Search results for "Animal"

showing 10 items of 22159 documents

Control of Gastric Acid Secretion in Somatostatin Receptor 2 Deficient Mice: Shift from Endocrine/Paracrine to Neurocrine Pathways

2007

The gastrin-enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cell-parietal cell axis is known to play an important role in the regulation of gastric acid secretion. Somatostatin, acting on somatostatin receptor type 2 (SSTR2), interferes with this axis by suppressing the activity of the gastrin cells, ECL cells, and parietal cells. Surprisingly, however, freely fed SSTR2 knockout mice seem to display normal circulating gastrin concentration and unchanged acid output. In the present study, we compared the control of acid secretion in these mutant mice with that in wild-type mice. In SSTR2 knockout mice, the number of gastrin cells was unchanged; whereas the numbers of somatostatin cells were reduced in the antru…

medicine.medical_specialtyendocrine systemCell CountGalaninBiologyHistidine DecarboxylaseArticleGastric AcidMiceEndocrinologyParietal Cells GastricInternal medicineParacrine CommunicationmedicineEnterochromaffin CellsSomatostatin receptor 2AnimalsReceptors SomatostatinEnterochromaffin-like cellGastrinMice KnockoutDelta cellSomatostatin receptorGastrin-Secreting Cellsdigestive oral and skin physiologyNeurosecretory SystemsMicroscopy ElectronEndocrinologySomatostatinGastric MucosaVesicular Monoamine Transport ProteinsG cellReceptors Galaninhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonists
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Increased Connexin 43 Expression as a Potential Mediator of the Neuroprotective Activity of the Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone

2009

CRH is a major central stress mediator, but also a potent neuroprotective effector. The mechanisms by which CRH mediates its neuroprotective actions are largely unknown. Here, we describe that the gap junction molecule connexin43 (Cx43) mediates neuroprotective effects of CRH toward experimentally induced oxidative stress. An enhanced gap junction communication has been reported to contribute to neuroprotection after neurotoxic insults. We show that CRH treatment up-regulates Cx43 expression and gap junctional communication in a CRH receptor-dependent manner in IMR32 neuroblastoma cells, primary astrocytes, and organotypic hippocampal slice cultures. MAPKs and protein kinase A-cAMP response…

medicine.medical_specialtyendocrine systemCorticotropin-Releasing HormoneMAP Kinase Signaling SystemCarbenoxoloneConnexinBiologyNeuroprotectionModels BiologicalArticleRats Sprague-DawleyCorticotropin-releasing hormoneMiceEndocrinologyMediatorInternal medicineCell Line Tumormedicinepolycyclic compoundsAnimalsHumansProtein kinase AMolecular BiologyGap junctionBrainGap JunctionsGeneral MedicineCell biologyRatsEndocrinologyNeuroprotective Agentsnervous systemGene Expression RegulationConnexin 43cardiovascular systemSignal transductionhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsmedicine.drugSignal Transduction
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Atrial natriuretic peptide secretion during development of the rat supraoptic nucleus

2009

Since a relationship between atrial natriuretic peptide and oxytocin was recently demonstrated in the heart (Gutkowska et al., 1997), the aim of this study was to determine whether a relationship between the two peptides is present also in the rat hypothalamus. For this purpose, we measured ANP-ontogeny in the rat hypothalamus immunohistochemically and compared it with oxytocin-ontogeny which we previously studied. The results showed that the ANP-peptide and mRNA-ANP start at the 18th day of the fetal life. Our earlier data for oxytocin in the rat hypothalamus showed that only mRNA-oxytocin appeared the 18th day of foetal life (Farina Lipari et al., 2001); thus, at the 18th day of foetal li…

medicine.medical_specialtyendocrine systemHistologyBiophysicsOxytocinSupraoptic nucleusAtrial natriuretic peptidePregnancyInternal medicinesupraopticMedicineAnimalsSecretionRNA MessengerRats Wistarlcsh:QH301-705.5FetusMessenger RNAbusiness.industryReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionnucleushypothalamicCell BiologyImmunohistochemistryRatsEndocrinologyOxytocinAnimals NewbornGene Expression Regulationlcsh:Biology (General)Hypothalamuscardiovascular systemFemalebusinessSupraoptic NucleusAtrial Natriuretic FactorCell Nucleolushormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistscirculatory and respiratory physiologymedicine.drugEuropean Journal of Histochemistry
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Bisphenol A Effects on the Growing Mouse Oocyte Are Influenced by Diet1

