Search results for "Gonad"

showing 10 items of 240 documents

Effect of testosterone on intracellular Ca++ in vascular smooth muscle cells.

2001

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyVascular smooth musclebusiness.industryTestosterone (patch)Muscle Smooth VascularIntracellular caRatsRats Sprague-DawleyEndocrinologyInternal medicineInternal MedicinemedicineAnimalsCalciumTestosteronebusinessGonadal Steroid HormonesCells CulturedAmerican journal of hypertension
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Gonadotropin Hormone Modulation of Testosterone, Immune Function, Performance, and Behavioral Trade‐Offs among Male Morphs of the Lizard Uta stansbur…

2008

Sexual selection predicts that trade-offs maintain trait variation in alternative reproductive strategies. Experiments often focus on testosterone (T), but the gonadotropins follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone may provide a clearer understanding of the pleiotropic relationships among traits. We assess the activational role of gonadotropins on T and corticosterone regulation in traits expressed by polymorphic male side-blotched lizards Uta stansburiana. Gonadotropins are found to enhance and suppress multiple physiological, morphological, and behavioral traits independently, as well as indirectly via T, and we demonstrate selective trade-offs between reproduction and surviva…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classColorBiologyModels BiologicalCaliforniaSexual Behavior AnimalFollicle-stimulating hormoneEndocrinologyInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsTestosteroneSexual MaturationSelection GeneticSocial BehaviorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsReproductive successLizardsLuteinizing HormoneMating systemAndrogenCortisonePhenotypeEndocrinologySexual selectionLinear ModelsFemaleFollicle Stimulating HormoneGonadotropinLuteinizing hormoneHormoneThe American Naturalist
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Prolactin secretion before, during, and after chronic gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist treatments in children.

2005

Objective To examine the effect of long-term administration of GnRH agonists (GnRHa) on PRL secretion in children affected by central precocious puberty (CPP) and growth hormone deficiency (GHD). Design Prospective analysis of blood sampling before, during, and after GnRHa treatments. Setting Pediatric endocrine center. Patient(s) One hundred nineteen and 93 children with a diagnosis of CPP and GHD, respectively. Intervention(s) Monthly depot injections of GnRHa drugs (leuprorelin acetate 3.75 mg [LA] and triptorelin 3.75 mg [TR]) administered to CPP and GHD patients for 40 and 24 months, respectively. Main Outcome Measure(s) Serum PRL levels at baseline and after 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, and…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classPuberty PrecociousGonadotropin-releasing hormoneGrowth hormone deficiencyGonadotropin-Releasing HormoneLeuprorelinInternal medicineGonadotropin-releasing hormone agonistmedicinePrecocious pubertyHumansProspective StudiesChildbusiness.industryHuman Growth HormoneObstetrics and Gynecologymedicine.diseaseTriptorelinProlactinProlactinEndocrinologyReproductive MedicineChild PreschoolFemalebusinessBlood samplingmedicine.drugFertility and sterility
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The significance of premature luteinization in an oocyte-donation programme

2006

BACKGROUND: Several evidences indicate that premature luteinization (PL) may affect IVF outcome. The primary end-point of the present study was to verify the effect of PL on the pregnancy rate (PR) of our oocytedonation programme. METHODS: PL was defined as serum progesterone ³1.2 ng/ml on the day of HCG. We analysed retrospectively 240 oocyte-donation cycles in which 120 women donated twice, with PL in the first donation cycle and no PL in the following one, acting as its own control. Recipients (n = 240) were divided in two groups according to the presence of PL (n = 120) or not (n = 120). Both groups were compared regarding donor cycle parameters and recipient cycle outcome. RESULTS: The…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentFertilization in VitroBiologyGonadotropin-Releasing HormoneAndrologyHuman fertilizationOvulation InductionPregnancymedicineHumansBlastocystProgesteroneRetrospective StudiesGynecologyPregnancyOocyte DonationRehabilitationEmbryo donationObstetrics and GynecologyEmbryo TransferOocytemedicine.diseaseEmbryo transferLuteinizationPregnancy rateBlastocystTreatment Outcomemedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicineOocytesFemaleOvulation inductionHuman Reproduction
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UNC-52/perlecan affects gonadal leader cell migrations in C. elegans hermaphrodites through alterations in growth factor signaling.

2003

0012-1606 doi: DOI: 10.1016/S0012-1606(03)00014-9; The unc-52 gene of Claenorhabditis elegans encodes a homologue of the basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan perlecan. Viable alleles reduce the abundance of UNC-52 in late larval stages and increase the frequency of distal tip cell (DTC) migration defects caused by mutations disrupting the UNC-6/netrin guidance system. These unc-52 alleles do not cause circumferential DTC migration defects in an otherwise wild-type genetic background. The effects of unc-52 mutations on DTC migrations are distinct from effects on myofilament organization and can be partially suppressed by mutations in several genes encoding growth factor-like molecu…

