8 results on '"Weisenberg, L. S."'
Search Results
2. Neuroendocrine Changes in Female Rats Born from Streptozotocin-Diabetic Mothers.
- Author
-
Foglia, V. G., Heller, C. L., Bec�-Villalobos, D., Weisenberg, L. S., Lacau de Mengido, I. M., Piroli, G., Libertun, C., and De Nicola, A. F.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Subcellular distribution of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate-binding protein and estrogen receptors in control pituitaries and estrogen-induced pituitary tumors.
- Author
-
Piroli G, Weisenberg LS, Grillo C, and De Nicola AF
- Subjects
- 1-Methyl-3-isobutylxanthine pharmacology, Animals, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Cell Nucleus metabolism, Chromatography, DEAE-Cellulose, Cytosol metabolism, Female, Ovariectomy, Pituitary Gland, Anterior drug effects, Pituitary Neoplasms chemically induced, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Rats, Inbred Strains, Receptors, Cyclic AMP metabolism, Receptors, Estradiol metabolism, Carrier Proteins drug effects, Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein, Estrogens pharmacology, Pituitary Gland, Anterior metabolism, Pituitary Neoplasms metabolism, Receptors, Cyclic AMP drug effects, Receptors, Estradiol drug effects
- Abstract
Binding of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) and steroid receptors was studied in cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions of pituitaries from castrated rats, in rats subjected to acute (60 min) or short-term (4 days) estradiol (E2) treatment, and in diethylstilbestrol-induced pituitary tumors (DES-T). E2 receptors were primarily in nuclear extracts in all animals that were given estrogens, whereas cytosolic receptors were low to absent. Contrarily, castrated rats showed high quantities of cytoplasmic receptor but little in nuclear sites. The progestin receptor was induced only in 4-day E2-treated rats and in DES-T. cAMP binding was stimulated in cytosol from 4-day E2-treated rats and in DES-T, but a significant reduction in binding was also noted in nuclear extracts from DES-T. Scatchard analysis for the cytosolic cAMP-binding activity demonstrated a two-component system, and the increased cAMP binding obtained in DES-T seemed to be caused by an increase in the low-affinity, high-capacity binder [regulatory type II (RII) subunit of protein kinase]. Suggestion of the preferential estrogenic induction of RII was also obtained by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, which provided separation of RI and RII subunits. The results suggest that sustained estrogenization leads to induction of cytosolic cAMP-binding protein and increased levels of nuclear E2 receptor. In DES-T, this effect resulted in an inverse subcellular distribution of both binding proteins, which may be related to abnormal growth of the pituitary, as has been postulated for hormone-dependent mammary tumors.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Binding of steroids in nuclear extracts and cytosol of rat pituitary and estrogen-induced pituitary tumors.
- Author
-
Weisenberg LS, Piroli G, Heller CL, and De Nicola AF
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Nucleus analysis, Corticosterone metabolism, Cytosol analysis, Dexamethasone metabolism, Estradiol metabolism, Kinetics, Male, Pituitary Neoplasms chemically induced, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Estrogens pharmacology, Pituitary Gland analysis, Pituitary Neoplasms analysis, Receptors, Steroid analysis
- Abstract
We have determined binding sites for estrogen, progestin, androgen and glucocorticoid in anterior pituitaries from Sprague-Dawley rats, a strain with low estrogen sensitivity, and in diethylstilbestrol-induced pituitary tumors in Fischer 344 rats, a strain with high estrogen sensitivity. Binding sites differ in their quantity and subcellular distribution. Cytosolic sites for [3H]estradiol in normal pituitaries from untreated rats were high prevailing over sites for other hormones, but they were depleted in the tumors due to their retention in nuclei under the influence of estrogen. Unoccupied nuclear sites for estrogen in normal glands also prevailed over sites for other steroids, and were similar to those in tumors. Second, the progestin site labeled with [3H]R 5020 was concentrated 5.7-fold in cytosol and 8.5-fold in nuclei of the tumors over the values found in glands from normal males estrogenized for 3 days. Third, glucocorticoid receptors labeled with [3H]dexamethasone were predominantly cytosolic in normal glands, but very low in cytosol and more evident in nuclear extracts from the tumors, the reverse of the profile found in normal pituitaries. Last, limited and comparable amounts of androgen receptors were measured in the subcellular fractions of both tissues. It is suggested that the subcellular distribution of some steroid receptors may be controlled in part by the cell population of the tissue and its degree of genetic activity.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Steps of glucocorticoid action in normal and diabetic rat placenta.
