18 results on '"Kwang-Ho Pyun"'
Search Results
2. Acori graminei rhizomaAmeliorated Ibotenic Acid-Induced Amnesia in Rats
- Author
-
Kwang Ho Pyun, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Ji Hyun Kim, Hyejung Lee, and Insop Shim
- Subjects
business.industry ,Morris water navigation task ,Hippocampus ,Amnesia ,lcsh:Other systems of medicine ,Water maze ,Pharmacology ,lcsh:RZ201-999 ,central cholinergic system ,Choline acetyltransferase ,Lesion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Cholinergic ,Original Articles - Basic Science ,neuroprotection ,learning and memory ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Acori graminei rhizome ,Ibotenic acid - Abstract
In the present study, we investigated the effects ofAcori graminei rhizoma(AGR) on learning and memory for the Morris water maze task and on the central cholinergic system of the rats with excitotoxic medial septum (MS) lesion. On the water maze test, the rats were trained to find a platform that was in a fixed position during 6 days and then they received a 60 s probe trial in which the platform was removed from the pool on the 7th day. Ibotenic lesioning of the MS impaired the performance on the maze test and it caused degeneration of choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholine esterase in the hippocampus, which are markers of the central cholinergic system. Daily administrations of AGR (100 mg kg−1, i.p.) for 21 consecutive days produced reversals of the ibotenic acid-induced deficit in learning and memory. These treatments also reduced the loss of cholinergic immunoreactivity in the hippocampus that was induced by ibotenic acid. These results demonstrated that AGR ameliorated learning and memory deficits through their effects on the central nervous system, and neuroprotection was partly evaluated through the effect of AGR on the cholinergic system. Our studies suggest that AGR can possibly be used as treatment for Alzheimer's disease.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Inhibitory Effects of Coptidis rhizoma and Berberine on Cocaine-Induced Sensitization
- Author
-
Insop Shim, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Bombi Lee, Hyejung Lee, Chae Ha Yang, and Eun Sang Choe
- Subjects
Central nervous system ,cocaine ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Berberine ,Dopamine ,tyrosine hydroxylase ,berberine ,medicine ,Premovement neuronal activity ,Sensitization ,Tyrosine hydroxylase ,business.industry ,Dopaminergic ,lcsh:Other systems of medicine ,lcsh:RZ201-999 ,Ventral tegmental area ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,chemistry ,Original Articles – Basic Science ,ventral tegmental area ,business ,Coptidis rhizome ,locomotor activity ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Substantial evidence suggests that the behavioral and reinforcing effects of cocaine can be mediated by the central dopaminergic systems. Repeated injections of cocaine produce an increase in locomotor activity and the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in the main dopaminergic areas. Protoberberine alkaloids affect neuronal functions.Coptidis rhizoma(CR) and its main compound, berberine (BER) reduced the dopamine content in the central nervous system. In order to investigate the effects of CR or BER on the repeated cocaine-induced neuronal and behavioral alterations, we examined the influence of CR or BER on the repeated cocaine-induced locomotor activity and the expression of TH in the brain by using immunohistochemistry. Male SD rats were given repeated injections of saline or cocaine hydrochloride (15 mg/kg, i.p. for 10 consecutive days) followed by one challenge injection on the 4th day after the last daily injection. Cocaine challenge (15 mg/kg, i.p) produced a larger increase in locomotor activity and expression of TH in the central dopaminergic areas. Pretreatment with CR (50, 100, 200 and 400 mg/kg, p.o.) and BER (200 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before the daily injections of cocaine significantly inhibited the cocaine-induced locomotor activity as well as TH expression in the central dopaminergic areas. Our data demonstrate that the inhibitory effects of CR and BER on the repeated cocaine-induced locomotor activity were closely associated with the reduction of dopamine biosynthesis and post-synaptic neuronal activity. These results suggest that CR and BER may be effective for inhibiting the behavioral effects of cocaine by possibly modulating the central dopaminergic system.
