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Query: UMLS:C0406810 (
NAME
)
13,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is increasing evidence that the magnitude and potential of intestinal nutrient absorption (sugars, fatty acids, cholesterol and triglycerides) and intestinal defense function are regulated by metabolic learning phenomena, and are influenced by dietary energy content and exercise. Metabolic overload syndromes, mainly obesity, and chronic malabsorption disorders such as inflammatory bowel disease and celiac disease have been defined as extreme phenotypes. Metabolic learning processes depend on developmental and transcriptional control systems of intestinal epithelial cell differentiation. The physiological differentiation zone of enterocytes is linked to the beta-catenin system, apolipoprotein apoA-IV and the master transcription factors Cdx2, HNF1alpha, and
GATA4
. In addition to these developmental regulatory transcription factors, nuclear receptors including RXR, LXR, PPAR, PXR, and
CAR
have been implicated in the generation of more absorptive enterocytes with a more differentiated phenotype on the one hand, and dedifferentiated cells with reduced capacity of detoxification and defense causing loss of junction control and barrier defects on the other. Large-scale analysis of gene expression profiles and identification of key pathways and master regulatory transcription factors will help dissect the role of nutritional and environmental factors as well as pharmacological intervention on mucosal homeostasis and disease, with potential applications for diagnosis and therapy.
...
PMID:Metabolic learning in the intestine: adaptation to nutrition and luminal factors. 1693 81
Oxytocin (OT), a hormone recently identified in the heart, induces embryonic and cardiac somatic stem cells to differentiate into cardiomyocytes (CM), possibly through nitric oxide (NO). We verified this hypothesis using P19 cells and P19 Clone 6 derivatives expressing a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter linked to cardiac myosin light chain-2v promoter. OT treatment of these cells induced beating cell colonies that were fully inhibited by N,G-nitro-L-arginine-methyl-ester (L-
NAME
), an inhibitor of NO synthases (NOS), partially reduced by 1400W, an inhibitor of inducible NOS, and ODQ, an inhibitor of NO-sensitive guanylyl cyclases. The NO generator S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) reversed the L-
NAME
inhibition of cell beating and GFP expression. In OT-induced cells, L-
NAME
significantly decreased transcripts of the cardiac markers Nkx2.5, MEF2c, alpha-myosin heavy chain, and less,
GATA4
, endothelial NOS, and atrial natriuretic peptide, as well as the skeletal myocyte (SM) marker myogenin. Image analysis of OT-induced P19Cl6-GFP cells revealed ventricular CM coexpressing sarcomeric alpha-actinin and GFP, with some cells exclusively expressing alpha-actinin, most likely of the SM phenotype. The OT-mediated production of CM, but not SM, was diminished by L-
NAME
. In P19 cells, exogenously added OT stimulated the expression of its own transcript, which was reduced in the presence of L-
NAME
. Surprisingly, L-
NAME
alone decreased the expression of anti-stage specific embryonic antigen-1 marker of the undifferentiated state and induced some beating colonies as well as GFP in P19Cl6-GFP cells. Collectively, our data suggest that the pleiotropic action of NO is involved in the initiation of CM differentiation of P19 cells and maintenance of their undifferentiated state.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide signaling in oxytocin-mediated cardiomyogenesis. 1713 63
Although studies have suggested a role for angiogenesis in determining heart size during conditions demanding enhanced cardiac performance, the role of EC mass in determining the normal organ size is poorly understood. To explore the relationship between cardiac vasculature and normal heart size, we generated a transgenic mouse with a regulatable expression of the secreted angiogenic growth factor PR39 in cardiomyocytes. A significant change in adult mouse EC mass was apparent by 3 weeks following PR39 induction. Heart weight; cardiomyocyte size; vascular density normalization; upregulation of hypertrophy markers including atrial natriuretic factor, beta-MHC, and
GATA4
; and activation of the Akt and MAP kinase pathways were observed at 6 weeks post-induction. Treatment of PR39-induced mice with the eNOS inhibitor L-
NAME
in the last 3 weeks of a 6-week stimulation period resulted in a significant suppression of heart growth and a reduction in hypertrophic marker expression. Injection of PR39 or another angiogenic growth factor, VEGF-B, into murine hearts during myocardial infarction led to induction of myocardial hypertrophy and restoration of myocardial function. Thus stimulation of vascular growth in normal adult mouse hearts leads to an increase in cardiac mass.
...
PMID:Myocardial hypertrophy in the absence of external stimuli is induced by angiogenesis in mice. 1797 62