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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C1519176 (
PSA
)
5,490
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of four retinoids,
all-trans
-retinoic acid (tretinoin), 13-cis-retinoic acid (isotretinoin), R0 10-1670 (etretin) and the arotinoid, R0 15-0778, on fibroblast proliferation and glycosaminoglycans (GAG) secretion in vitro were studied. Fibroblasts lines cultured from normal skin (HSF) were compared with those from lesional (
PSA
) and non-lesional (PSB) psoriatic skin. In general, the retinoids inhibited proliferation; the action was cytostatic, in rank order tretinoin greater than isotretinoin greater than etretin greater than arotinoid. The psoriatic cells tended to be more sensitive than the HSF lines, overall mean proliferation values (+/- SEM), as a percentage of untreated controls being: HSF 72 ++- 3,
PSA
61 +/- 3 and PSB 54 +/- 3. Stimulation of GAG secretion at low concentrations (10(-7) M) of all four retinoids, declined as concentrations increased, and secretion was inhibited at 10(-4)M in PSB fibroblasts. Calculation of effects on GAG secretion due to changes in cell density confirmed the rank order for direct stimulation of secretion as arotinoid greater than etretin greater than isotretinoin greater than tretinoin. Electrophoresis of [3H]-labelled glycosaminoglycans secreted in the presence of 10(-7) M arotinoid showed that it was predominantly hyaluronic acid, as in untreated cells. These data confirm that different retinoids have contrasting levels of effects on mesenchymal cells and suggest a greater sensitivity to drugs in fibroblasts from psoriatic skin.
...
PMID:Proliferation and glycosaminoglycans secretion in fibroblasts from psoriatic skin: differential responses to retinoids. 296 63
Active metabolites of vitamin A and D are well known to act as growth inhibitors in hormone-related prostate and breast cancers. When various concentrations of 1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (vitamin D3),
all-trans
-retinoic acid (ATRA) and 9-cis retinoic acid (9-cis RA) were examined, the androgen-stimulated growth of mouse mammary carcinoma SC-3 cells was inhibited by vitamin D3 alone in a dose-dependent manner. A flow cytometer analysis showed that vitamin D3 leads SC-3 cells to relative G1-growth arrest after 72 h. Characterization of vitamin D3-responsive genes using an oligonucleotide microarray demonstrated that 220 genes were upregulated at more than threefold, and 84 genes were downregulated to less than one-third, compared with the testosterone-stimulated SC-3 cells. Neither cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs) nor the antiapoptotic bcl-2 gene were induced in vitamin D3-responsive genes, with the exception of a slight induction of p15(INK4B). Importantly, fgf8 was markedly repressed in response to vitamin D3. The exogenous addition of FGF8 canceled the growth suppression by vitamin D3 in SC-3 cells, suggesting that the repression of fgf8 is an indispensable step in vitamin D3-mediated growth inhibition. In reporter assays using the ARE-containing artificial construct and the natural androgen-regulated
PSA
promoter, co-transfection of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) and androgen receptor (AR) suppressed AR-stimulated promoter activity. In addition, vitamin D3 also suppressed androgen-stimulated promoter activity in the stably transfected SC-3 cells. Moreover, VDR repressed the core promoter activity of fgf8 in COS1 cells and in the SC-3 cells. All these findings strongly suggest that vitamin D3 serves as a negative regulator for both androgen-related and fgf8 transcriptions.
...
PMID:Vitamin D3 suppresses the androgen-stimulated growth of mouse mammary carcinoma SC-3 cells by transcriptional repression of fibroblast growth factor 8. 1650 48
Fucoxanthin is one of the most abundant carotenoids and possesses a number of beneficial medicinal qualities which include its anti-oxidant, anti-obesity and anti-cancer properties. In this study, the photostability of fucoxanthin in extracts with different chemical profiles was studied. The extracts were obtained from Undaria pinnatifida, a seaweed rich in this carotenoid, using conventional liquid solvent extraction procedures and the QuEChERS method. All the extracts contained
all-trans
-fucoxanthin as the major compound. Conventional procedures produced a fucoxanthin purity of lower than 50%, whereas after liquid-liquid partition,
PSA
cleanup, and
PSA
and GCB cleanup (QuEChERS method) fucoxanthin purity increased to 70%, 86%, and 94%, respectively. Although in the acetone extract the initial content of fucoxanthin was the highest, results demonstrate that coextractives play an important role in enhancing the rate of photodegradation. After light exposure, the conventional extracts lost around 90% of the initial fucoxanthin content. On the other hand, the extracts obtained by the QuEChERS method showed significantly higher light stability than the conventional extracts. These results suggest that the QuEChERS method could be used and further improved to obtain more purified and stable extracts for fucoxanthin from U. pinnatifida.
...
PMID:Fucoxanthin from Undaria pinnatifida: photostability and coextractive effects. 2376 30