35 resultados para Equine pituitary extract


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One of the most important questions in arbovirology concerns the origin of epidemic Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) viruses; these viruses caused periodic, extensive epidemics/epizootics in the Americas from 1938-1973 (reaching the United States in 1971) but had recently been presumed extinct. We have documented the 1992 emergence of a new epidemic/epizootic VEE virus in Venezuela. Phylogenetic analysis of strains isolated during two outbreaks indicated that the new epidemic/epizootic virus(es) evolved recently from an enzootic VEE virus in northern South America. These results suggest continued emergence of epizootic VEE viruses; surveillance of enzootic viruses and routine vaccination of equines should therefore be resumed.

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It has been shown that the pituitary contains a cytotropic factor (CTF) that stimulates the secretion of catecholamines by dopaminergic neurons of the hypothalamus. In the present study, CTF was purified from rat pituitaries and found by means of mass spectrometric analysis to be adenosine. This finding was corroborated by the observations that CTF behaves identically to adenosine when subjected to liquid chromatography, is inactivated and converted to inosine by adenosine deaminase, and is qualitatively and quantitatively indistinguishable from adenosine in its biological activity. It is concluded that pituitary adenosine is a trophic factor for hypothalamic dopaminergic neurons.

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Acid extracts and a resultant fraction from solid-phase extraction (SPE) of Romalea guttata crop and midgut tissues induce sorghum (Sorghum bicolor var. Rio) coleoptile growth in 24-h incubations an average of 49% above untreated controls. When combined with plant auxin, indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), the SPE fraction shows a synergistic reaction, yielding increases in coleoptile growth that average 295% above untreated controls and 8% above IAA standards. The interaction lowered the point of maximum sensitivity of IAA 3 orders of magnitude, resulting in a new IAA physiological set point at 10(-7) g/ml. This synergism suggests that contents in animal regurgitants making their way into plant tissue during feeding may produce a positive feedback in plant growth and development following herbivory. Such a process, also known as reward feedback, may exert major controls on ecosystem-level relationships in nature.

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Despite a rapidly increasing acceptance for a role of ATP as an extracellular mediator in several biological systems, the present report shows that ATP may mediate physiological responses in pituitary cells. We have now been able to demonstrate a specific action of ATP receptors to mediate the release of luteinizing hormone from gonadotropes and have coupled them with further studies that clearly show that ATP can be exocytotically released from cultured rat pituitary cells. Both ATP and UTP (100 microM) caused a > 14-fold increase in the rate of luteinizing hormone release from superfused cells. Adenosine 5'-[alpha, beta-methylene]triphosphate and 5'-[beta,gamma-methylene triphosphate were ineffective, and 2-methylthio-ATP had only a modest stimulatory effect. Homologous and heterologous desensitization occurred with UTP and ATP, and these did not have additive effects. Thus, nucleotides can be effective stimulators of luteinizing hormone release through a single class of ATP receptor (P2U subtype). The calcium ionophore A23187 provoked release of a substantial amount of ATP from pituitary cells in a concentration- and Ca(2+)-dependent manner, which was desensitized by pretreatment with A23187. This implies a possible paracrine and/or autocrine mechanism by which nucleotides may exert their effects on pituitary cells. In conclusion, we have provided strong evidence for a novel role of extracellular nucleotides as mediators in pituitary--in particular, in gonadotrope--function.

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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.