Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.1.1.1 (alcohol dehydrogenase)
9,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The stress of motion sickness was experimentally provoked by Coriolis effect. Significant and reproducible increases from the basal serum level (delta mean +/- S.E.) of antidiuretic hormone delta - ADH: 48.2 +/- 4.6 pg/ml; p less than 0.0005), of growth hormone (delta - hGH: 10.0 +/- 1.2 ng/ml; p less than 0.0005), of prolactin (delta - hPRL: 186.5 +/- 29.9 muU/ml; p less than 0.0005), and of cortisol (delta - F; 12.3 +/- 0.9 microgram%; p less than 0.0005) were observed, whereas the luteinizing hormone levels did not change significantly. The stimulation of hormone secretion induced by different degrees of motion sickness seems to correlate with the severity of motion sickness. The secretion of antidiuretic hormones is the most sensitive indicator for the stress of motion sickness whereas growth hormone, prolactin, and cortisol responses to the stress of motion sickness are more delayed and less pronounced.
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PMID:Increased secretion of growth hormone, prolactin, antidiuretic hormone, and cortisol induced by the stress of motion sickness. 62 65

Some pituitary hormones secrete hormones while others do not. Nonsecreting tumors can interfere with normal pituitary hormone secretion and produce tumor symptoms and signs like headaches and visual field defects. The most frequent hormone-secreting tumors are prolactinomas. Growth hormone or ACTH or gonadotropin or gonadotropin-alpha and beta chain-producing tumors are less frequent, TSH producing tumors are extremely rare. The most important elements of the diagnostic work-up are clinical signs and symptoms, assessment of pituitary function (measurement of TSH, free T4, LH, FSH, oestradiol/free testosteron, growth hormone, IGF-1, prolactin, ACTH, Cortisol, serum and urine osmolality), CT and/or MRI and, in patients with large tumors, a visual field exam. The treatment of choice of pituitary tumors is often surgery. Alternative therapies are radiation treatment (in nonoperable patients or when hormone levels are persistently elevated after pituitary surgery) and drug treatment (dopamine agonists in hyperprolactinemia, somatostatin analogues in acromegaly). Pituitary hormone deficiencies are treated depending on the specific deficiency with thyroxine, cortisone, oestrogen/gestagen/testosterone gonadotropines or ADH analogues.
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PMID:[Hypophyseal dysfunction and tumors]. 158 68

The crucial role of retinoids in controlling differentiation processes has become evident from studies conducted in a variety of in vivo and in vitro systems. Most striking is the role of retinoic acid as a morphogenic substance in vertebrate limb development, but equally important is its role in the maintenance of epithelial integrity in most superficial linings of the body. The similarity of the mode of action of retinoids to that of the steroid and thyroid hormones has recently been demonstrated with the discovery of the nuclear receptors for retinoic acid, which belong to the steroid/thyroid hormone receptor superfamily. These receptors act as transcriptional activators by binding as heterodimers to specific nucleotide sequences in the response elements of target genes. Response elements for retinoic acid have so far been identified for the rat growth hormone and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, the mouse complement H and laminin B1, the human and mouse retinoic acid receptor beta, the human osteocalcin, and the human alcohol dehydrogenase genes. The retinoic acid response element (RARE) for the rat growth hormone gene is also a thyroid hormone response element (TRE), and the AP-1 binding site of the human osteocalcin promoter is also a vitamin D response element (VDRE) and a RARE. Both these elements are palindromic. Other RAREs have a direct repeat configuration of the half-site motif AGGTCA separated by five nucleotides (AGGTCA xxxxx AGGTCA). The direct repeat arrangement of the same core motif AGGTCA separated by three or four nucleotides becomes a VDRE or TRE, respectively. A point mutation has been identified in the RAR alpha gene of embryonal carcinoma cells resistant to retinoic acid. In addition to the three retinoic acid receptors (alpha, beta, gamma) belonging to the steroid/thyroid hormone receptor superfamily, a second class of retinoid receptors (RXR) alpha, beta, gamma has also been characterized and its relatedness to a gene, XR2C, of the locus ultraspiracle required for pattern formation in Drosophila has been established. That would suggest that both vertebrates and invertebrates may require similar transcriptional activators during morphogenesis. An RXRE has been identified in the CRBPII gene promoter and it contains five repeats of the canonical sequence AGGTCA separated by one nucleotide. The importance of retinoids, both as chemopreventive agents of tumorigenesis and potent differentiation inducers of neoplastic cells, can only be emphasized by the recent finding that the t(15;17) (q21- q11-22) translocation, specifically associated with acute promyelocytic leukemia, also causes translocation of the retinoic acid receptor alpha gene and its fusion with with a new locus, myl, of unknown function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Retinoids and their receptors in differentiation, embryogenesis, and neoplasia. 166 Dec 45

