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Featured researches published by T. Landsverk.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1995

Immune-complex trapping in the splenic ellipsoids of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

Arild Espenes; C. McL. Press; Birgit H. Dannevig; T. Landsverk

Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), immunised with horseradish peroxidase, were given horseradish peroxidase intravenously, and the trapping of antigen in the spleen was followed 1, 24, and 48 h after injection. After 1 h, the localisation of horseradish peroxidase indicated that the antigen had been extensively trapped in the walls of the splenic ellipsoids. The colocalisation of horseradish peroxidase with rainbow trout immunoglobulin M and complement factor 3 was shown with a double immunofluorescence technique and suggested that horseradish peroxidase was trapped in the form of immune complexes. After 24 and 48 h, very little horseradish peroxidase was detected in the ellipsoids, and horseradish peroxidase was mainly found in association with large cells with prominent cytoplasmic extensions. In nonimmunised fish given horseradish peroxidase intravenously, antigen was not detected in ellipsoids. Thus, the observed difference between immunised and nonimmunised trout suggests a specific role for the splenic ellipsoids in rapid immune-complex trapping and invites speculation on its significance in a secondary immune response.


Gastroenterology | 1988

Secretin empties bile duct cell cytoplasm of vesicles when it initiates ductular HCO3− secretion in the pig

Trond Buanes; Tom Grotmol; T. Landsverk; M. G. Raeder

To determine whether secretin has any effect on bile duct cell ultrastructure, bile duct cells from liver biopsy specimens of pigs were analyzed morphometrically. During secretory rest, bile duct cell cytoplasmic vesicles totaled 96 (84-103) arbitrary units per cell volume (U). Secretin increased bile HCO3- secretion from 9 mumol/min (range 6-15) to 131 mumol/min (range 118-200) and lowered the bile duct cell vesicles to 5 U (range 3-9). Acute elevation of arterial PCO2 to 10.9 kPa (range 10.2-11.1) doubled vesicle number in resting duct cells and augmented the secretory response to secretin. At high arterial PCO2, secretin cleared the duct cell cytoplasm of vesicles and more than doubled the basolateral plasma membrane surface area. Taurocholate-induced canalicular choleresis, in contrast, did not alter duct cell morphology. It is concluded that secretin clears the bile duct cell cytoplasm of vesicles as it initiates ductular HCO3- secretion, possibly through causing exocytotic insertion of vesicle material into the basolateral plasma membrane.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1997

APOPTOSIS IN PHAGOCYTOTIC CELLS OF LYMPHOID TISSUES IN RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) FOLLOWING ADMINISTRATION OF CLODRONATE LIPOSOMES

Arild Espenes; C. McL. Press; N. van Rooijen; T. Landsverk

Abstract.Macrophage function has been studied in vivo by using liposomes that contain dichloromethylene-bisphosphonate (clodronate liposomes) to deplete macrophage subpopulations. In the present study, the effects of intravenously injected clodronate liposomes on the head kidney and spleen of the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) were studied from 1 h to 7 days after injection. The rapid trapping of liposomes in the splenic ellipsoids was followed by depletion of ellipsoidal sheath macrophages and accumulation of particulate material and IgM in the ellipsoidal wall, findings illustrating the importance of ellipsoidal macrophages in the clearance of filtered substances trapped in the reticular matrix of the ellipsoidal wall. A reduced reactivity for acid phosphatase in the spleen and ultrastructural evidence of cell death in phagocytotic cells of the head kidney and spleen supported the selective effect of clodronate liposomes on macrophages in rainbow trout. Apoptotic bodies were prominent ultrastructural features in tissues collected from clodronate-liposome-treated rainbow trout. The increased presence of apoptotic cells in clodronate-liposome-treated trout compared with trout given liposomes containing phosphate-buffered saline was confirmed by using terminal deoxynucleotidyl-transferase-mediated deoxyuridine-triphosphate nick-end-labelling of cells with extensive DNA fragmentation. The characterization of liposome-mediated macrophage depletion in fish provides a useful model for further investigation of piscine macrophage function.