2009

Growing evidence suggests that exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) has the ability to disrupt several different stages of oocyte development. To date, most attention has focused on the effects of BPA on the periovulatory oocyte, and considerable variation is evident in the results of these studies. In our own laboratory, variation in the results of BPA studies conducted at different times appeared to correlate with changes in mill dates of animal feed. This observation, coupled with reports by others that dietary estrogens in feed are a confounding variable in studies of endocrine-disrupting chemicals, prompted us to evaluate the effect of diet on the results of BPA studies of the periovulatory o…

medicine.medical_specialtyendocrine systemOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhytoestrogensBiologyEndocrine DisruptorsAndrologychemistry.chemical_compoundMiceMeiosisPhenolsInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsBenzhydryl compoundsEstrogens Non-SteroidalMatingBenzhydryl Compoundsmedia_commonurogenital systemCell BiologyGeneral MedicineOocyteAneuploidyAnimal FeedIsoflavonesDietMice Inbred C57BLMeiosisEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicinechemistryOocytesGametePhytoestrogensFemaleReproductionhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsResearch Article
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Thyrotropin Receptor Blocking Antibodies.

2018

AbstractAutoantibodies (Ab) against the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR) are frequently found in autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD). Autoantibodies to the TSHR (anti-TSHR-Ab) may mimic or block the action of TSH or be functionally neutral. Measurement of anti-TSHR-Ab can be done either via competitive-binding immunoassays or with functional cell-based bioassays. Antibody-binding assays do not assess anti-TSHR-Ab functionality, but rather measure the concentration of total anti-TSHR binding activity. In contrast, functional cell-based bioassays indicate whether anti-TSHR-Ab have stimulatory or blocking activity. Historically bioassays for anti-TSHR-Ab were research tools and were u…

medicine.medical_specialtyendocrine systemendocrine system diseasesEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismGraves' diseaseClinical Biochemistry030209 endocrinology & metabolismHashimoto DiseaseReviewBiochemistryThyroiditisThyrotropin receptor03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyInternal medicineBlocking antibodymedicineAnimalsHumansReceptorAntibodies BlockingAutoantibodiesbinding assaycell-based bioassaybiologybusiness.industryBiochemistry (medical)AutoantibodyReceptors ThyrotropinGeneral MedicineHashimoto’s thyroiditismedicine.diseaseTSH receptor blocking autoantibodieseye diseasesEndocrinologyHormone receptor030220 oncology & carcinogenesisImmunologybiology.proteinBiological AssayAntibodybusinessGraves’ diseasehormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsHormone and metabolic research = Hormon- und Stoffwechselforschung = Hormones et metabolisme
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Endothelial Bmx tyrosine kinase activity is essential for myocardial hypertrophy and remodeling

2015

Cardiac hypertrophy accompanies many forms of heart disease, including ischemic disease, hypertension, heart failure, and valvular disease, and it is a strong predictor of increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Deletion of bone marrow kinase in chromosome X (Bmx), an arterial nonreceptor tyrosine kinase, has been shown to inhibit cardiac hypertrophy in mice. This finding raised the possibility of therapeutic use of Bmx tyrosine kinase inhibitors, which we have addressed here by analyzing cardiac hypertrophy in gene-targeted mice deficient in Bmx tyrosine kinase activity. We found that angiotensin II (Ang II)-induced cardiac hypertrophy is significantly reduced in mice deficient i…

medicine.medical_specialtyendotheliumEndotheliumAngiogenesiscardiomyocyteCardiomegalyheartmTORC1030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyMitochondria Heart03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsMyocytes Cardiac030304 developmental biologyMice Knockout0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryKinasebusiness.industryta1184Angiotensin IIBiological SciencesProtein-Tyrosine KinasesAngiotensin IImedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyEtkcardiovascular systemCancer researchPhosphorylationCytokinesEndothelium VascularSignal transductionInflammation MediatorssignalingbusinessTyrosine kinaseSignal Transduction
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Myogenic effects enhance norepinephrine constriction: Inhibition by nitric oxide and felodipine

