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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study the primary objectives were to localize angiotensin-II (AII) receptors on specific ovarian cells and determine whether these receptors are regulated by LH. AII receptor analysis, carried out using membrane fractions prepared from isolated thecal, granulosa, and luteal cells from bovine ovary, revealed that [125I]AII-binding sites were present only on thecal cells. The Kd and binding capacity were determined to be 0.29 +/- 0.08 nM and 66.9 +/- 8.1 fmol/mg membrane protein (mean +/- SEM from three experiments, each with duplicate determinations), respectively. None of the peptides unrelated to AII affected the binding of [125I]AII. Unlabeled AII, saralasin, and AIII were equipotent (IC50, approximately 5 nM for all three peptides) in competing with the radioligand. However, the binding affinity for AI was less by almost 2 log units. Using AII receptor subtype-specific nonpeptide antagonists, Losartan [a selective antagonist for the type 1 AII (AT1) receptor] and PD 123319 [a selective antagonist for the type 2 AII (AT2) receptor], AII receptors on thecal cells could be classified pharmacologically as AT2-type receptors. The IC50 determined from the competitive binding inhibition experiments for the various unlabeled competing substances were 5 nM, 20 nM, 200 nM, and 200 microM with respect to AII, p-amino-phenylalanine-AII, PD123319, and Losartan, respectively. Thecal cells cultured in a serum-free medium also expressed AII receptors, which could be up-regulated by LH or 8-bromo-cAMP in a dose-dependent manner. The number of AII receptors on thecal cells nearly doubled when the cells were cultured in the presence of 100 ng/ml LH, with little change in their Kd value. This increase in the number of AII receptors was inhibitable by a protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide. In summary, we have demonstrated that in the bovine ovary, AII receptors belonging to AT2 subclass are predominantly expressed on thecal cells, and these receptors can be up-regulated by LH via a cAMP-dependent mechanism. Thus, the bovine thecal cells in primary culture can potentially become a useful in vitro system to study the mechanism of regulation of AII receptor induction as well as the so far unknown function of this class of receptor.
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PMID:Characterization of angiotensin-II receptor subtype on bovine thecal cells and its regulation by luteinizing hormone. 150 74

Interphase nuclei are organized into structural and functional domains. The coiled body, a nuclear organelle of unknown function, exhibits cell type-specific changes in number and morphology. Its association with nucleoli and with small nuclear ribonucleo-proteins (snRNPs) indicates that it functions in RNA processing. In cycling cells, coiled bodies are round structures not associated with nucleoli. In contrast, in neurons, they frequently present as nucleolar "caps." To test the hypothesis that neuronal differentiation is accompanied by changes in the spatial association of coiled bodies with nucleoli and in their morphology, PC12 cells were differentiated into a neuronal phenotype with nerve growth factor (NGF) and coiled bodies detected by immunocytochemical localization of p80-coilin and snRNPs. The fraction of cells that showed coiled bodies as nucleolar caps increased from 1.6 +/- 0.9% (mean +/- SEM) in controls to 16.5 +/- 1.6% in NGF-differentiated cultures. The fraction of cells with ring-like coiled bodies increased from 17.2 +/- 5.0% in controls to 57.8 +/- 4.4% in differentiated cells. This was accompanied by a decrease, from 81.2 +/- 5.7% to 25.7 +/- 3.1%, in the fraction of cells with small, round coiled bodies. SnRNPs remained associated with typical coiled bodies and with ring-like coiled bodies during NGF-induced recruitment of snRNPs to the nuclear periphery. Together with the observation that coiled bodies are also present as nucleolar caps in sensory neurons, the results indicate that coiled bodies alter their morphology and increase their association with nucleoli during NGF-induced neuronal differentiation.
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PMID:Changes in morphology and spatial position of coiled bodies during NGF-induced neuronal differentiation of PC12 cells. 935 54

We investigated the development of inner ear innervation in Otx1 null mutants, which lack a horizontal canal, between embryonic day 12 (E12) and postnatal day 7 (P7) with DiI and immunostaining for acetylated tubulin. Comparable to control animals, horizontal crista-like fibers were found to cross over the utricle in Otx1 null mice. In mutants these fibers extend toward an area near the endolymphatic duct, not to a horizontal crista. Most Otx1 null mutants had a small patch of sensory hair cells at this position. Measurement of the area of the utricular macula suggested it to be enlarged in Otx1 null mutants. We suggest that parts of the horizontal canal crista remain incorporated in the utricular sensory epithelium in Otx1 null mutants. Other parts of the horizontal crista appear to be variably segregated to form the isolated patch of hair cells identifiable by the unique fiber trajectory as representing the horizontal canal crista. Comparison with lamprey ear innervation reveals similarities in the pattern of innervation with the dorsal macula, a sensory patch of unknown function. SEM data confirm that all foramina are less constricted in Otx1 null mutants. We propose that Otx1 is not directly involved in sensory hair cell formation of the horizontal canal but affects the segregation of the horizontal canal crista from the utricle. It also affects constriction of the two main foramina in the ear, but not their initial formation. Otx1 is thus causally related to horizontal canal morphogenesis as well as morphogenesis of these foramina.
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PMID:Otx1 null mutant mice show partial segregation of sensory epithelia comparable to lamprey ears. 1168 72

Cytophaga hutchinsonii is an aerobic cellulolytic gliding bacterium. The mechanism of its cell motility over surfaces without flagella and type IV pili is not known. In this study, mariner-based transposon mutagenesis was used to identify a new locus CHU_1797 essential for colony spreading on both hard and soft agar surfaces through gliding. CHU_1797 encodes a putative outer membrane protein of 348 amino acids with unknown function, and proteins which have high sequence similarity to CHU_1797 were widespread in the members of the phylum Bacteroidetes. The disruption of CHU_1797 suppressed spreading toward glucose on an agar surface, but had no significant effect on cellulose degradation for cells already in contact with cellulose. SEM observation showed that the mutant cells also regularly arranged on the surface of cellulose fiber similar with that of the wild type strain. These results indicated that the colony spreading ability on agar surfaces was not required for cellulose degradation by C. hutchinsonii. This was the first study focused on the relationship between cell motility and cellulose degradation of C. hutchinsonii.
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PMID:A novel locus essential for spreading of Cytophaga hutchinsonii colonies on agar. 2357 28

Cilia with paddle-shaped or disc-shaped tips enclosing a curved end of the axoneme (paddle cilia or discocilia) have been described in a variety of marine invertebrates. Although numerous studies, in which fixed specimens were used, claimed that paddle cilia and discocilia are genuine structures of unknown function, several studies, in which fresh living material was used, reported that modified cilia are artifacts. We have re-investigated a recent SEM report that paddle cilia are genuine organelles in veliger larvae of marine bivalves (Campos and Mann, 1988). Using high-speed video and electronic flash DIC microscopy, we find no paddle cilia in living larvae of Spisula solidissima and Lyrodus pedicellatus. Hypotonic seawater, however, induces formation of paddle cilia and vesiculations of the ciliary membrane in these veligers, as does the hypotonic SEM fixative used by Campos and Mann (1988). Fixatives that are isosmotic with seawater, on the other hand, do not induce paddle cilia. We conclude that paddle cilia are artifacts, and we propose a unifying mechanism to explain their production in various animals under different conditions.
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PMID:On the Nature of Paddle Cilia and Discocilia. 2930 55