2 resultados para Adrenal Gland Diseases

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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The role of adrenal and thyroid hormones on the development of chief and parietal cells was studied in the rat. Administration of corticosterone or thyroxine in the first and second postnatal weeks resulted in the precocious appearance of pepsinogen in the oxyntic gland mucosa and an increase in basal acid output. When pups were adrenalectomized or made hypothyroid, both pepsinogen and basal acid secretion were lowed. Corticosterone injection increased pepsinogen content and acid secretion to levels higher than those of control in hypothyroid and adrenalectomized rats while thyroxine had no such effect in adrenalectomized rats. Morphologically, chief cells responded to corticosterone or thyroxine with increases in both zymogen granules and RER. Chief cells, however, contained less zymogen granules and RER in adrenalectomized and hypothyroid rats. Corticosterone was effective in restoring the normal morphological appearance of chief cells in the hypothyroid rats while thyroxine had no effect in the adrenalectomized rats. In response to corticosterone or thyroxine, parietal cells in normal animals appeared to contain more mitochondria, tubulovesicles and intracellular canaliculi than those of control. Unlike chief cells, parietal cells retained normal ultrastructure in the absence of adrenal and thyroid hormones. These data indicate that (1) corticosterone is necessary for the functional and morphological development of chief cells; (2) the morphological development of parietal cells does not appear to depend upon corticosterone, (3) the effect of thyroxine on the development of chief and parietal cells is due to corticosterone. ^

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Although more than 100 genes associated with inherited retinal disease have been mapped to chromosomal locations, less than half of these genes have been cloned. This text includes identification and evaluation of candidate genes for three autosomal dominant forms of inherited retinal degeneration: atypical vitelliform macular dystrophy (VMD1), cone-rod dystrophy (CORD), and retinitis pigmentosa (RP). ^ VMD1 is a disorder characterized by complete penetrance but extremely variable expressivity, and includes macular or peripheral retinal lesions and peripappilary abnormalitites. In 1984, linkage was reported between VMD1 and soluble glutamate-pyruvate transaminase GPT); however, placement of GPT to 8q24 on linkage maps had been debated, and VMD1 did not show linkage to microsatellite markers in that region. This study excluded linkage between the loci by cloning GPT, identifying the nucleotide substitution associated with the GPT sozymes, and by assaying VMD1 family samples with an RFLP designed to detect the substitution. In addition, linkage of VMD1 to the known dominant macular degeneration loci was excluded. ^ CORD is characterized by early onset of color-vision deficiency, and decreased visual acuity, However, this retinal degeneration progresses to no light perception, severe macular lesion, and “bone-spicule” accumulations in the peripheral retina. In this study, the disorder in a large Texan family was mapped to the CORD2 locus of 19q13, and a mutation in the retina/pineal-specific cone-rod homeobox gene (CRX) was identified as the disease cause. In addition, mutations in CRX were associated with significantly different retinal disease phenotypes, including retinitis pigmentosa and Leber congenital amaurosis. ^ Many of the mutations leading to inherited retinal disorders have been identified in genes like CRX, which are expressed predominantly in the retina and pineal gland. Therefore, a combination of database analysis and laboratory investigation was used to identify 26 novel retina/pineal-specific expressed sequence tag (EST) clusters as candidate genes for inherited retinal disorders. Eight of these genes were mapped into the candidate regions of inherited retinal degeneration loci. ^ Two of the eight clusters mapped into the retinitis pigmentosa RP13 candidate region of 17p13, and were both determined to represent a single gene that is highly expressed in photoreceptors. This gene, the Ah receptor-interacting like protein-1 (AIPL1), was cloned, characterized, and screened for mutations in RP13 patient DNA samples. ^