Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A variety of neuroendocrine cells survive and express specific neuropeptide genes for long periods of time in slice explant cultures in the presence of serum. However, before use of these slice explant cultures as experimental models for physiological and pharmacological studies on the regulation of neuropeptide gene expression, it is first necessary to evaluate their characteristics in defined (e.g. serum free) media and to control for the spontaneous electrical and synaptic activity of neurons in these cultures. In this study, brain slices from postnatal day 4 rats were cultured in serum-containing media (SCM) for 12 days to allow thinning, and then maintained in a serum-free, defined media (SFM) for 6 days. Culture slices transferred to SFM appeared healthy and numerous neuroendocrine neurons containing messenger RNA (mRNA) encoding for LHRH and magnocellular neurons containing mRNA encoding for oxytocin (OT) were detected using in situ hybridization histochemistry (ISHH). Each of these neuronal subtypes robustly produced their appropriate gene products as determined by immunocytochemical analysis. Abundant magnocellular OT neurons were found in cultures grown in either SCM or SFM. In contrast, magnocellular vasopressin (VP) neurons were rarely detected under these conditions. Inhibition of spontaneous electrical and synaptic activity in these slice explant cultures was effectively achieved by incubation for the last 2.5 days of culture in the presence of tetrodotoxin (TTX; 10(-6) M). Densitometric single cell analyses after ISHH was performed on both LHRH and OT cells. Comparisons of the density values (corresponding to mRNA levels), from these slice explants, found that: (1) cellular LHRH mRNA levels decreased in the absence of serum, whereas cellular OT mRNA levels did not significantly change under these conditions; (2) the presence of TTX in the media resulted in an overall decrease in cellular LHRH mRNA values in both SCM and SFM, and (3) the OT neurons in these slice cultures appear to be composed of a heterogeneous population, with one cell subtype responding to TTX with an increase in cellular OT mRNA levels. These data show that factors in serum and spontaneous electrical activity can differentially influence mRNA levels of LHRH cells and magnocellular OT neurons in culture.
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PMID:Maintenance of LHRH and oxytocin neurons in slice explants cultured in serum-free media: effects of tetrodotoxin on gene expression. 175 75

Bleeding from gastroesophageal varices is a frequent and often deadly complication of cirrhosis. The key factor in the natural history of esophageal varices is increased portal pressure, which in cirrhosis is due to the combination of increased hepatic vascular resistance and increased portal collateral blood flow. The maintenance and aggravation of this situation leads to the progressive dilation of the varices and thinning of the variceal wall, until the tension exerted by the variceal wall exceeds the elastic limit of the vessel, leading to variceal hemorrhage. Mortality from a variceal bleeding episode has decreased in the last two decades from 40% to 20% due to the implementation of effective treatments and improvement in the general medical care. Initial treatment should include adequate fluid resuscitation and transfusion to maintain the hematocrit at 25% to 30%, and prophylactic antibiotics (norfloxacin or amoxicillin-clavulanic acid). It is currently recommended that a vasoactive drug be started at the time of admission. Drug therapy may be started during transferal to hospital by medical or paramedical personnel and maintained for up to five days to prevent early rebleeding. Terlipressin, a vasopressin derivative, is the preferred agent because of its safety profile and proven efficacy in improving survival. Somatostatin is as effective as terlipressin, but may require higher than the usually recommended dosage. Octreotide is effective in conjunction with endoscopic therapy, but is the second choice because it has not been shown to reduce mortality. Vasopressin may be used where terlipressin is not available, but should be given in combination with transdermal nitroglycerin. Endoscopic elastic band ligation is the recommended endoscopic treatment, but injection sclerotherapy is still employed in many centres for active variceal bleeding. Failures of medical therapy (drugs plus endoscopic therapy) should undergo a second course of endoscopic therapy before proceeding to transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt or, in rare occasions, to portosystemic shunt surgery. Administration of recombinant activated factor VII may decrease the number of treatment failures among patients with advanced liver failure (Child-Pugh class B and C).
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PMID:Medical management of variceal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis. 1499 22

Neuroendocrine factors play an important role in the pathogenesis of chronic heart failure. Despite numerous clinical and experimental studies, the role of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and glucocorticoid hormones is not fully characterised. Here we present a study of plasma cortisol concentration in 74 chronic heart failure patients, divided into four groups based on NYHA functional classes I-IV, and in 17 control subjects. In parallel, we performed morphological analysis of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis components from 8 male patients who had died from chronic heart failure, and 9 male controls. In our study we applied immunohistochemical method and quantitative analysis to investigate an expression of hypothalamic neurohormones (corticotropin-releasing hormone, vasopressin) and adrenocorticotropin hormone in the pituitary, as well as performed general histological examination of the adrenal cortex. Measurement of morning cortisol concentration in plasma of chronic heart failure patients revealed neither difference compared to controls nor with the severity of the disease. Despite this, a two-fold increase in the density of corticotropin-releasing hormone-immunoreactive neurons as well as a two-fold increase in the number of corticotropin-releasing hormone neurons co-expressing vasopressin in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus were found. In the anterior pituitary the density of adrenocorticotropin hormone-immunoreactive cells was significantly increased. General histological analysis of the adrenal cortex revealed a drastic thinning of the zona fasciculata and dystrophic changes in corticocytes. Structural changes, observed in the adrenal cortex, suggest a relative glucocorticoid deficiency, which may contribute to corticotropin-releasing hormone and adrenocorticotropin hormone upregulation in hypothalamus and pituitary of chronic heart failure patients.
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PMID:Altered hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity in patients with chronic heart failure. 1954 45

Mammalian class IX myosin Myo9a is a single-headed, actin-dependent motor protein with Rho GTPase-activating protein activity that negatively regulates Rho GTPase signaling. Myo9a is abundantly expressed in ciliated epithelial cells of several organs. In mice, genetic deletion of Myo9a leads to the formation of hydrocephalus. Whether Myo9a also has essential functions in the epithelia of other organs of the body has not been explored. In the present study, we report that Myo9a-deficient mice develop bilateral renal disease, characterized by dilation of proximal tubules, calyceal dilation, and thinning of the parenchyma and fibrosis. These structural changes are accompanied by polyuria (with normal vasopressin levels) and low-molecular-weight proteinuria. Immunohistochemistry revealed that Myo9a is localized to the circumferential F-actin belt of proximal tubule cells. In kidneys lacking Myo9a, the multiligand binding receptor megalin and its ligand albumin accumulated at the luminal surface of Myo9a-deficient proximal tubular cells, suggesting that endocytosis is dysregulated. In addition, we found, surprisingly, that levels of murine diaphanous-related formin-1, a Rho effector, were decreased in Myo9a-deficient kidneys as well as in Myo9a knockdown LLC-PK1 cells. In summary, deletion of the Rho GTPase-activating protein Myo9a in mice causes proximal tubular dilation and fibrosis, and we speculate that downregulation of murine diaphanous-related formin-1 and impaired protein reabsorption contribute to the pathophysiology.
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PMID:Rho GAP myosin IXa is a regulator of kidney tubule function. 2613 56