Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.5 (RNase)
17,967 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ovarian hormones, particularly 17 beta-estradiol, have important effects on body fat levels in rats, but it is not known whether 17 beta-estradiol can act directly on various fat depots to affect adiposity or whether these effects are entirely indirect (e.g. via food intake, exercise, or various metabolic actions). We have found high affinity, estrogen-specific macromolecular binding of 17 beta-[3H]estradiol in the cytoplasmic fraction of adipose tissues from ovariectomized rats. Saturation analysis indicates a Kd of 7.4 X 10(-10) M, and binding is inhibited by unlabeled 17 beta-estradiol or 11 beta-methoxy-17-ethynyl-1,3,5(10)-triene-3,17beta-diol (R2858) but not by progesterone, 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone, or cortisol. 17 beta-[3H]Estradiol binding is virtually abolished by incubation with pronase but not with DNase or RNase, indicating that the binding macromolecule is probably a protein. Binding is seen in all adipose tissues studied, including abdominal, sc, and brown fat. Binding site concentration is highest in parametrial fat pads, followed by retroperitoneal, brown, omental, and inguinal depots. Binding is also seen in the cytoplasmic fraction of isolated parametrial adipocytes. These data indicate that the various adipose tissues might be estrogen target tissues in rats. Therefore, it is possible that estrogenic effects on body weight and composition could be mediated in part by direct estrogen action on adipose tissues.
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PMID:Cytoplasmic 17 beta-[3H]estradiol binding in rat adipose tissues. 74 11

The overall aim of this investigation was to examine the expression and steroidal regulation of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and the IGF-I receptor in the rat corpus luteum and to examine the specificity of IGF-I action in the two luteal cell populations. We first examined whether the corpus luteum expresses the IGF-I and IGF-I receptor genes. Using a solution hybridization/RNase protection assay, IGF-I and IGF-I receptor mRNAs were represented by protected bands 224 and 265 bases in length, respectively. In addition, Northern blot analysis showed that, as in liver, rat IGF-I and IGF-I receptor cDNAs hybridized with 7.5-, 1.8-, and 0.8- to 1.2-kilobase transcripts and an 11-kilobase transcript, respectively. Both IGF-I and IGF-I receptor mRNAs were detected on all days of pregnancy tested (days 5-21). Since the rat corpus luteum increases remarkably in size and steroidogenic capacity at midpregnancy due to estradiol stimulation, we determined whether these developmental changes are accompanied by an increased expression of the IGF-I and/or IGF-I receptor genes. Total RNA was isolated from corpora lutea of day 12 hypophysectomized-hysterectomized rats treated with or without estradiol for 3 days. Estradiol caused a clear and marked reduction in IGF-I and IGF-I receptor mRNA. [125I]IGF-I bound with high specificity and affinity to luteal cell membranes. Large and small cell populations forming corpora lutea of day 3 and 14 pregnant rats were separated by elutriation and used for the determination of binding activity and for cell culture, respectively. IGF-I receptors were found to be localized principally in the large luteal cell population. The small luteal cells had approximately 6.5-fold less IGF-I-binding activity. The difference in binding activity in both cell populations was reflected in the ability of both cell types to respond to IGF-I. IGF-I (25 ng/ml) had a profound effect on the production of progesterone by the large luteal cells. No stimulatory effect of IGF-I on the small luteal cells was observed. Addition of estradiol (10 ng/ml) to the cell culture remarkably enhanced IGF-I stimulation of progesterone biosynthesis by the large luteal cells. In summary, the results of this investigation have revealed that the corpus luteum of the pregnant rat is a major site of expression of both the IGF-I and IGF-I receptor genes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Expression, action, and steroidal regulation of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and IGF-I receptor in the rat corpus luteum: their differential role in the two cell populations forming the corpus luteum. 165 18