- Published
- 2009
4. Antidepressant Effects of Soyo-san on Immobilization Stress in Ovariectomized Female Rats
- Author
-
Hyun Jung Park, Yoon-Sang Kim, Jin Kyung Oh, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Insop Shim, and Eun-Mee Lim
- Subjects
Restraint, Physical ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aché ,Ovariectomy ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Morris water navigation task ,Anxiety ,Choline O-Acetyltransferase ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Corticosterone ,Internal medicine ,Animals ,Medicine ,Hippocampus (mythology) ,Maze Learning ,Neurons ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Immunohistochemistry ,Acetylcholinesterase ,Choline acetyltransferase ,Antidepressive Agents ,language.human_language ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,language ,Ovariectomized rat ,Antidepressant ,Female ,business ,Stress, Psychological ,Drugs, Chinese Herbal - Abstract
Soyo-san is a traditional oriental medicinal formula, a mixture of 9 crude drugs, and it has been clinically used for treating mild depressive disorders. The purpose of the study was to examine the effect of Soyo-san on repeated stress-induced alterations of learning and memory on a Morris water maze (MWM) task and also the anxiety-related behavior on the elevated pulse maze (EPM) in ovariectomized female rats. We assessed the changes in the reactivity of the cholinergic system by measuring the immunoreactive neurons of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and reactivity of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the hippocampus, and the serum levels of corticosterone were assessed after behavioral testing. The female rats were randomly divided into three groups: the nonoperated and nonstressed group (normal), the ovariectomized and stressed group (control), and the ovariectomized, stressed and Soyo-san treated group (SOY). The rats were exposed to immobilization stress (IMO) for 14 d (2 h/d), and Soyo-san (400 mg/kg, i.p.) was administered 30 min before IMO stress. Treatments with SOY caused significant reversals of the stress-induced deficits in learning and memory on a spatial memory task, and it also produced an anxiolytic-like effect on the EPM, and increased the ChAT and AChE reactivities (p
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Acupuncture at GV01 Relieves Somatic Pain Referred by Colitis in Rats
- Author
-
Younbyoung Chae, Insop Shim, Hee Young Kim, Hyejung Lee, Kyungeh An, Dae-Hyun Hahm, and Kwang-Ho Pyun
- Subjects
Male ,Pain Threshold ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Bioinformatics ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Random Allocation ,Somatic pain ,Acupuncture ,Animals ,Periaqueductal Gray ,Medicine ,Colitis ,Endogenous opioid ,Neurons ,Referred pain ,Naloxone ,business.industry ,Therapeutic effect ,Experimental colitis ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Rats ,Nociception ,Trinitrobenzenesulfonic Acid ,Anesthesia ,Pain, Referred ,business ,Acupuncture Points ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos - Abstract
The present study aimed to expand our previous findings regarding the therapeutic effects and underlying mechanisms of acupuncture at GV01 in colitis. Our results showed that acupuncture at GV01 has antinociceptive effects on referred somatic pain induced by experimental colitis, and that endogenous opioid pathways may mediate these effects.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Anti-allodynic effect of bee venom on neuropathic pain in the rat
- Author
-
Seung-Moo Han, Insop Shim, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Bae Hwan Lee, Sung-Keel Kang, Hyejung Lee, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Hye-Jeong Hwang, Younbyoung Chae, and Young-Kook Choi
- Subjects
business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Intraperitoneal injection ,Zusanli ,Nerve injury ,complex mixtures ,Allodynia ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Anesthesia ,Peripheral nerve injury ,Neuropathic pain ,Acupuncture ,medicine ,Morphine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Neuropathic pain syndromes resulted from peripheral nerve injury appear to be resistant to conventional analgesics like opioids. However, it has been demonstrated that acupuncture including aqua-acupuncture may be effective in managing neuropathic pain. The present study was conducted to determine if bee venom injection into acupoint ihibits neuropathic pain, which is difficult to be treated by usual analgesics. Under pentobarbital anesthesia, male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to neuropathic surgery. Two weeks after nerve injury, mechanical and cold allodynia were tested in order to evaluate the antiallodynic effects of bee venom injection into an acupoint. Intraperitoneal injection of morphine inhibited mechanical allodynia dose-dependently. Bee venom injected into Zusanli acupoint significantly inhibited mechanical and cold allodynia. These results suggest that bee venom-acupuncture as well as morphine is very effective to inhibit mechanical allodynia.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Nelumbinis Semen reverses a decrease in hippocampal 5-HT release induced by chronic mild stress in rats
