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Dive into the research topics where Ann LeFurgey is active.

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Featured researches published by Ann LeFurgey.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Intermittent perfusion protects the brain during deep hypothermic circulatory arrest

Stephen M. Langley; Paul J. Chai; Sara E. Miller; James R. Mault; James Jaggers; Steven S.L. Tsui; Andrew J. Lodge; Ann LeFurgey; Ross M. Ungerleider

BACKGROUND Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA) has been shown to cause impairment in recovery of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral metabolism (CMRO2) proportional to the duration of the DHCA period. This effect on CMRO2 may be a marker for brain injury, because CMRO2 recovers normally after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) when DHCA is not used. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of intermittent perfusion during DHCA on the recovery of CMRO2 after CPB and to correlate these findings with electron microscopy (EM) of the cerebral microcirculatory bed. METHODS Fifteen neonatal piglets were placed on CPB and cooled to 18 degrees C. Each animal then underwent either: (1) 60 minute continuous CPB (control), (2) 60 minute uninterrupted DHCA (UI-DHCA), or (3) 60 minute DHCA with intermittent perfusion (1 minute every 15 minutes) (I-DHCA). All animals were then rewarmed and weaned from CPB. Measurements of CBF and CMRO2 were taken before and after CPB. A further 9 animals underwent CPB without DHCA (2 animals) or with DHCA (7 animals), under various conditions of arterial blood gas management, intermittent perfusion, and reperfusion time. RESULTS UI-DHCA resulted in significant impairment to recovery of CMRO2 after CPB (p < 0.05). Regardless of the blood gas strategy used, the EM after UI-DHCA revealed extensive damage characterized by perivascular intracellular and organelle edema, and vascular collapse. I-DHCA, on the other hand, produced a pattern of normal CMRO2 recovery identical to controls, and the EM was normal for both these groups. CONCLUSIONS Intermittent perfusion during DHCA is clinically practical and results in normal cerebral metabolic and ultrastructural recovery. Furthermore, the correlation between brain structure and CMRO2 suggests that monitoring CMRO2 during the operation may be an outstanding way to investigate new strategies for neuroprotection designed to reduce cerebral damage in children undergoing correction of congenital cardiac defects.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

Biochemical characterization of Leishmania major aquaglyceroporin LmAQP1: possible role in volume regulation and osmotaxis

Katherine Figarella; Néstor L. Uzcátegui; Yao Zhou; Ann LeFurgey; Marc Ouellette; Hiranmoy Bhattacharjee; Rita Mukhopadhyay

The Leishmania major aquaglyceroporin, LmAQP1, is responsible for the transport of trivalent metalloids, arsenite and antimonite. We have earlier shown that downregulation of LmAQP1 provides resistance to trivalent antimony compounds whereas increased expression of LmAQP1 in drug‐resistant parasites can reverse the resistance. In this paper we describe the biochemical characterization of LmAQP1. Expression of LmAQP1 in Xenopus oocytes rendered them permeable to water, glycerol, methylglyoxal, dihydroxyacetone and sugar alcohols. The transport property of LmAQP1 was severely affected when a critical Arg230, located inside the pore of the channel, was altered to either alanine or lysine. Immunofluorescence and immuno‐electron microscopy revealed LmAQP1 to be localized to the flagellum of Leishmania promastigotes and in the flagellar pocket membrane and contractile vacuole/spongiome complex of amastigotes. This is the first report of an aquaglyceroporin being localized to the flagellum of any microbe. Leishmania promastigotes and amastigotes expressing LmAQP1 could regulate their volume in response to hypoosmotic stress. Additionally, Leishmania promastigotes overexpressing LmAQP1 were found to migrate faster towards an osmotic gradient. These results taken together suggest that Leishmania LmAQP1 has multiple physiological roles, being involved in solute transport, volume regulation and osmotaxis.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2007

Saccharomyces cerevisiae Vacuole in Zinc Storage and Intracellular Zinc Distribution

Claudia Simm; Brett Lahner; David E. Salt; Ann LeFurgey; Peter Ingram; Brian Yandell; David J. Eide

ABSTRACT Previous studies of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae indicated that the vacuole is a major site of zinc storage in the cell. However, these studies did not address the absolute level of zinc that was stored in the vacuole nor did they examine the abundances of stored zinc in other compartments of the cell. In this report, we describe an analysis of the cellular distribution of zinc by use of both an organellar fractionation method and an electron probe X-ray microanalysis. With these methods, we determined that zinc levels in the vacuole vary with zinc status and can rise to almost 100 mM zinc (i.e., 7 × 108 atoms of vacuolar zinc per cell). Moreover, this zinc can be mobilized effectively to supply the needs of as many as eight generations of progeny cells under zinc starvation conditions. While the Zrc1 and Cot1 zinc transporters are essential for zinc uptake into the vacuole under steady-state growth conditions, additional transporters help mediate zinc uptake into the vacuole during “zinc shock,” when zinc-limited cells are resupplied with zinc. In addition, we found that other compartments of the cell do not provide significant stores of zinc. In particular, zinc accumulation in mitochondria is low and is homeostatically regulated independently of vacuolar zinc storage. Finally, we observed a strong correlation between zinc status and the levels of magnesium and phosphorus accumulated in cells. Our results implicate zinc as a major determinant of the ability of the cell to store these other important nutrients.