1998

Myogenic effects enhance norepinephrine constriction: Inhibition by nitric oxide and felodipine. Myogenic, pressure-induced vasoconstriction may amplify the effects of circulating vasoconstrictors. Through intravital microscopy in cremaster arterioles (31 to 115 μm diameter), the relative contribution of myogenic responses (MR) to norepinephrine (NE)-induced constriction and the inhibitor potency of nitric oxide (NO) or a Ca2+ entry blocker (CEB), felodipine (F), were examined. In 24 anesthetized hamsters, a vessel occluder was placed around the aorta to control cremaster vessel inflow pressure (IP). NE infusion increased blood pressure (by 50 ± 2mm Hg) and induced significant constriction …

medicine.medical_specialtyendotheliumVasodilator AgentsmicrocirculationMyogenic mechanismBayliss effectBlood PressureNitric OxideNitroarginineMuscle Smooth VascularConstrictionNitric oxideMicrocirculationNorepinephrine (medication)Norepinephrinechemistry.chemical_compoundCricetinaeInternal medicineintravital microscopymedicineAnimalsVasoconstrictor AgentsBayliss effectAorta AbdominalcremasterFelodipineCapillariesArteriolesEndocrinologychemistryFelodipineNephrologyAnesthesiacalcium entry blockerInjections Intravenouscardiovascular systemmedicine.symptomVasoconstrictionmedicine.drugKidney International
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Specific, concentration-dependent uptake of vitellin by the oocytes ofNereis virens (Annelida, Polychaeta) in vitro

1991

One purpose of this study was the development of methods for radioactive labeling and handling of the yolk protein of Nereis virens, another, the utilization of this tracer in nereid oocyte cultures to describe the kinetics and specificity of yolk protein uptake. Accumulation of labeled yolk protein by growing oocytes is linear over time, specific for yolk protein, and dependent on tracer concentration in the medium. Incorporation of yolk protein follows saturation kinetics which allows us to reproducibly determine the characteristics of this process. The apparent KM of ∼ 1 × 10−8 M indicates the high affinity of the transport system; the Vmax (160–400 pg protein/day × oocyte) reveals that …

medicine.medical_specialtyfood.ingredientKineticsGeneral MedicineBiologyOocyteIn vitroEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurefoodBiochemistryInternal medicineYolkmedicineCoelomSexual maturityAnimal Science and ZoologyEnzyme kineticsYolk sacJournal of Experimental Zoology
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Identification of the yolk receptor protein in oocytes of Nereis virens (Annelida, Polychaeta) and comparison with the locust vitellogenin receptor

1992

In oviparous animals large amounts of yolk proteins of extraovarian origin are accumulated by developing oocytes during vitellogenesis. The yolk protein precursors, the vitellogenins (VTG), are transported into the oocytes by receptor-mediated endocytosis. In oocytes of the polychaetous annelid, Nereis virens, the receptor protein for VTG was visualized by ligand blotting studies as a protein with an apparent molecular mass of 190 kDa under non-reducing conditions. Anti-Locusta VTG receptor antibodies recognize the Nereis VTG receptor protein. The Nereis VTG receptor protein binds Locusta and Schistocerca VTG; the VTG receptor proteins of both locust species bind the Nereis vitellin. These …

medicine.medical_specialtyfood.ingredientbiologyPhysiologybiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryVitellogeninEndocrinologyfoodEndocrinologyBiochemistryInternal medicineYolkbiology.proteinmedicineAnimal Science and ZoologySchistocercaVitellogenesisReceptorVitellogeninsNereisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocustJournal of Comparative Physiology B
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The effects of experimentally manipulated yolk androgens on growth and immune function of male and female nestling collared flycatchers Ficedula albi…

2009

Hormone-mediated maternal effects may be an important mechanism for adjusting offspring phenotype to particular requirements of the environment. We manipulated the levels of testosterone and androstenedione in the yolk of collared flycatcher Ficedula albicollis eggs to investigate the effects of pre-natal exposure to androgens on growth and immune function. Androgen treatment tended to reduce the growth of males, and enhance the growth of females, as indicated by significant interaction between sex and androgen treatment. Cellular immune function was not affected by androgen treatment or sex. Survival of nestlings until fledging was not related to androgen treatment. Our results indicate th…

medicine.medical_specialtyfood.ingredientmedicine.drug_classOffspringFicedula albicollisFledgeMaternal effectBiologyurologic and male genital diseasesAndrogenbiology.organism_classification10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental StudiesEndocrinologyfood1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternal medicineYolkmedicine570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)Animal Science and ZoologyAndrostenedione1103 Animal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTestosterone
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