- Author
-
Insop Shim, Moonkyu Kang, Choon-Gon Jang, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Hyunsu Bae, and Hyun-Taek Kim
- Subjects
Male ,Serotonin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Microdialysis ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Hippocampus ,Serotonergic ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Internal medicine ,Animals ,Medicine ,5-HT receptor ,Medicine, East Asian Traditional ,Pharmacology ,Fluoxetine ,Plants, Medicinal ,business.industry ,Hypericum perforatum ,Antidepressive Agents ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Endocrinology ,Chronic Disease ,Antidepressant ,Plant Preparations ,business ,Stress, Psychological ,Drugs, Chinese Herbal ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Depression is associated with a dysfunctional serotonin system. Recently, several lines of evidence have suggested that a very important evoking factor in depression may be a serotonin deficit in the hippocampus. This study assessed the antidepression effects of Nelumbinis Semen (NS) through increasing serotonin concentrations under normal conditions and reversing a decrease in serotonin concentrations in rat hippocampus with depression-like symptoms induced by chronic mild stress (CMS). Using an in-vivo microdialysis technique, the serotonin-enhancing effect of NS on rat hippocampus was investigated and its effects compared with those of two well-known antidepressants, Hypericum perforatum (St John's wort) and fluoxetine (Prozac). Rats were divided into five groups: saline-treated normal, without CMS; saline-treated stress control; NS-, St John's wort- and fluoxetine-treated rats under CMS for 8 weeks or no stress treatment. NS and fluoxetine significantly increased serotonin in normal conditions and reversed a CMS-induced decrease in serotonin release in the hippocampus (P< 0.05 compared with normal group or control group under CMS). These results suggest that NS increases the serotonin levels normally decreased in depression, resulting in an enhancement of central serotonergic transmission and possible therapeutic action in depression. It is suggested that NS may present an antidepressant effect through enhancement of serotonin.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Anti-inflammatory effects ofStephania tetrandraS. Moore on interleukin-6 production and experimental inflammatory disease models
- Author
-
ChulSung, Lee, Jung Joon Lee, Hyung Sik Kang, In Pyo Choi, Young Ho Kim, and Kwang Ho Pyun
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,Immunology ,Arthritis ,CCL4 ,Inflammation ,Pharmacology ,Anti-inflammatory ,Stephania tetrandra ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,In vivo ,lcsh:Pathology ,medicine ,Interleukin 6 ,biology ,Superoxide ,business.industry ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Research Article ,lcsh:RB1-214 - Abstract
Deregulation of interleukin-6 (IL-6) expression caused the synthesis and release of many inflammatory mediators. It is involved in chronic inflammation, autoimmune diseases, and malignancy.Stephania tetrandraS. Moore is a Chinese medicinal herb which has been used traditionary as a remedy for neuralgia and arthritis in China. To investigate the anti-inflammatory effects ofS. tetrandraS. Moorein vitroandin vivo, its effects on the production of IL-6 and inflammatory mediators were analysed. When human monocytes/macrophages stimulated with silica were treated with 0.1–10 μg/mlS. tetrandaS. Moore, the production of IL-6 was inhibited up to 50%. At these concentrations, it had no cytotoxicity effect on these cells. It also suppressed the production of IL-6 by alveolar macrophages stimulated with silica. In addition, it inhibited the release of superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide from human monocytes/macrophages. To assess the anti-fibrosis effects ofS. tetrandraS. Moore, its effects onin vivoexperimental inflammatory models were evaluated. In the experimental silicosis model, IL-6 activities in the sera and in the culture supernatants of pulmonary fibroblasts were also inhibited by it.In vitroandin vivotreatment ofS. tetrandraS. Moore reduced collagen production by rat lung fibroblasts and lung tissue. Also,S. tetrandraS. Moore reduced the levels of serum GOT and GPT in the rat cirrhosis model induced by CCL4, and it was effective in reducing hepatic fibrosis and nodular formation. Taken together, these data indicate that it has a potent anti-inflammatory and antifibrosis effect by reducing IL-6 production.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Studies on the role of interleukin-4 and Fc epsilon RII in the pathogenesis of minimal change nephrotic syndrome
