to inhibit oxidative phosphorylation and, predictably, sodium salicylate inhibited oxidative phosphorylation, as evidenced by depletion of ATP stores (875 +/- 75 pmol/10(6) PMN, [2.92 +/- 0.25 mM]) in stimulated (FMLP, 0.1 microM) but not resting neutrophils treated with antiinflammatory doses of sodium salicylate (EC50 = 1 mM, P < 0.00001). Indomethacin and piroxicam (10 and 30 microM) only minimally decreased ATP concentrations in stimulated and resting neutrophils. ATP is metabolized to adenosine, and we have previously demonstrated that both endogenously released (180-200 nM) and exogenous adenosine (IC50 = 250 nM) inhibit stimulated neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells. To determine whether the increased metabolism of ATP and the resultant increase in adenosine release were responsible for inhibition of neutrophil adhesion to endothelium, we determined whether addition of adenosine deaminase (ADA, 0.125 IU/ml), an enzyme that converts extracellular adenosine to its inactive metabolite, inosine, affected inhibition of neutrophil adhesion to endothelium by stimulated neutrophils. ADA significantly reversed inhibition of neutrophil adherence to endothelium by sodium salicylate (0.5-5 mM, P < 0.00001). This suggests that sodium salicylate inhibits neutrophil adherence by increasing adenosine release. Whereas indomethacin and piroxicam (10-50 microM) also inhibited stimulated neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells, ADA did not affect their inhibition of adherence. These studies demonstrate a heretofore unexpected antiinflammatory mechanism for salicylates: salicylates increase ATP hydrolysis and thereby enhance release of adenosine. Moreover, these data are consistent with the hypothesis that NSAIDs differ from one another with respect to their mechanisms of action
PMID: 8088928
ISSN: 0360-3997
CID: 8416