Ultramicroscopy | 1988

Frontiers in electron probe microanalysis: Application to cell physiology

Ann LeFurgey; M. Bond; Peter Ingram

The application of electron probe microanalysis techniques, using X-ray and electron energy loss instruments, to problems in cell physiology is reviewed. The details of the special methodological requirements for the analysis of cryosections at high spatial resolution in an analytical electron microscope are discussed together with a comprehensive review of data obtained on major organ systems and cell types.


Journal of Microscopy | 1992

Real-time quantitative elemental analysis and mapping: microchemical imaging in cell physiology.

Ann LeFurgey; S. D. Davilla; D. A. Kopf; Joachim R. Sommer; Peter Ingram

Recent advances in widely available microcomputers have made the acquisition and processing of digital quantitative X‐ray maps of one to several cells readily feasible. Here we describe a system which uses a graphics‐based microcomputer to acquire spectrally filtered X‐ray elemental image maps that are fitted to standards, to display the image in real time, and to correct the post‐acquisition image map with regard to specimen drift. Both high‐resolution quantitative energy‐dispersive X‐ray images of freeze‐dried cyrosections and low‐dose quantitative bright‐field images of frozen‐hydrated sections can be acquired to obtain element and water content from the same intracellular regions. The software programs developed, together with the associated hardware, also allow static probe acquisition of data from selected cell regions with spectral processing and quantification performed on‐line in real time. In addition, the unified design of the software program provides for off‐line processing and analysing by several investigators at microcomputers remote from the microscope. The overall experimental strategy employs computer‐aided imaging, combined with static probes, as an essential interactive tool of investigation for biological analysis. This type of microchemical microscopy facilitates studies in cell physiology and pathophysiology which focus on mechanisms of ionic (elemental) compartmentation, i.e. structure‐function correlation at cellular and subcellular levels; it allows investigation of intracellular concentration gradients, of the heterogeneity of cell responses to stimuli, of certain fast physiological events in vivo at ultrastructural resolution, and of events occurring with low incidence or involving cell‐to‐cell interactions.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1994

Mitochondrial localization and characterization of 99Tc-sestamibi in heart cells by electron probe x-ray microanalysis and 99Tc-NMR spectroscopy

David Piwnica-Worms; James F. Kronauge; Ann LeFurgey; Mark Backus; Daniel Hockett; Peter Ingram; Melvyn Lieberman; B. Leonard Holman; Alun G. Jones; Alan Davison

As the development of targeted intracellular magnetic resonance contrast agents proceeds, techniques for the quantitative analysis of the subcellular compartmentation and characterization of metallopharmaceuticals must also advance. To this end, the subcellular distribution and chemical state of hexakis (2-methoxyisobutyl isonitrile) technetium-99 (99Tc-SESTAMIBI), the ground state of the organotechnetium radiopharmaceutical used for the noninvasive evaluation of myocardial perfusion and viability by scintigraphy, has been determined by a novel application of electron probe X-ray microanalysis (EPXMA) and 99Tc-NMR spectroscopy. In cryopreserved cultured chick heart cells equilibrated in 36 microM 99Tc-SESTAMIBI, EPXMA imaging of mitochondria yielded a respiratory uncoupler-sensitive characteristic 99Tc X-ray peak representing 32.0 +/- 2.9 nmoles Tc/mg dry weight, while EPXMA of cytoplasm or nucleus showed no peak significantly greater than the threshold detectability limit of approximately 1 nmole/mg dry weight. Technetium-99 NMR spectroscopy of heart cells equilibrated with 99Tc-SESTAMIBI showed a single peak at -45.5 ppm with no evidence of significant line broadening or chemical shift compared to aqueous chemical standards, indicating that the majority of the complex exists unbound within the mitochondrial matrix. These data quantitatively demonstrate the localization of this lipophilic cationic organometallic complex within mitochondria in situ, consistent with a sequestration mechanism dependent on membrane potentials. Furthermore, this study establishes the general feasibility of combined EPXMA and NMR spectroscopy for the direct subcellular localization and characterization of metallopharmaceuticals, techniques that are readily applicable to MR contrast agents.