The methodology of flow cytometry (FCM) in the determination of DNA content of lymphoid cells was studied. We conclude that the optimal conditions for the Ortho Instruments L-30 Cytofluorograf flow cytometer are as follows: 70% ethanol should be used as fixative and propidium iodide as DNA fluorescent stain at a final concentration of 50 micrograms/ml. RNase and Triton-X-100 added to the mixture and the use of fresh chicken red blood cells (CRBC) as internal standard will ensure the reliability of the data. The interference of doublet cells is eliminated by selecting single cell area signals. We discovered that aneuploidy detection can be optimized by using the coefficient of variation ratio (CVR) together with the DNA ratio (DR). A special computer program was written to calculate the percentage of cells in different phases of the cell cycle, according to DNA histograms derived from FCM. Based on assessment of the DNA content of lymphoid cells of 33 normal subjects, the normal ranges of DR, CVR and S% were found to be 2.57-2.83, 1.02 and less than 9.6% respectively. The diagnosis of two cases of lymphoid cell malignancy is reported and the potential of this method for wide clinical application discussed.
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PMID:[Flow cytometry in determination of DNA content of lymphoid cells: study of methodology and its preliminary clinical application]. 253 77

Analysis in a cell flow cytometer (Ortho Spectrum III, Ortho Inst.) of single cell suspensions from the bursa and thymus of 20-day embryos revealed two distinct cell clusters. The two clusters were less apparent after fixation of the cells in paraformaldehyde and assumed a comet-like appearance at 30 min fixation in ethyl alcohol (EA). The G (postmitotic), S [deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis], and G2/M (premitotic and mitotic) phases of the life cycle were visualized in two cell flow cytometers (Ortho Spectrum III and FACS IV, Bectin Dickinson) after treating the cells with EA, ribonuclease (RNase), and propidium iodide (PI, a fluorescent dye). Bursal cell suspensions exposed to the EA-RNase-PI protocol and stored for 3 weeks in phosphate-buffered saline showed minor changes in the G1 coefficient of variation, G1, and S percentages, but marked changes in these parameters occurred after 6 weeks of storage. Thymic cells treated in a similar fashion could not be maintained for 3 weeks. Bursal and thymic cells may remain in the EA for one day and possibly as long as 7 days prior to preparing them for DNA life cycle analysis. Paraformaldehyde was not a satisfactory cell fixative for assessing a cell's DNA life cycle.
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PMID:Cell flow cytometry of fixed and unfixed bursal and thymic cells. 400 Oct 57

This paper further characterizes the estrogen-binding protein we have described in the cytosol of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. [3H]Estradiol was used as the radioprobe, and specific binding of cytosol fractions was measured by chromatography on Sephadex minicolumns. Other 3H-steroids did not exhibit specific binding. [3H]Estradiol binding was destroyed by treatment with trypsin, but not RNase, DNase, or phospholipase; N-ethylmaleimide substantially decreased the binding. The yeast did not metabolize estradiol added to the medium, and extraction and chromatography of the bound moiety showed it to be unmetabolized estradiol. Scatchard analysis of cytosol from both a and alpha mating types as well as the a/alpha diploid cell revealed similar binding properties: an apparent dissociation constant or Kd(25 degrees) for [3H]estradiol of 1.6-1.8 nM and a maximal binding capacity or Nmax of approximately 2000-2800 fmol/mg of cytosol protein. Gel exclusion chromatography on Sephacryl S-200 and high performance liquid chromatography suggested a Stokes radius of approximately 30 A. Sucrose gradient centrifugation showed a sedimentation coefficient of approximately 5 S, and the complex did not exhibit ionic dependent aggregation. The estrogen binder in S. cerevisiae differed in its steroidal specificities from classical mammalian estrogen receptors in rat uterus. 17 beta-Estradiol was the best competitor, 17 alpha-estradiol had about 5% the activity, and diethylstilbestrol exhibited negligible binding affinity as did tamoxifen, nafoxidine, and the zearalenones. In summary, a high affinity, stereospecific, steroid-selective binding protein has been demonstrated in the cytosol of the simple yeast S. cerevisiae. We speculate that this molecule may represent a primitive hormone receptor system, possibly for an estrogen-like message molecule.
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PMID:Characterization of an estrogen-binding protein in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 636 45