- Author
-
Byoung Soo Cho, Kwang Ho Pyun, and Choong Eun Lee
- Subjects
medicine.medical_treatment ,Nephrosis ,Immunoglobulin E ,Pathogenesis ,medicine ,Humans ,Receptor ,Child ,Interleukin 4 ,B-Lymphocytes ,biology ,business.industry ,Receptors, IgE ,Nephrosis, Lipoid ,CD23 ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cytokine ,Solubility ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Interleukin-4 ,Antibody ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Childhood minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) has often been associated with allergic symptoms such as urticaria, bronchial asthma, atopic dermatitis, allergic rhinitis and elevated IgE levels and referred to involve immune dysfunction. Fc epsilon RII is known to be involved in IgE production and response. Interleukin-4 is being recognized as a major cytokine up-regulating IgE production. Hence the present study is aimed at investigating the role of interleukin-4 and Fc epsilon RII in the pathogenesis of MCNS. IgE was measured by ELISA. Fc epsilon RII was analyzed by fluorescence activated cell scanner (FAC-scan) by double antibody staining with anti Leu16-FITC and anti Leu20-PE. Soluble IgE receptor was measured by ELISA using anti CD23 antibody (3-5-14). Interleukin-4 activities were measured by CD23 expression on purified human tonsillar B cells. Serum IgE levels were significantly higher in MCNS (1,507 +/- 680 IU/dl) than in normal controls (123 +/- 99.2 IU/dl). A significantly higher expression of membrane Fc epsilon RII was noted for MCNS (41 +/- 12%) than that in normal controls (18 +/- 6.2%) (p < 0.001). Soluble CD23 levels were also significantly higher in MCNS (198 +/- 39.3%) than in normal controls (153 +/- 13.4) (p < 0.01). Interleukin-4 activity in sera of MCNS (12U/ml) was also significantly higher than normal controls (4.5U/ml). These results indicate that increased production of Fc epsilon RII and interleukin-4 may play an important role in the pathogenesis of MCNS.
- Published
- 1992
10. Neuroprotective effect of palmul-chongmyeong-tang on ischemia-induced learning and memory deficits in the rat
- Author
-
Seung-Moo Han, Hyejung Lee, Insop Shim, Sung-Keel Kang, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Young-ju Yun, and Bombi Lee
- Subjects
Male ,Ischemia ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Hippocampus ,Morris water navigation task ,Water maze ,Pharmacology ,Neuroprotection ,Brain Ischemia ,Choline O-Acetyltransferase ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Ginseng ,Medicine ,Animals ,Radix ,Maze Learning ,Neurons ,business.industry ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Neuroprotective Agents ,Anesthesia ,Acetylcholinesterase ,Cholinergic ,Amnesia ,business ,Drugs, Chinese Herbal ,Phytotherapy - Abstract
Ginseng Radix, Atractylodis Macrocephalae Rhizoma, Poria, Glycyrrhizae Radix, Angelicae Gigantis Radix, Ligusticum Rhizoma, Rehmanniae Radix, Paeoniae Radix, Acori Graminei Rhizoma, and Polygalae Radix have been widely used as herbal medicine against ischemia. In order to test the neuroprotective effect of a novel prescription, the present study examined the effects of Palmul-Chongmyeong-Tang (PMCMT) consisting of these ten herbs on learning and memory in the Morris water maze task and the central cholinergic system of rats with cerebral ischemia-induced neuronal and cognitive impairments. After middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) for 2 h, rats were administered with saline or PMCMT (200 mg/kg, p.o.) daily for 2 weeks, followed by their training to the tasks. In the water maze test, the animals were trained to find a platform in a fixed position during 6 d and then received a 60 s probe trial on the 7th day following removal of the platform from the pool. Rats with ischemic insults showed impaired learning and memory of the tasks and treatment with PMCMT produced a significant improvement in escape latency to find the platform in the Morris water maze. Consistent with behavioral data, treatment with PMCMT also reduced the loss of cholinergic immunoreactivity in the hippocampus induced by cerebral ischemia. These results demonstrated that PMCMT has a protective effect against ischemia-induced neuronal and cognitive impairments. The present study suggested that PMCMT might be useful in the treatment of vascular dementia.