Malemedicine.medical_treatmentOrganogenesisCellDisorders of Sex DevelopmentReceptor-Like Protein Tyrosine PhosphatasesFibroblast growth factorAnimals Genetically ModifiedCell MovementNetrinGrowth SubstancesGenes HelminthGeneticsMusclesCell migrationsWnt signaling pathwayHelminth Proteinsmedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypeLarvaC. elegansFemaleNetrinsProteoglycansSignal transductionSignal TransductionUNC-52Nerve Tissue ProteinsReceptors Cell SurfacePerlecanmacromolecular substancesBiologymedicineAnimalsCaenorhabditis elegansCaenorhabditis elegans ProteinsGonadsGeneMolecular BiologyGrowth factorfungiMembrane ProteinsCell BiologyPerlecanReceptors Fibroblast Growth Factornervous systemMutationbiology.proteinProtein Tyrosine PhosphatasesDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental biology
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Hydrodynamism and its influence on the reproductive condition of the edible sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus

2013

Despite the large body of work published in the last two decades on the reproduction of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus, the reproductive aspects linked to hydrodynamic conditions and their influence on gonad production remain poorly understood. The present paper aims to evaluate the effect of hydrodynamism on the reproductive cycle of P. lividus. Variability in the gonadosomatic index (GSI) of P. lividus was estimated seasonally from 2007 to 2008 at two shallow sub-littoral flat basaltic areas at Ustica Island (Western Mediterranean). GSI was higher in the sites characterized by low hydrodynamism than in those with high hydrodynamism. Results also suggest a possible role for hydrodyna…

Mediterranean climateSettore BIO/07 - Ecologiafood.ingredientPopulation dynamicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectAquatic ScienceOceanographyPopulation densityParacentrotus lividusReproductive cycleMediterranean seafoodbiology.animalParacentrotusMediterranean SeaWater MovementsAnimalsSea urchinSea urchinsmedia_commonPopulation DensitybiologyEcologyReproductionHydrodynamismGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPollutionGonadosomatic IndexParacentrotus lividus; Population dynamicsParacentrotus lividusGonadosomatic indexHydrodynamicsParacentrotusReproductionParacentrotus lividu
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Systematics of Mepraia (Hemiptera-Reduviidae): cytogenetic and molecular variation.

2009

The haematophagous insects of the subfamily Triatominae (Hemiptera-Reduviidae) have great epidemiological importance as vectors of Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease. Mepraia was originally described as a monotypic genus comprised of Mepraia spinolai, distributed along coastal areas of northern Chile (from Region I to the Metropolitan Region). Recently, some M. spinolai populations have been ranked as a new species named Mepraia gajardoi. Several populations along the distribution range of the genus were sampled, and genetic differentiation was studied based upon the analysis of three molecular markers: cytogenetics (karyotype and chromosome behaviour during meiosis us…

Microbiology (medical)SystematicsMaleMitochondrial DNAMolecular Sequence DataMicrobiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionMepraiaCytogeneticsIntergenic regionGeneticsAnimalsChagas DiseaseChileGonadsMolecular BiologyRibosomal DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyGeneticsPolymorphism GeneticbiologyMolecular epidemiologyBase SequenceGeographyChromosomebiology.organism_classificationInsect VectorsInfectious DiseasesReduviidaeEvolutionary biologyDNA IntergenicFemaleTriatominaeSequence AlignmentInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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Testis asymmetry in birds: the influences of sexual and natural selection

2014

Gonad size and shape asymmetries are particularly common in birds. Although some obvious size and shape differences between the left and right testes in birds were first documented more than a century ago, little is known about what influences the variation across species in either the degree or the direction of these asymmetries. Here we show that a left bias in size is the most likely ancestral state in most orders and families, and that there is a weak but significant negative relation between the degree of size and shape asymmetries. In extant species, testis size and shape symmetries increase with the degree of sperm competition (relative testes mass), but those relations are significa…

Natural selectionGonadOvary (botany)Zoologynatural selectionAnatomyBiologyLeft Testismedicine.anatomical_structurebirdsmedicineSeasonal breederta1181sexual selectionAnimal Science and Zoologytestis asymmetryGizzardBody cavitySperm competitionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Avian Biology
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Inflammation and prostate cancer

2008

Prostate cancer remains a major health concern for the male population throughout the Western world. It is today widely accepted that inflammation has a role in many human cancers. In fact, inflammation is thought to incite carcinogenesis by causing cell and genome damage, promoting cellular turnover and creating a tissue microenvironment that can enhance cell replication, angiogenesis and tissue repair. Accordingly, there is a body of literature suggesting a link between chronic inflammation and prostate cancer, in which prostate inflammation may contribute to the promotion of prostate cancer development. On the other hand, high levels of endogenous gonadal steroids are considered as risk…

OncologyMaleCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyInflammationprostate cancer.AngiogenesisInflammationmedicine.disease_causeProstate cancerProstateInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansGonadal Steroid HormonesTestosteroneInflammationSettore MED/04 - Patologia Generalebusiness.industryCancerProstatic NeoplasmsGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyCancer researchmedicine.symptomCarcinogenesisbusinessHormone
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Ovarian steroids and cancer: news on the breast, questions on the reproductive tract

2021

The association between steroid hormones and cancer has been a primary research focus for many years. Reproductive hormones are of particular interest given the fact that several highly prevalent c...

Ovarian Neoplasms030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicinebusiness.industryEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismReproductive tractReproductive hormonesObstetrics and GynecologyPhysiologyCancerBreast Neoplasms030209 endocrinology & metabolismmacromolecular substancesmedicine.disease03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyHumansMedicineFemaleSteroidsGonadal Steroid HormonesbusinessHormoneGynecological Endocrinology
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