- Author
-
Heller CL, Weisenberg LS, Ortí E, and De Nicola AF
- Subjects
- Animals, Corticosterone analogs & derivatives, Corticosterone metabolism, Dexamethasone pharmacology, Female, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Receptors, Glucocorticoid metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental metabolism, Glucocorticoids pharmacology, Pregnancy in Diabetics metabolism
- Abstract
This investigation examined the effects of Streptozotocin diabetes in pregnancy on several parameters of glucocorticoid action in the rat placenta. Pregnant diabetic rats showed reduced body weight, increased adrenal weight and serum corticosterone concentrations. Glucocorticoid receptors in placental cytosol of labyrinthine zone, measured in the absence of MoO4Na2 were similar in control and diabetic rats, but after addition of MoO4Na2 receptor number were moderately, but significantly reduced in diabetic placentas (P less than 0.01). No changes in affinity were detected in saturation analysis. Furthermore, transformation of the receptor assessed by its capacity for binding to DNA-cellulose, was enhanced in diabetic animals, suggesting increased efficiency of the receptor-bound hormone. Since the function of the glucocorticoid receptor of rat placenta may be the inhibition of local progesterone production (Heller and De Nicola, J. steroid Biochem. 19 (1983) 1339-1343), we determined progesterone synthesis in vitro and found that diabetic placentas synthesized significantly less progesterone than control tissue (P less than 0.05). Lastly, we found that the metabolism of corticosterone to 11-dehydrocorticosterone, while declining in control placentas as pregnancy advanced, it was sustained in diabetic pregnancy. It is suggested that diabetic rat placentas showed increased activity towards the glucocorticoid receptor, resulting in reduction in progesterone synthesis and sustained catabolism of corticosterone. The latter may possibly constitute a compensatory mechanism to protect the fetal compartment from high levels of maternal glucocorticoids.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Effect of median eminence lesions on [3H]estradiol binding in the anterior pituitary and hypothalamus.
- Author
-
Weisenberg LS, De Nicola AF, Arakelian MC, and Libertun C
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain metabolism, Cytosol metabolism, Female, Kinetics, Organ Specificity, Protein Biosynthesis, Rats, Estradiol metabolism, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System physiology, Hypothalamus metabolism, Median Eminence physiology, Pituitary Gland, Anterior metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Effects of bromocriptine on [3H]estradiol binding in cytosol of anterior pituitary.
- Author
-
De Nicola AF, Weisenberg LS, Arakelian MC, and Libertun C
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytosol metabolism, Female, Kinetics, Pituitary Gland, Anterior drug effects, Rats, Receptors, Estrogen drug effects, Tritium, Bromocriptine pharmacology, Estradiol metabolism, Pituitary Gland, Anterior metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism
- Abstract
The hypothalamus may control hormone receptors in the anterior pituitary either by a direct trophic effect or indirectly by regulation of serum pituitary hormone levels. Rats whose medial basal hypothalamus had been destroyed in order to suppress neural control of the gland showed a reduction in [3H]estradiol binding in the anterior pituitary and high serum PRL levels; both changes were reversed by treatment of the lesioned rats with daily injections of bromocriptine, a dopamine agonist. In nonlesioned animals, the same treatment did not modify significantly those parameters. In another hyperprolactinemic model (rats with anterior pituitaries transplanted under the kidney capsule), [3H]estradiol binding by the in situ pituitaries of the host rats was similar to that in the nongrafted controls. These results suggest that changes due to median eminence lesion are reversible and that bromocriptine is able to act as a substitutive therapy which restores binding of estradiol in glands whose receptors have been decreased by the effect of the lesion. High PRL levels due to pituitary transplant do not account for the observed changes in the pituitary estradiol binding.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Hormonal effects on unoccupied estrogen receptors in nuclei of anterior pituitary glands.
- Author
-
Weisenberg LS, Ortí E, Piroli G, Libertun C, and De Nicola AF
- Subjects
- Adrenalectomy, Animals, Female, Ovariectomy, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Receptors, Estradiol metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism, Receptors, Progesterone metabolism, Estradiol pharmacology, Pituitary Gland, Anterior metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen drug effects, Tamoxifen pharmacology
- Abstract
Free nuclear receptors were measured in anterior pituitaries from ovariectomized-adrenalectomized rats after extraction of purified nuclei with 0.4 M KC1 and incubation of the extract with 2.5 nM (3H)-estradiol (E2) during 1.5 h at 0-4 degrees C. High affinity, low capacity binding was present in untreated rats; receptor concentration doubled after E2 was given for 4 days, whereas acute (60 min) treatment was without effect. Prolonged exposure to diethylstilbestrol (3 months) down-regulated free as well as total nuclear receptors. Tamoxifen increased free nuclear receptors, induced the progestin receptor in cytosol, and inhibited E2-stimulated serum prolactin but not E2 stimulation of free nuclear receptors. Progesterone and testosterone had no effect on basal or E2-stimulated free nuclear sites, whereas dexamethasone reduced the former but not the latter. Furthermore, from 33 to 36% of free nuclear receptors bound to (3H)-E2, were retained in DNA-cellulose columns whether incubation with ligand was performed at low (0-4 degrees C) or high temperature (25 degrees C); DNA-cellulose binding was unchanged after short E2 but increased after 4 days of E2. These data suggest ligand as well as antiestrogen and corticoid regulation of free nuclear receptors for E2 in anterior pituitary. Free nuclear sites may be a fraction of total cell receptors which are in the transformed state and which bind more tightly to nuclei in vivo, as indicated by the results of DNA-cellulose binding in vitro.
- Published
- 1986
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.