The effect of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) on the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase was determined in primary hepatocyte culture from male rats. Continuous exposure of hepatocytes to IGF-I (30 nM) resulted in increases in alcohol dehydrogenase activity on Days 3-6 of culture. The increase in enzyme activity was preceded by increased alcohol dehydrogenase mRNA, indicating that the effect of IGF-I was at the pretranslational level. The effect of IGF-I was observed only in the presence of pharmacological concentrations of insulin in the media. Insulin alone had no effect on alcohol dehydrogenase activity. The permissive influence of insulin was correlated with the ability of insulin to maintain a steady high number of IGF-I binding receptors in the hepatocytes during culture. The response of alcohol dehydrogenase to IGF-I is similar to that previously demonstrated for growth hormone and suggests the possibility that the effect of growth hormone on this enzyme may be mediated by IGF-I.
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PMID:Effect of insulin-like growth factor I on rat alcohol dehydrogenase in primary hepatocyte culture. 216 56

After burn trauma, a very marked endocrine response occurs. Almost all the known hormones take part in it. Their response influences very much the postburn metabolic changes and participates in the integration of the body's response with the nervous and immune systems. In this review, mainly the changes in various hormone levels are described, as well as the possible role of the acute phase response after burn trauma, and the communications between the endocrine and immune systems, the cells of the latter are able to respond to various hormonal stimuli and to secrete various hormones themselves. Some of the hormones are very sensitive indicators of the burn stress, e.g., the T3 levels (very low), testosterone in males (very low), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) (very low), ADH, catecholamines, renin and angiotensin II, cortisol (high), 17-beta-estradiol in males (usually elevated). Other hormones are usually elevated, but not always (ACTH, aldosterone, prolactin, glucagon, immunoreactive insulin, beta-endorphin, rT3, 11-beta-hydroxyandrostenedione), but there are hormones that are unually low (T4, FSH, androstenedione, progesterone--the latter especially in females). Calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, growth hormone are sometimes elevated, as well as LH (measured with RIA methods). TSH is usually normal, the biologically measured LH was reported to be low. The levels of the sensitive indicators of burn stress may be used to evaluate the effect of treatment: if the burn patient is properly treated, the indicators may become earlier normal.
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PMID:Endocrine changes after burn trauma--a review. 251 73

Conditions for maintaining the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in cultures of hepatocytes isolated from female rats were studied. The activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in freshly isolated cells was 1.7 U/mg DNA. When cultured, the activity declined 20% after one day of culture, irrespective of the culture conditions. In a conventional medium with 5 mM glucose the activity after one week of culture was only 30% of that initially measured in culture. Addition of 25 mM glucose or a high concentration of amino acids delayed the decrease. When these compounds were added together it was possible to maintain the initial activity for one week, but the activity declined during the following week. Addition of growth hormone had no effect during the first week of culture but abolished the fall during the second week. The initial metabolism of ethanol was 0.65 mumol/min x mg DNA and declined to two-thirds during the 2 weeks of culture.
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PMID:Maintenance of alcohol dehydrogenase activity in long-term culture of hepatocytes from female rat. 264 72