- Published
- 2007
11. Effect of traditional acupuncture on proximal colonic motility in conscious dogs
- Author
-
Insop Shim, Hee Young Kim, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Tchi-Chou Nam, Dae-Hyun Hahm, and Hyejung Lee
- Subjects
Traditional acupuncture ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Consciousness ,business.industry ,Colon ,Therapeutic effect ,Acupuncture ,Electromyography ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Meridian (perimetry, visual field) ,Dogs ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Large intestine ,Proximal colon ,Female ,business ,Gastrointestinal Motility ,Colonic motility - Abstract
Acupoints on the Large Intestine Meridian and specific acupoints related with large intestine have been empirically used to treat large intestinal disease. However, the relationship between acupoints related with large intestine and their functions has not been investigated fully. We investigated whether large intestine-related acupoints affect colonic motility in conscious dogs implanted with electrodes at the proximal colon. Manual acupuncture was applied at the following acupoints: 7 main points on the Large Intestine Meridian (LI1, LI2, LI3, LI4, LI5, LI6, and LI11), ST25, BL25 or GV1. Acupuncture at the Large Intestine Meridian acupoints, ST25 and BL25 had no significant effects on the proximal colonic motility. However, acupuncture at GV1 depressed the proximal colonic motility by decreasing the total duration and the frequency of contractile states, which may contribute to the therapeutic effects of GV1. This study also revealed that there was no clear correlation between Large Intestine Meridian and the proximal colonic motility in conscious dogs.
- Published
- 2006
12. Skin on GV01 acupoint in colonic inflammatory states: tenderness and neurogenic inflammation
- Author
-
Young Jin Choi, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Insop Shim, Hyejung Lee, Hee Young Kim, and Boo-Yong Sohn
- Subjects
Inflammation ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurogenic inflammation ,Physiology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Colitis ,Gastroenterology ,Skin Diseases ,Surgery ,Rats ,Tenderness ,Sprague dawley ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Diarrhea ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hypersensitivity ,Animals ,medicine.symptom ,Neurogenic Inflammation ,business ,Acupuncture Points - Abstract
GV01 is one of the most effective acupoints to treat diarrhea in humans and animals. The present study showed that skin on the GV01 acupoint reveals tenderness and neurogenic inflammation in colonic inflammatory states, but not in normal healthy states.
- Published
- 2006
13. Acupuncture reduces alcohol withdrawal syndrome and c-Fos expression in rat brain
- Author
-
Chae Ha Yang, Kwang Joong Kim, Young Kyu Kwon, Insop Shim, Ji Hyun Kim, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Hyejung Lee, Kwang-Ho Pyun, and Jin Yong Chung
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Alcohol abuse ,Striatum ,Zusanli ,Nucleus accumbens ,c-Fos ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Acupuncture ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,biology ,Behavior, Animal ,Ethanol ,business.industry ,fungi ,Brain ,Central Nervous System Depressants ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Rats ,Substance Withdrawal Syndrome ,Endocrinology ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Anesthesia ,Alcohol withdrawal syndrome ,biology.protein ,business ,Acupuncture Points ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Acupuncture as a therapeutic intervention is widely practiced in the treatment of many functional disorders including alcohol abuse. In the present study, the effects of acupuncture on alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) and Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI) in the striatum and the nucleus accumbens (NAC) of rats were investigated. During 3 days of cessation following chronic administration of ethanol (3 g/kg, i.p. for 3 weeks), rats showed a significant increase in AWS, such as hypermotility, tail rigidity, grooming and tremor, and an increase in FLI in the dopamine terminal areas of the brain. Treatment with acupuncture at zusanli (ST36) or sanyinjiao (SP6) during the withdrawal period inhibited both AWS and FLI of rats undergoing ethanol injection. These results suggest that acupuncture may be useful in the treatment of alcoholism by modulating post-synaptic neural activation in the striatum and NAC.
