79 results on '"Dannies, Priscilla S."'
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2. Peptide Hormones, Regulated Secretion
3. Peptide Hormones, Segregation Mechanism
4. Protein folding and deficiencies caused by dominant-negative mutants of hormones
5. The 3-Acetylpyridine Model of Parkinsonism: Use of Cytochrome Oxidase Gene Expression as an Index of Alterations in Basal Ganglia Function
6. Prolactin
7. Control of Prolactin Production by Estrogen
8. ESTROGEN EFFECTS ON PROLACTIN STORAGE AND CELL GROWTH IN GH CELLS
9. Mechanisms of Regulation of Prolactin Release
10. Prolactin and Growth Hormone Aggregates in Secretory Granules: The Need to Understand the Structure of the Aggregate
11. Anti-tumor effects of adenovirus containing human growth hormone sequences in a mouse model of human ovarian cancer
12. Aggregation and Lack of Secretion of Most Newly Synthesized Proinsulin in Non-β-Cell Lines
13. Is There Structural Specificity in the Reversible Protein Aggregates That Are Stored in Secretory Granules?
14. The Tertiary Structure and Backbone Dynamics of Human Prolactin
15. Manipulating the Reversible Aggregation of Protein Hormones in Secretory Granules
16. Prolonged Retention after Aggregation into Secretory Granules of Human R183H-Growth Hormone (GH), a Mutant that Causes Autosomal Dominant GH Deficiency Type II
17. Mechanisms for storage of prolactin and growth hormone in secretory granules
18. Aggregation of Human Wild-Type and H27A-Prolactin in Cells and in Solution: Roles of Zn2+, Cu2+, and pH
19. Molecular and Cellular Basis of Isolated Dominant-Negative Growth Hormone Deficiency, IGHD Type II: Insights on the Secretory Pathway of Peptide Hormones
20. A serum prolactin-binding protein: implications for growth hormone
21. Misfolded growth hormone causes fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus and disrupts endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi traffic
22. Concentrating hormones into secretory granules: layers of control
23. Acquisition of Lubrol Insolubility, a Common Step for Growth Hormone and Prolactin in the Secretory Pathway of Neuroendocrine Cells
24. Accumulation of Synaptosomal-Associated Protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25) and Other Proteins Associated with the Secretory Pathway in GH4C1 Cells Upon Treatment with Estradiol, Insulin, and Epidermal Growth Factor*
25. Autosomal Dominant Growth Hormone (GH) Deficiency Type II: The Del32–71-GH Deletion Mutant Suppresses Secretion of Wild-Type GH1
26. Protein Hormone Storage in Secretory Granules: Mechanisms for Concentration and Sorting1
27. Cell Biology of Secretion
28. Stabilization of the Receptor Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase-Like Protein ICA512 in GH4C1Cells upon Treatment with Estradiol, Insulin, and Epidermal Growth Factor1
29. Editorial: A New Releasing Factor? with Biotechnology and a Little Bit of Luck
30. Inefficient Secretion of Human H27A-Prolactin, a Mutant That Does Not Bind Zn2+
31. Regulation of Parathyroid Hormone‐Related Peptide Gene Expression by Estrogen in GH4C1 Rat Pituitary Cells Has the Pattern of a Primary Response Gene
32. Rapid stimulation of rhodamine 123 efflux from multidrug-resistant KB cells by progesterone
33. Regulation of prolactin storage
34. Is a sorting signal necessary to package proteins into secretory granules?
35. Ca2+ channel agonists enhance thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced inositol phosphates and prolactin secretion
36. Prolactin and Insulin Are Targeted to the Regulated Pathway in GH4C1Cells, but Their Storage Is Differentially Regulated
37. Estradiol Decreases Retention of Rhodamine 123 Fluorescence in GH4C1Pituitary Tumor Cells
38. Comparison of the Regulation of Carboxypeptidase E and Prolactin in GH4C1 Cells, a Rat Pituitary Cell Line
39. Release and synthesis of prolactin by rat pituitary cell strains are regulated independently by thyrotropin-releasing hormone
40. Dopamine has no Effect on Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone Mobilization of Calcium from Intracellular Stores in Rat Anterior Pituitary Cells
41. Action of Cholera Toxin on Hormone Synthesis and Release in GH Cells: Evidence that Adenosine 3′,5′-Monophosphate Does Not Mediate the Decrease in Growth Hormone Synthesis Caused by Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone*
42. Dopamine Inhibits Prolactin Release when Cyclic Adenosine 3′,5′-Monophosphate Levels Are Elevated*
43. Stimulation of the Adenosine 3′,5′-Monophosphate and the Ca2+Messenger Systems Together Reverse Dopaminergic Inhibition of Prolactin Release*
44. Antiestrogens are partial estrogen agonists for prolactin production in primary pituitary cultures
45. 20K IS BOUND WITH HIGH AFFINITY BY ONE RAT AND ONE OF TWO RABBIT GROWTH HORMONE RECEPTORS
46. Molecular endocrinology, vol. 1
47. Hormonal Induction of a Heterogeneous Population of Storage Granules in GH4C1Pituitary Tumor Cells
48. Endocrine control of growth edited by William H. Daughaday, Elsevier, 1981. Dfl. 82.00 (xii + 275 pages) ISBN 0 444 00434 3
49. Unresponsiveness of GH cells to cyclo(histidyl-proline), a metabolite of thyrotropin releasing hormone
50. Estrogen Induces Accumulation of the Mitochondrial Ribonucleic Acid for Subunit II of Cytochrome Oxidase in Pituitary Tumor Cells
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