51 results on '"D'Istria, M"'
Search Results
2. Evidence for the involvement of prothymosin alpha in the spermatogenesis of the frog Rana esculenta
- Author
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Ferrara D, Izzo G, Liguori L, d'Istria M, Minucci S., ANIELLO, FRANCESCO, Ferrara, D, Izzo, G, Liguori, L, D'Istria, M, Aniello, Francesco, and Minucci, S.
- Abstract
Prothymosin alpha (PTMA) is a small acidic protein abundantly and ubiquitously expressed in mammals and involved in different biological activities. Until now, its specific function in spermatogenesis has never been properly investigated. Recently, the isolation of a cDNA encoding for PTMA from the testis of the frog Rana esculenta has been reported: ptma transcript is highly expressed throughout the frog reproductive cycle, peaking in September/October, in concomitance with the germ cell maturation; it is specifically localized in the cytoplasm of primary and secondary spermatocytes and, at a lower level, in the interstitial compartment, in Leydig cells.In this article we support the involvement of PTMA in the meiotic phases of frog spermatogenesis. The expression of ptma mRNA increases in the testis of frogs treated with the antiandrogen cyproterone acetate, which blocks the II meiotic division and induces an increase in SPC cysts; on the contrary, it highly decreases in the testis of animals kept at 4 degrees C and treated with human corionic gonadotropin, in concomitance with the induced block of spermatogenesis and the disappearance of meiotic cells in the tubules. Furthermore, for the first time we have also evidenced by immunohistochemistry the expression of PTMA in the nuclei of secondary spermatocytes, spermatids, and spermatozoa, as well as in the cytoplasm of interstitial Leydig cells. Taken together our data suggest for an important role of PTMA in germ cell maturation and/or differentiation during R. esculenta spermatogenesis.
- Published
- 2009
3. Melatonin effects on the testicular activity in green frog, rana esculenta
- Author
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D'ISTRIA M, FUSCHINO A, MINUCCI, Sergio, PALMIERO C, RASTOGI RK, SERINO, Ismene, GOOS H.J.TH, RASTOGI R.K, VAUDRY H, PIERANTONI R, D'Istria, M, Fuschino, A, Minucci, Sergio, Palmiero, C, Rastogi, Rk, and Serino, Ismene
- Published
- 2001
4. When is depression simply sadness?
- Author
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MAJ, Mario, MONTELEONE P, D'ISTRIA M, SERINO, Ismene, MAJ M, CUOMO V., Maj, Mario, Monteleone, P, D'Istria, M, Serino, Ismene, Maj, M, and Cuomo, V.
- Subjects
Sadness ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Depressive Disorder ,Depression ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Terminology as Topic ,Humans ,Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 1995
5. (+)-N-allylnormetazocine enhances N-acetyltransferase activity and melatonin synthesis: preliminary evidence for a functional role of sigma receptors in the rat pineal gland
- Author
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Luca Steardo, Monteleone, P., D Istria, M., Serino, I., Maj, M., Cuomo, V., Steardo, L, Monteleone, P, D'Istria, M, Serino, Ismene, Maj, Mario, and Cuomo, V.
- Subjects
Male ,Arylamine N-Acetyltransferase ,Carbazoles ,DISCRIMINATIVE STIMULUS PROPERTIES ,BRAIN ,RIMCAZOLE ,Pineal Gland ,Rats ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Phenazocine ,Animals ,Receptors, sigma ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Melatonin - Abstract
In the present study, to evaluate the role that sigma receptors play in the physiology of the pineal gland, we assessed the effects of the sigma receptor ligand (+)-N-allylnormetazocine on the gland activity during either the day or the night. As compared to saline, (+)-N-allylnormetazocine enhanced the physiological increases in both pineal N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity and melatonin content at night, but it did not affect the biosynthetic activity of the gland during the day. Moreover, (+)-N-allylnormetazocine potentiated the enhancement of NAT activity and pineal melatonin content induced by isoproterenol administration during the day. The nocturnal stimulation of pineal NAT activity and melatonin levels by (+)-N-allylnormetazocine was prevented by pretreatment with rimcazole, a specific sigma receptor antagonist. These results demonstrate that sigma receptor activation by (+)-N-allylnormetazocine is not able, by itself, to stimulate pineal melatonin production, whereas it potentiates the biosynthetic activity of the pineal gland when this is stimulated noradrenergically.