- Published
- 2005
14. Effects of acupuncture at GV01 on experimentally induced colitis in rats: possible involvement of the opioid system
- Author
-
Hyejung Lee, Lee Seung Ki, Kwang-Ho Pyun, Dae-Hyun Hahm, Insop Shim, Hee Young Kim, and Tchi-Chou Nam
- Subjects
Male ,Physiology ,Colon ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Narcotic Antagonists ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Inflammation ,(+)-Naloxone ,Pharmacology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,medicine ,Acupuncture ,Animals ,Colitis ,Endogenous opioid ,Peroxidase ,business.industry ,Naloxone ,Therapeutic effect ,General Medicine ,Opioid system ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Diarrhea ,Disease Models, Animal ,Trinitrobenzenesulfonic Acid ,Anesthesia ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Gastrointestinal Motility ,Acupuncture Points - Abstract
Oriental medicine uses acupuncture at the GV01 acupoint with great success to treat diarrhea. It significantly reduced the colonic motility and inflammation in colitic rats. Naloxone pretreatment blocked these effects. The therapeutic effects of acupuncture at GV01 in colitis may involve endogenous opioid pathways.
- Published
- 2005
15. Contents Vol. 75, 2002
- Author
-
Toshihiro Imaki, Yoko Kasagi, Michael P. Dashkevicz, Ping Yin, Ismail H. Zwain, Rupa M. Parmar, Armando Arroyo, Kensaku Sakae, Kengo Kawashima, Sun Mi Shin, James M. Schaeffer, Paula Amato, Anita C. Hansson, Inpyo Choi, Shiro Minami, Young Yang, Kun-yong Kim, Reiko Tokita, Tomoko Nakata, Hilary A. Wilkinson, Seung Hyun Han, Changmee Kim, Kwang Ho Pyun, Abba J. Kastin, Mathias Z. Strowski, Hyun Kim, Allan D. Blake, Samuel S.C. Yen, Martin Köhler, Jun Arita, Kjell Fuxe, and Victoria Akerstrom
- Subjects
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,Traditional medicine ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Control of Autoimmune Diabetes in NOD Mice by GAD Expression or Suppression in β Cells
- Author
-
Hee-Sook Jun, Chang Soon Yoon, Yup Kang, Hye Won Lim, Kwang Ho Pyun, Robert S. Sherwin, Qi Quan Huang, Ji-Won Yoon, and K. Hirasawa
- Subjects
endocrine system ,Type 1 diabetes ,medicine.medical_specialty ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,endocrine system diseases ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Transgene ,Glutamate decarboxylase ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Nod ,medicine.disease ,Islet ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Beta cell ,business ,NOD mice - Abstract
Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) is a pancreatic beta cell autoantigen in humans and nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. beta Cell-specific suppression of GAD expression in two lines of antisense GAD transgenic NOD mice prevented autoimmune diabetes, whereas persistent GAD expression in the beta cells in the other four lines of antisense GAD transgenic NOD mice resulted in diabetes, similar to that seen in transgene-negative NOD mice. Complete suppression of beta cell GAD expression blocked the generation of diabetogenic T cells and protected islet grafts from autoimmune injury. Thus, beta cell-specific GAD expression is required for the development of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice, and modulation of GAD might, therefore, have therapeutic value in type 1 diabetes.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Perinatal Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus
- Author
-
Ralph J. Wedgwood, Hans D. Ochs, Kwang Ho Pyun, and Max T. W. Dufford
- Subjects
business.industry ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,Breast milk ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Virus ,Serology ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,In utero ,Immunopathology ,Immunology ,medicine ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
INFANTS born to mothers infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are at risk for exposure to HIV in utero, during delivery, and after birth in breast milk or through other close contact...
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Perinatal Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus
- Author
-
Hans D. Ochs, Kwang Ho Pyun, Max T. W. Dufford, and Ralph J. Wedgwood
- Subjects
business.industry ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,virus diseases ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,Breast milk ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology ,Specific antibody ,Perinatal infection ,In utero ,Medicine ,business ,Close contact - Abstract
INFANTS born to mothers infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are at risk for exposure to HIV in utero, during delivery, and after birth in breast milk or through other close contact...
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.