DNA synthesis in rat hepatocytes, from livers regenerating after 70% hepatectomy, was assessed by flow cytometric determination of nuclear DNA content and by incorporation of [3H]thymidine. Parenchymal liver cells were isolated by collagenase perfusion and low-speed centrifugation. Nuclei from the isolated cells were prepared for flow cytometry by a treatment with detergent, pepsin and RNase, and stained with ethidium bromide. Parallel samples of cells were incubated with [3H]thymidine and analysed for rate of incorporation of radioactivity into DNA and for labelling index determination. The flow cytometric measure of the replicative response, i.e. the presence of cells with S-phase DNA content within the diploid and tetraploid cell populations, was compared with the incorporation of [3H]thymidine. For each of fourteen animals, including two control rats and twelve partially hepatectomized animals killed either before (at 13 hr after hepatectomy), at the onset (16 and 18 hr) or at the peak (24 hr) of regenerating activity, a fairly good correlation was found between the different methods. Satisfactory resolution of the flow cytometric detection of S-phase cells was indicated by a sorting experiment using an Ortho (system 50-H) cell sorter which demonstrated that after [3H]thymidine injection in vivo 88% of the diploid and 84% of the tetraploid S-phase nuclei were labelled, while labelling in the G1-fractions was only 2 and 7%, respectively.
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PMID:The proliferation response of rat liver parenchymal cells after partial hepatectomy. A methodological study comparing flow cytometry of nuclear DNA content and in vivo and in vitro uptake of thymidine. 712 1

A 5.2-kb mRNA band that contains estrogen receptor (ER) sequence and exhibits sex- and tissue-specific expression has been identified in rat pituitary via Northern analysis; this band is composed of at least two distinctive ER mRNA isoforms. This mRNA is expressed in high levels in female pituitary but is absent in male pituitary and uterus, whereas the mRNA encoding the full-length receptor (6.2 kb) is expressed in all the aforementioned tissues. Estradiol treatment potently induces the expression of the 5.2-kb band in the male pituitary. Oligonucleotide hybridization and ribonuclease-protection experiments indicate that the pituitary ER variant is missing exons 1-4. Two corresponding cDNA clones, truncated estrogen receptor product 1 and 2 (TERP-1 and TERP-2), were isolated by using the anchored PCR. Both sequences contain a 31-bp segment of specific sequence upstream of exon 5; TERP-2, however, contains an additional 66 bp of specific sequence between the 31-bp segment and exon 5. On Northern analysis, probes complementary to the 31-bp segment of specific sequence hybridize only to the 5.2-kb band. Immunoblotting identified several proteins in rat pituitary that could represent the translation products of these or related transcripts. In summary, several ER isoforms have been identified that exhibit both tissue-specific expression and marked estrogen regulation and differ from full-length receptor by virtue of sequence upstream of the exon 4/5 boundary. Physiologically, the putative proteins encoded by these or similar isoforms might be important modulators of the tissue- and promoter-specific effects of estradiol.
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PMID:Estrogen regulates the expression of several different estrogen receptor mRNA isoforms in rat pituitary. 775 13

In the rat, the GH receptor (GHR) and the GH-binding protein (GHBP), which arise from alternative splicing of the same gene, show a sexually dimorphic and GH-dependent expression pattern. Multiple alternative 5'-untranslated regions (UTRs) are present in GHR and GHBP transcripts in the rat, one of which, GHR1, has recently been shown to be liver specific and found at higher levels in females. We have measured the hepatic GHR1, GHR, and GHBP transcript levels, by RNase protection and solution hybridization assay, in animals with differing hormonal status, in which hepatic GHR binding and plasma GHBP have been previously assayed. Estradiol (E2) induced GHR1 in males, whereas ovariectomy or the antiestrogen tamoxifen reduced GHR1 expression in females. The induction of GHR1 by E2 was GH dependent, being lower in GH-deficient dwarf rats and absent in hypophysectomized rats, paralleling previous measurements of plasma GHBP and hepatic GHR binding in these animals. Significant changes in GHR1 could explain the trends seen in the same extracts when coding region probes were used. Short-term adrenalectomy had no effect on GHR and GHBP expression, but dexamethasone markedly reduced both protein and messenger RNA (mRNA) levels. Corticosterone treatment had no effect alone but reduced the E2-induced increase in GHR1 levels, whereas methylprednisolone administered orally reduced hepatic GH binding, plasma GHBP, and GHR1 mRNA levels. Thus, 5'-UTRs, encoded by different first exons, are involved in the regulation of hepatic GHR and GHBP expression and need to be considered when comparing effects of hormonal manipulation on the mRNA transcripts and protein products of the GHR gene. Previous studies have found discrepancies between levels of protein expression and mRNA transcripts measured only with coding region probes. Our results suggest that posttranscriptional differences related to 5'-UTR heterogeneity in the GHR gene explain some of these discrepancies.
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PMID:Steroid regulation of growth hormone (GH) receptor and GH-binding protein messenger ribonucleic acids in the rat. 782 33

