Search results for " Progesterone"

showing 3 items of 83 documents

Optimized culture conditions for tissue explants of uterine leiomyoma

2012

Background Uterine leiomyomas are the most common benign tumours in women, which arise from smooth muscle cells of the uterine myometrium and usually are multicentric. In spite of their frequency pathogenesis is widely unknown, mainly due to the absence of a suitable model system. We describe the systematic optimization of culturing leiomyoma tissue explants in an economical and effective ex vivo system. Methods Different concentrations of oxygen, different media, sera, hormones, and growth factor supplements were tested. Immunohistochemical stainings with antibodies against hormone receptors as well as specifying proliferation and apoptotic indices and real-time PCR were performed. Results…

medicine.medical_treatmentCulture Media; Epidermal Growth Factor; Estradiol; Female; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Leiomyoma; Progesterone; RNA Messenger; Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction; Uterine NeoplasmsBiologyReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAndrologyTissue culturemedicineHumansRNA MessengerUterine NeoplasmProgesteroneUterine leiomyomaEpidermal Growth FactorEstradiolLeiomyomaGrowth factorMyometriummedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistrySettore MED/40 - Ginecologia E OstetriciaCulture MediaLeiomyomaHormone receptorUterine NeoplasmsFemaleEx vivoHuman
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Case-specific performance of MM-PBSA, MM-GBSA, and SIE in virtual screening.

2015

In drug discovery the reliable prediction of binding free energies is of crucial importance. Methods that combine molecular mechanics force fields with continuum solvent models have become popular because of their high accuracy and relatively good computational efficiency. In this research we studied the performance of molecular mechanics generalized Born surface area (MM-GBSA), molecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA), and solvated interaction energy (SIE) both in their virtual screening efficiency and their ability to predict experimentally determined binding affinities for five different protein targets. The protein-ligand complexes were derived with two different app…

molecular mechanics generalized Born surface areaPhosphodiesterase InhibitorsMolecular Dynamics Simulationta3111Molecular mechanicsMolecular Docking Simulationbeta-LactamasesMolecular dynamicssolvated interaction energyBacterial ProteinsComputational chemistryAldehyde ReductaseDrug DiscoveryMaterials ChemistryHumansHSP90 Heat-Shock ProteinsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryBeta-Lactamase InhibitorsSpectroscopymolecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann surface areaMM-GBSAVirtual screeningBinding SitesChemistryPhosphoric Diester Hydrolasesta1182Hydrogen BondingInteraction energyvirtual screeningComputer Graphics and Computer-Aided DesignMolecular Docking SimulationMM-PBSAModels ChemicalROC CurveSolvent modelsDocking (molecular)Area Under CurveBiological systemReceptors Progesteronebeta-Lactamase InhibitorsHydrophobic and Hydrophilic InteractionsProtein BindingJournal of molecular graphicsmodelling
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Sex steroid hormone receptors, their ligands, and nuclear and non-nuclear pathways

2015

The ability of a cell to respond to a particular hormone depends on the presence of specific receptors for those hormones. Once the hormone has bound to its receptor, and following structural and biochemical modifications to the receptor, it separates from cytoplasmic chaperone proteins, thereby exposing the nuclear localization sequences that result in the activation of the receptor and initiation of the biological actions of the hormone on the target cell. In addition, recent work has demonstrated new pathways of steroid signaling through orphan and cell surface receptors that contribute to more rapid, “non-nuclear” or non-transcriptional effects of steroid hormones, often involving G-pro…

orphan receptorreceptorreceptorsandrogenBiologyprogesteronegenomic pathwaySettore BIO/10 - Biochimicaestrogensex steroid hormoneReceptorlcsh:Science (General)Orphan receptorHormone response elementsex steroid hormones; receptors; estrogens; androgens; progesterone; genomic pathway; non-genomic pathway; orphan receptorandrogensSex hormone receptornon-genomic pathwayBiochemistryNuclear receptorSex steroidHormone receptorsex steroid hormonesEstrogen-related receptor gammaestrogenslcsh:Q1-390AIMS Molecular Science
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