Immunology | 1996

Fetal lambs are depleted of IgM+ cells following a single injection of an anti‐IgM antibody early in gestation

C. Mcl. Press; J. D. Reynolds; S.J. McClure; M. W. Simpson‐Morgan; T. Landsverk

B‐cell depleted fetal sheep were created following a single injection of an anti‐IgM monoclonal antibody early in gestation. Six sheep fetuses were given a single intraperitoneal injection of a monoclonal antibody directed against IgM at 63 days of gestation (gestation in sheep = 150 days). The fetuses were killed at 138–142 days of gestation and lymphoid tissues were collected for subsequent light microscopy and immunohistochemical examination. The ileal and jejunal Peyers patch (PP) follicles in four of the six injected fetuses were markedly reduced in size. Cells in the rudimentary follicles of the ileal PP of these animals showed no reactivity for IgM and most were negative for CD45. The dome regions contained many T cells, which were predominantly CD8+ cells and included γδ T cells. The interfollicular areas of the PP of the markedly affected fetuses contained large populations of T cells. The spleen and lymph nodes were also markedly depleted of IgM+ cells and these tissues contained only a small, scattered population of weakly IgM+ cells. Follicular accumulations of IgM+ cells were absent. Large populations of T cells were present in the white pulp of the spleen and cortex of the lymph nodes. The liver did not contain IgM+ cells and the medulla of the thymus was depleted of IgM+ cells. The results of this study suggest that a surface IgM+ B‐cell population is present in the sheep fetus at 63 days of gestation, which is essential for the colonization of the ileal PP and subsequent B‐cell development.


Apmis | 1994

Gastropathies in the Lundehund

Ø. Kolbjørnsen; C. McL. Press; T. Landsverk

The results from gross and microscopic examination of the stomachs of Lundehunds and examination of stomachs of control dogs from other breeds were compared. Over a 13‐year period, 12 of 14 autopsied Lundehunds have been diagnosed as having intestinal lymphangiectasia. In the present study, histological examination revealed gastritis as manifested by an increase in the number of mononuclear cells infiltrating the lamina propria in all the Lundehunds. The inflammation was chronic and restricted to the fundic and body regions, except in one Lundehund where antral gastritis was also present. Computer‐assisted morphometric analysis was used to quantify the increased number of mononuclear cells. Atrophy of mucosal fundic glands was prominent in most Lundehunds and mucous metaplasia was often present. Conventional morphometry revealed a significant decrease in the height of the gastric mucosa. A relative expansion in area of the basal part of the lamina propria in Lundehunds with chronic atrophic gastritis corresponded to the observed increase in mononuclear cells and stromal elements. Primary gastric carcinoma with neoplastic cells infiltrating layers of the stomach wall was found in four Lundehunds. The high incidence of gastric carcinoma and the consistent presence of gastritis in Lundehunds suffering from intestinal lymphangiectasia suggest that these changes represent features of a single pathogenetic process.


Clinical & Developmental Immunology | 2003

The effect of dosage, gestational age and splenectomy on anti-IgM interception of prenatal B-cell development in sheep.

P. McCullagh; C. McL. Press; S.J. McClure; H.J.S Larsen; T. Landsverk

The administration of a single bolus of anti-IgM antibody to foetal lambs early in pregnancy produces prolonged B-cell depletion. The present study investigated this depletion by examining the effect, on B-cell development in the ileal Peyers patches, of varying the timing and dosage of antibody administration and by supplementing anti-IgM with surgical splenectomy. The capacity of a 1 mg bolus of anti-IgM to deplete Peyers patches of B cells was lost if its administration was deferred until two thirds of the way through pregnancy, but persisted beyond this time if weight-adjusted doses were used. Splenectomy of the foetus performed at an earlier age failed to extend the age at which a 1 mg dose of antibody remained effective. As the concentration of murine immunoglobulin in foetal serum was greatly reduced after 21 days, it is inferred that ongoing suppression of B-cell development is not dependent on the continued presence of murine immunoglobulin. The enduring nature of suppression could be attributable to a limited period during which differentiation of B cells from stem cells normally occurs, although further studies will be needed to investigate this and other possible explanations for the effect of anti-IgM treatment on prenatal B-cell development in sheep.


Fish & Shellfish Immunology | 1994

Immune and enzyme histochemical phenotypes of lymphoid and nonlymphoid cells within the spleen and head kidney of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.)

C.McL. Press; Birgit H. Dannevig; T. Landsverk


Fish & Shellfish Immunology | 1994

Receptor-mediated endocytosis and phagocytosis by rainbow trout head kidney sinusoidal cells

Birgit H. Dannevig; Anita Lauve; Charles McL. Press; T. Landsverk


Journal of Fish Diseases | 1996

Retention of furunculosis vaccine components in Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., following different routes of vaccine administration

C.McL. Press; Ø. Evensen; Liv Jorun Reitan; T. Landsverk


Fish & Shellfish Immunology | 1996

The trapping of intravenously injected extracellular products fromAeromonas salmonicidain head kidney and spleen of vaccinated and nonvaccinated Atlantic salmon,Salmo salarL.

Arild Espenes; C.McL. Press; Liv Jorun Reitan; T. Landsverk

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Arild Espenes

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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C.McL. Press

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Liv Jorun Reitan

National Veterinary Institute

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H.J.S Larsen

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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