Biomedical Applications of Microprobe Analysis | 1999

Principles and instrumentation

Peter Ingram; John D. Shelburne; Ann LeFurgey

Electron microscopy is analytical to some extent. Analytical electron microscopy (AEM) can be defined as the observation of the interaction of electrons with matter at a resolution smaller than that which could be seen with the naked eye. This obviously includes all images in general; however, the term “microprobe analysis” has evolved to make it essentially a form of microchemistry in particular. The wavelength of X-rays can be measured using a wavelength dispersive spectrometer, or the characteristic energies can be measured by means of an energy dispersive spectrometer. Each instrumental configuration has its own advantages and limitations, and the choice of instrumentation depends not only on user preference but also on the particular task at hand. For example, analytical transmission electron microscopy can allow the user to obtain crystallographic information about the sample by means of selected area electron diffraction, whereas analytical scanning electron microscopy permits the elemental analysis of bulk samples and, more recently, the potential to determine the microcrystallographic characteristics of mineral specimens. This approach is particularly useful for the analysis of clinical specimens when combined with backscattered electron imaging, which enhances the ability to detect inorganic particulates of relatively high atomic number in an organic matrix of low atomic number.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2001

Compartmental responses to acute osmotic stress in Leishmania major result in rapid loss of Na+ and Cl-:

Ann LeFurgey; Peter Ingram; J. J. Blum

The elemental composition of the cytoplasm, electron dense vacuoles, and heterochromatin and euchromatin regions of the nucleus of Leishmania major promastigotes was measured by electron probe X-ray microanalysis under iso-osmotic conditions (305 mOsM) and shortly after a sudden increase (to 615 mOsM) or decrease (to 153 mOsM) in the osmolality of the buffer in which they were suspended. In response to acute hypotonicity a complete loss of Na from the electron dense vacuoles and an approximately threefold decrease in the Na concentrations in the cytoplasm and the nuclear regions occurred, together with an approximately threefold decrease in Cl content in each compartment and a smaller (approx. 1.2-fold) decrease in K content. Thus, in addition to the rapid change in shape and release of amino acids known to occur in response to acute hypo-osmotic stress, a major efflux of Na and Cl, and, to a lesser extent, of K, also occurs. In response to acute hypertonicity Na in the acidocalcisomes did not change but Na content of the cytoplasm decreased by 33%. A small increase in the S content of the cytoplasm and the electron dense vacuolar compartments occurred. No changes were detectable in Ca or Zn content in any of the compartments examined in response to hypotonicity or hypertonicity.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1990

Elemental composition of polyphosphate-containing vacuoles and cytoplasm of Leishmania major

Ann LeFurgey; Peter Ingram; J. J. Blum

Leishmania major promastigotes contain electron-dense vacuoles. The elemental composition of these vacuoles and of the cytoplasm was measured by electron probe X-ray microanalysis, using rapid cryopreservation techniques to prevent alterations in composition due to diffusion. The electron-dense vacuoles are rich in P, presumably present as polyphosphate (poly P). Mg is present at about 9 times its cytoplasmic level. There is sufficient Mg to largely neutralize most of the negative charge of the Poly P. The electron-dense vacuoles also contain appreciable amounts of Ca and Zn, which are not detectable in the cytoplasm, as well as Na, K, and Cl, the latter two at concentrations below that of the cytoplasm. These results suggest that the vacuolar membranes have at least one cation transport system. Incubation of the promastigotes for 1 h in the absence of phosphate in the presence or absence of glucose did not cause significant changes in the vacuolar contents of P, Mg, or Zn, but changes in K and Cl content were observed in both the electron-dense vacuoles and in the cytoplasm.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1986

Heterogeneity of calcium compartmentation: Electron probe analysis of renal tubules

Ann LeFurgey; Peter Ingram; Lazaro J. Mandel

SummaryThe objective of this study has been to determine the intracellular localization of calcium in cryofixed, cryosectioned suspensions of kidney proximal tubules using quantitative electron probe X-ray microanalysis. Two populations of cells have been identified: 1) „Viable” cells, representing the majority of cells probed, are defined by their relatively normal K/Na concentration ratio of ∼4∶1. Their measured Ca content is 4.1±1.4 (sem) mmol/kg dry wt in the cytoplasm and 3.1 ± 1.1 mmol/kg dry wt in the mitochondria, or an average cell calcium content of ∼3.8 mmol/kg dry wt. 2) “Nonviable” cells, defined by the presence of dense inclusions in their mitochondria and a K/Na concentration ratio of ∼1. The Ca content is 15±2 mmol/kg dry wt in the cytoplasm and 685±139 mmol/kg dry wt in the mitochondria of such cells. Assuming 25 to 30% of the cell volume is mitochondrial, the overall calcium content of such nonviable cells is ∼ 210 mmol/kg dry wt. The presence of these inclusions in 4 to 5% of the cells would account for the average total Ca content measured in perchloric acid extracts of isolated proximal tubule suspensions (≈ 18 nmol/mg protein or 12.6 mmol/kg dry wt). Whole kidney tissues display a large variability in toal Ca content (4.5 to 18 nmol/mg protein, or 3.4 to 13.5 mmol/kg dry wt), which could be accounted for by inclusion in 0 to 4% of the cells. The electron probe X-ray microanalysis (EPXMA) data conclusively demonstrate that thein situ mitochondrial Ca content of viable cells from the kidney, proximal tubule is low and support the idea that mitochondrial Ca may regulate dehydrogenase activity but probably does not normally control cytosolic free Ca.

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Max Dratwa

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Elizabeth Murphy

National Institutes of Health

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