Six months after severe thiamine deficiency, when their body and liver weights had normalized, male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to constant ethanol vapor concentrations for 6 days in an inhalation chamber and blood ethanol concentrations (BECs) were determined. Previously induced thiamine deficiency was associated with about a 50% reduction of BECs and a significant increase in liver alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity suggesting a persistent acceleration of ethanol metabolism. No significant changes were found in liver aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, plasma levels of thyroxine, testosterone, or estradiol, or brain or liver histology. Plasma growth hormone concentrations were about 60% lower in the experimental group than in controls, but this effect of previous thiamine deprivation did not correlate with changes in ADH activity. Therefore, it remains to be elucidated how thiamine deficiency-induced central nervous system alterations may contribute to the development of metabolic tolerance to ethanol.
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PMID:Acceleration of ethanol metabolism by past thiamine deficiency. 266 63

Various methods for gene transfer in cattle are described. Four vectors containing (1) the bovine papilloma virus DNA, (2) the alcohol dehydrogenase gene of Drosophila melanogaster, and the human (3) and the bovine (4) growth hormone gene were used for gene injection in bovine zygotes. The period between 78 and 82 h after prostaglandin treatment was determined as the optimum time for collection of bovine zygotes. A total of 802 eggs was obtained from 74 successfully superovulated heifers. The foreign DNA was injected into the pronuclei of 156 (Construct 1), 130 (Construct 2), 62 (Construct 3) and 250 (Construct 4) centrifuged zygotes. An average number of 12 zygotes per recipient heifer was transferred into one oviduct. The eggs were recovered after 14 days (Constructs 1 and 2) for analysis or after 7 days (Constructs 3 and 4) respectively for transfer into final recipients. After the transfer into 23 recipient heifers of 43 embryos (Construct 4), 14 calves were born and 1 fetal monster was isolated. According to dot-blot hybridization the total rate of efficiency of gene transfer was 3.2%, 6.9%, and 0.8% for Constructs 1, 2 and 4, respectively.
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PMID:Gene transfer experiments in cattle. 279 60

Growth hormone has previously been shown to increase the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in primary hepatocyte culture from male rats. In this study, continuous exposure of cultured hepatocytes to growth hormone (1 microgram/ml) resulted in parallel increased in the enzyme activity of alcohol dehydrogenase and immunoreactive protein. Growth hormone increased the incorporation of [3H]leucine into alcohol dehydrogenase protein relative to the incorporation into cytosolic protein. The abundance of alcohol dehydrogenase mRNA increased on Days 3 and 4 of continuous exposure of the hepatocytes to growth hormone and returned to control levels on Day 5 of culture. Growth hormone increased the rate of transcription of the alcohol dehydrogenase gene as demonstrated by nuclear runoff experiments. These observations indicate that the effect of growth hormone in enhancing alcohol dehydrogenase activity is due to increased synthesis of the enzyme which is initiated at the level of gene transcription.
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PMID:Influence of growth hormone on the synthesis of rat liver alcohol dehydrogenase in primary hepatocyte culture. 280 27

Somatostatin produces a modest water diuresis in dogs by inhibiting the renal tubular action of ADH. SMS 201-995, an octapeptide analogue of somatostatin, is more potent and longer-acting than the native hormone, and possesses greater specificity in the inhibition of growth hormone secretion. In the present study we tested the ability of the analogue to produce urinary dilution following infusion (0.12 to 0.50 micrograms/min) into the left renal artery. Infusion in this dose range increased urine flow from 0.20 to 0.55 mL/min (P less than 0.05) and caused a 49% to 56% reduction in urine osmolarity. We conclude that SMS 201-995 is effective in causing a water diuresis in dogs and at smaller doses than required for the native hormone.
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PMID:Effect of a selective octapeptide analogue of somatostatin on renal water excretion in the dog. 285 12


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