Robert E. Shank
Washington University in St. Louis
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Featured researches published by Robert E. Shank.
Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 1959
Robert E. Shank; George R. Morrison; Chuan Huan Cheng; Irene E. Karl; Ruth Schwartz
This investigation was undertaken to seek quantitative information concerning the relative activity of certain enzymes in hepatic cells in various parts of the lobule. The enzymes selected for study are chiefly those with important nwtabohc roles. It was thought that such infornmtion might bring important new understandlilig of function in the liver lobule and its relationship to the localization of various types of injury. This approach has been made possible by the inicrochemical rnethodls of Lowry (4) which permit analysis of small groups of cells dissected out of frozen dried! sections of tissue. These method!s have been adlaptcd in our laboratory with the collaboration and assistance of Dr. Lowry and have been utilized in the study of liver of normal young male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing from 180 to 230 grams and! maintained! on a diet of Purina chow fed ad libitum. After eight hours of fast, the animals were sacrificed by decapitation. The liver was weighed and a small biopsy from the periphery of the left lateral lobe was droppedl immediately into liquid nitrogen. Sections were cut at 22 in a cryostat at a temperature of -25#{176}C. The tissue sections were then dehydrated! ifl vacuo at -40#{176}C. After dehydration sections were brought to room temperature in vacuo and!, in an air conditioned room, representative areas of the lobule were dissected out at a magnification of 72 x under the dissecting microscope. The areas selected included small Portal triadis surroundled by a rim
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1965
George R. Morrison; Frances E. Brock; Irene E. Karl; Robert E. Shank
Abstract The livers of rats were studied 48 hours after acute carbon tetrachloride injury in order to determine the degree to which four areas of the lobule participate in both regenerative and degenerative processes and to relate alterations in enzyme activity in each area to these processes. With histological stains, the intralobular distribution of mitotic activity, neutral fat and necrosis were quantitated. Microchemical techniques in conjunction with microdissection of lyophilized sections were used, and determinations were made of total protein, total hemoglobin, total lipid, and of nine enzymes in all four areas of the liver lobule. Regenerative processes were shown to dominate the portal midzone area of the injured lobule while degenerative processes were localized largely in the central area. Within the degenerated central area, activities of alkaline phosphatase, phosphoglucoisomerase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were elevated above control levels, while activities of lactic dehydrogenase, isocitric dehydrogenase, malic dehydrogenase, glutamic dehydrogenase, glutamic-alanine transaminase, and β-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase were decreased. In the portal midzone, a decreased activity of phosphoglucoisomerase and an elevated activity of lactic dehydrogenase were the only alterations in enzyme activities which were interpreted as being related to the regenerative process when correlations were made between the intralobular patterns of enzyme activities and the intralobular patterns of the manifestations of regeneration and degeneration.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1966
George R. Morrison; Frances E. Brock; Dejano T. Sobral; Robert E. Shank
Abstract The activities of 14 enzymes participating in the intermediary metabolism of carbohydrates have been measured in the livers of rats to study the effects of chronic cold exposure. Based upon significant alterations in the activities of rate-limiting enzymes, it is concluded that an improved capacity for gluconeogenesis is the major change in hepatic carbohydrate metabolism associated with cold-acclimatization. No significant alterations in the activities of enzymes which are rate-limiting for glycolysis, glycogenesis, or glycogenolysis were found in the livers of rats exposed to 4 ° for 28 days.
Experimental Biology and Medicine | 1951
Albert B. Eisenstein; Robert E. Shank
Summary and Conclusions (1) The weight of the adrenal glands of guinea pigs on graded levels of intake of ascorbic acid varied inversely with daily intake of this vitamin. (2) A progressive decrease in the number of circulating eosinophiles occurred in guinea pigs maintained on a scorbutigenie diet. (3) There was a delay in onset of severe symptoms of scurvy and an increase of the mean survival period in scorbutic animals treated with ACTH. (4) The administration of a large close of ACTH to guinea pigs with severe scurvy was promptly followed by a decline of more than 50% in the level of circulating eosinophiles. (5) These observations are interpreted as indicating that ascorbic acid deficiency functions as a non-specific stress and that this vitamin is not directly involved in mechanisms of elaboration of adrenal cortical hormones with an oxygen atom at the C-ll position.
Nutrition Reviews | 2009
D. Mark Hegsted; Willia J. Darby; L. J. Filer; Robert E. Shank
Journal of Nutrition | 1976
Chuan Huan Cheng; Mary Koch; Robert E. Shank
Nutrition Longevity, and Aging | 1976
Robert E. Shank
Journal of Nutrition | 1969
Chuan Huan Cheng; Mary Koch; Robert E. Shank
Nutrition Reviews | 2009
Robert E. Shank
BioScience | 1984
Robert E. Shank