Search results for "Sex hormone receptor"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Immunohistochemical expression of estrogens and progesterone receptors in carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma-undifferentiated and adenocarcinoma types.

2009

Cancer of the salivary gland is one of the common cancers in the head and the neck regions. This type of cancer develops in the minor and the major salivary glands, and it sometimes metastasizes to other organs, particularly the lung. Morphologic mimicry and similarity in the expression of steroid hormone receptors between salivary gland tumors and breast tumors are well-known phenomena and are occasionally debated in the field of surgical pathology. The expression of sex hormone receptors in some tumors suggests a role for these receptors in tumor pathogenesis and therapy. Previous studies of the expression of estrogens and progesterone receptors in salivary gland tumors have reported conf…

AdultMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentmedicine.medical_treatmentAdenoma PleomorphicAdenocarcinomaPleomorphic adenomaNeoplasms Multiple PrimaryMajor Salivary GlandProgesterone receptormedicineHumansReceptorGeneral DentistryAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industrySex hormone receptorMiddle Agedmedicine.disease:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Salivary Gland NeoplasmsImmunohistochemistrySteroid hormoneCarcinoma ex pleomorphic adenomaOtorhinolaryngologyReceptors EstrogenUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASAdenocarcinomaSurgeryFemalebusinessReceptors ProgesteroneMedicina oral, patologia oral y cirugia bucal
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Steroid hormone receptors in the female urogenital tract

1994

The increasing clinical use of estrogens in the treatment of stress-incontinent women caused us to examine receptor patterns in the female bladder and urethral tissue, and to characterize possible receptors by means of Scatchard plot analysis, competition experiments and density gradient centrifugation.

Differential centrifugationmedicine.medical_specialtyScatchard plotbusiness.industryGenitourinary systemUrologymedicine.medical_treatmentObstetrics and GynecologySex hormone receptorSteroid hormoneEndocrinologyHormone receptorInternal medicinemedicineReceptorbusinessInternational Urogynecology Journal
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Perinatal xenohormone exposure impacts sweet preference and submandibular development in male rats.

2013

Objective To determine the effect of perinatal exposure to low doses of genistein and/or vinclozolin on submandibular salivary gland (SSG) development in juvenile and adult male rats and to establish a link with sweet preference. Material and Methods Female rats received orally (1 mg kg−1 body weight/day) genistein and vinclozolin, alone or in combination, from the first gestational day up to weaning. Sweet preference was assessed at weaning and in adulthood in male offspring; submandibular glands were then collected to study the morphogenesis and mRNA expression of steroid receptors, growth factors and taste related proteins. Results Exposure to genistein and/or vinclozolin resulted in a h…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyOffspringsalivary glandsSubmandibular Glandendocrine disruptor mixtureGenisteinPhytoestrogensBiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundFood Preferences0302 clinical medicineFetusSaccharinstomatognathic systemInternal medicineProgesterone receptormedicineWeaningEndocrine systemAnimalsVinclozolinRats WistarGeneral DentistryOxazoles030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesPerinatal Exposuregrowth factorAndrogen AntagonistsSex hormone receptorGenisteinRatsEndocrinologyOtorhinolaryngologychemistryAnimals NewbornTastephytoestrogen[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition030217 neurology & neurosurgeryOral diseases
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Actions of sex hormones on the brain

1992

1. The brain is a target for sex steroid hormones. As a result of sex hormone actions on the brain various behavioral changes are observed in animal and man. This paper gives a brief overview over the multiple central nervous functions that are under modulatory control of sexual hormones and describes the complex sex steroid actions on the brain by giving an example for "activating" and "organizing" effects of estrogens on noradrenergic neurons in the brain of rats. 2. Estradiol-17 beta induced sex specific alterations in the turnover of noradrenaline in the preoptic area and mediobasal hypothalamus showing "female" or "male" responses. 3. Neonatal manipulations of female rat pups by testos…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyOvariectomyNorepinephrineNorepinephrineSex hormone-binding globulinPregnancyInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsTestosteroneGonadal Steroid HormonesBiological PsychiatryTestosteronePharmacologyNeurotransmitter AgentsEstradiolbiologyBrainEstrogensRats Inbred StrainsSex hormone receptorPreoptic AreaRatsPreoptic areaEndocrinologyAnimals NewbornSex steroidbiology.proteinFemaleOrchiectomyDefeminizationmedicine.drugHormoneProgress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry
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Sex steroids, carcinogenesis, and cancer progression

2004

The relationship between sex steroids and cancer has been studied for more than a century. Using an original intact cell analysis, we investigated sex steroid metabolism in a panel of human cancer cell lines, either hormone responsive or unresponsive, originating from human breast, endometrium, and prostate. We found that highly divergent patterns of steroid metabolism exist and that the catalytic preference (predominantly reductive or oxidative) is strictly associated with the steroid receptor status of cells. We explored intra-tissue concentrations and profiles of estrogens in a set of human breast tumors as compared to normal mammary tissues, also in relation to their estrogen receptor s…

Receptor StatusTime FactorsIntratumor estrogenCatecholsBreast cancer; Intratumor estrogens; Sex steroids; Adsorption; Androstenedione; Animals; Breast Neoplasms; Catalysis; Catechols; Cell Line Tumor; Chromatography High Pressure Liquid; Disease Progression; Estradiol; Estrogens; Humans; In Vitro Techniques; Ions; Kinetics; Models Biological; Neoplasms; Steroids; Time Factors; Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)Sex steroidmedicine.disease_causeEndometriumCatalysiBreast cancerNeoplasmsEstrogen Receptor StatusChromatography High Pressure LiquidEstradiolGeneral NeuroscienceSex hormone receptormedicine.anatomical_structureDisease ProgressionSteroidsBreast NeoplasmHumanmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorBreast NeoplasmsIn Vitro TechniquesBiologyModels BiologicalCatalysisGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyBreast cancerHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCell Line TumorInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansIonSteroidKineticIonsBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)AnimalIn Vitro TechniqueAndrostenedioneCancerEstrogensmedicine.diseaseEstrogenKineticsEndocrinologySex steroidCatecholNeoplasmAdsorptionCarcinogenesis
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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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