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    A radiolabel release microassay for phagocytic killing of candida albicans.

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    The chromium release technique for quantifying intracellular killing of radiolabelled Candida albicans particles was exploited in a microassay in which murine and human phagocytes acted as effectors under peculiarly simple conditions. At appropriate effector: target ratios and with a 4 h incubation, up to 50% specific chromium release could be detected in the supernatant with no need for opsonization or lysis of phagocytes. This simple microassay permits easy-to-perform, simultaneous testing of a variety of different phagocytes even if only available in limited amounts, and provides an objective measurement of intracellular killing of Candida albicans. © 1982

    A radiolabel release microassay for phagocytic killing of Candida albicans.

    No full text
    The chromium release technique for quantifying intracellular killing of radiolabelled Candida albicans particles was exploited in a microassay in which murine and human phagocytes acted as effectors under peculiarly simple conditions. At appropriate effector: target ratios and with a 4 h incubation, up to 50% specific chromium release could be detected in the supernatant with no need for opsonization or lysis of phagocytes. This simple microassay permits easy-to-perform, simultaneous testing of a variety of different phagocytes even if only available in limited amounts, and provides an objective measurement of intracellular killing of Candida albicans

    Comparison between natural reactivity (NR) against Candida albicans and natural killer (NK) activity against YAC-1 tumor cells

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    Cytotoxic activity against Candida albicans was measured in vitro in a 4-h 51Cr-release assay. The levels of reactivity correlated well with the number of polymorphonuclear cells in the effector population, being augmented by the enrichment of polymorphonuclear granulocutes. To exclude the possible role of contaminating natural killer cells, natural killer activity against tumour cells was compared with natural reactivity against Candida albicans in vitro. The findings indicate that there are many differences between these reactivities including organ and strain distribution, age dependency, adherence to nylon, and susceptibility to modulation by immuno-adjuvants and to treatment with anti-Thy 1.2 antiserum plus complement. These data further define in vitro polymorphonucleate-mediated cytotoxicity against Candida albicans on the basis of the above-mentioned criteria and clearly demonstrate that this in vitro reactivity could not be due to the presence of contaminating natural killer cells in the effector cell population

    Microvessel quantitation in intraductal and early invasive breast carcinomas.

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    OBJECTIVE: To study the angiogenic process in intraductal carcinoma of the breast, with and without a small focus of stromal infiltration, and to compare the microvessel density between the in situ phase and the early infiltration phases of breast cancer. STUDY DESIGN: Microvessel density (number of microvessels per square millimeter of neoplasia) was quantitatively evaluated on anti-factor VIII-immunostained histologic sections obtained from 10 ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS) (category A), 22 DCIS with a small focus of stromal infiltration (category B), 10 microinvasive carcinomas (category C), 12 T1a carcinomas (category D) and 20 T1b carcinomas (category E). RESULTS: The five categories of lesion had different values for microvessel density (P = .0017). Category A had microvessel density lower than category B (P = .0005). Category B had microvessel density higher than categories C, D and E (P = .0028, .0133 and .0033, respectively). CONCLUSION: Microvessel density seems to be a feature related to each crucial step in the early phases of neoplastic progression
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