Prodynorphin (Prodyn)-derived peptides are synthesized in a subset of gonadotrope cells and released concomitantly with LH and FSH, and their levels in the rat adenohypophysis are influenced by the gonadal steroid environment. In several hormonal systems, factors that affect peptide levels may modulate the transcription of messenger RNA (mRNA) encoding for the target gene. Therefore, the present study was designed to investigate the effects of gonadal ablation and estrogen replacement on changes in steady state levels of anterior pituitary Prodyn mRNA and on the transcription rate in the adult female rat. The antiestrogen tamoxifen was employed for further exploring the relationships between estrogens and dynorphin (dyn)-related peptides. Adopting a solution hybridization-ribonuclease protection assay, steady state levels of Prodyn mRNA doubled in 2-week ovariectomized (OVX) rats, in parallel with a 3-fold increase in immunoreactive dyn-A-(1-17)-like material (irdyn-A). Estradiol (E2) replacement through sc SILASTIC implants for 1, 3, 7, and 14 days, which produces serum E2 levels between 25-35 pg/ml, restored in a time-dependent manner mRNA and peptide concentrations to values in sham-OVX rats. A significant decrease was observed after 3 days, and after 7 days, the effect was maximal. Tamoxifen (250 micrograms/kg.day, sc) administered simultaneously antagonized the action of E2 on Prodyn gene expression. Tamoxifen administered without E2 for 7 or 14 days significantly raised anterior pituitary levels of Prodyn mRNA and ir-dyn-A. To establish whether E2 and tamoxifen exert their effects on adenohypophyseal Prodyn mRNA by influencing the transcriptional activity of this gene, an in vitro transcriptional elongation assay was performed on nuclei from the anterior pituitary. The transcriptional rate of the Prodyn gene was significantly increased in 2-week OVX rats. Prodyn mRNA synthesis was suppressed in OVX rats exposed to E2, an effect antagonized by tamoxifen administered concomitantly. The antiestrogen administered alone for 14 days further elevated the transcriptional rate of Prodyn mRNA induced by gonadal ablation. In conclusion, E2 down-regulated the synthesis of Prodyn-derived peptides in adenohypophyseal cells. The antiestrogen tamoxifen antagonized the effect of E2 and, when chronically administered to OVX rats, further elevated the postcastrational rise in Prodyn gene expression.
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PMID:Estrogen regulation of prodynorphin gene expression in the rat adenohypophysis: effect of the antiestrogen tamoxifen. 789 68

The cytosolic, alkaline RNase in rat vaginal epithelial cells (VEC) from normal, immature rats was found to be present largely in the free, active form unlike in many other mammalian tissues where it is known to be present in a latent form as a complex with RNase inhibitor (RNasin). Estradiol (E2) administration induced expression of RNasin activity in the VEC from such animals and caused virtually total inhibition of cytosolic RNase activity in these cells by 12 h after the hormone injection. These changes may have metabolic implications in relation to other biochemical events stimulated by estradiol in rat VEC.
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PMID:Modulation of cytosolic RNase activity by endogenous RNase inhibitor in rat vaginal epithelial cells on estradiol administration. 816 9


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