- Published
- 1995
6. N-acetyltransferase activity and melatonin content in Rana esculenta Harderian gland
- Author
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d'Istria M, Monteleone P, SERINO, Ismene, D'Istria, M, Monteleone, P, and Serino, Ismene
- Published
- 1993
7. MALLORY STAIN MAY INDICATE DIFFERENTIAL RATES OF RNA-SYNTHESIS .1. A SEASONAL CYCLE IN THE HARDERIAN-GLAND OF THE GREEN FROG (RANA-ESCULENTA)
- Author
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CHIEFFI BACCARI Gabriella, MARMORINO C, MINUCCI S, DI MATTEO L, VARRIALE B, D'ISTRIA M, CHIEFFI Giovanni, Chieffi, Gabriella, Marmorino, C, Minucci, S, DI MATTEO, L, Varriale, B, D'Istria, M, and Chieffi, Giovanni
- Abstract
When Mallory's trichrome stain is used, acinar nuclei of the Harderian gland of Rana esculenta display different affinities for the dye. Some of the orangiophilic nuclei show affinity for aniline blue (blue nuclei). In the Harderian gland of Rana esculenta their number and the intensity of staining with aniline blue may vary during the year. The affinity for aniline blue disappears following digestion of paraffin sections with RNAase, but not with DNAase or trypsin. Furthermore, in vitro incubation with [5, 6-3H]-Uridine shows a selective incorporation by the majority of blue nuclei. Therefore, the affinity for aniline blue is likely due to increased RNA synthesis. The increment of nuclear RNA shown by these methods is supported by the quantitative determination of total RNAs during the resumption (October) and enhancement (May) of secretory activity, when the percentage of blue nuclei of the acinar cells is at its highest levels of the year. The affinity of RNA-rich nuclei for aniline blue, while others are strictly orangiophil, is discussed on the basis of molecular structure of the dyes used in the staining mixture. Mallory's trichrome stain appears to be an useful tool for detecting changes in cell nuclear status.
- Published
- 1992
8. The Harderian gland of amphibias and reptiles
- Author
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CHIEFFI, Gabriella, Chieffi Baccari G., DI MATTEO, Loredana, d’Istria M., Marmorino C., MINUCCI, Sergio, VARRIALE, Bruno, Chieffi, Gabriella, Chieffi Baccari, G., DI MATTEO, Loredana, D’Istria, M., Marmorino, C., Minucci, Sergio, and Varriale, Bruno
- Published
- 1992
9. MALLORY STAIN MAY INDICATE DIFFERENTIAL RATES OF RNA-SYNTHESIS .2. COMPARATIVE OBSERVATIONS IN VERTEBRATE NUCLEI
- Author
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CHIEFFI, Gabriella, Marmorino C., MINUCCI, Sergio, DI MATTEO, Loredana, d’Istria M., Chieffi, Gabriella, Marmorino, C., Minucci, Sergio, DI MATTEO, Loredana, and D’Istria, M.
- Abstract
The differential staining of nuclei by the use of the Mallory trichrome method was investigated in a variety of tissues of representative vertebrates. By this method nuclei stained orange or blue; erythrocyte nuclei stained red. Since the higher affinity for aniline blue is due to an increased RNA synthesis, it was possible to reveal not only the changing metabolic status of a cell type, as shown for instance in the liver parenchyma and other glandular tissues, and nervous tissue, but also in different cell populations in the same tissue, such as the spleen.
- Published
- 1992
10. Hormonal control of the Harderian gland of Rana esculenta
- Author
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CHIEFFI, Gabriella, Chieffi Baccari G., Di Matteo L., d’Istria M., Marmorino C., Minucci S., Varriale B., Chieffi, Gabriella, Chieffi Baccari, G., Di Matteo, L., D’Istria, M., Marmorino, C., Minucci, S., and Varriale, B.
- Published
- 1991
11. Prolactin receptor does not correlate with oestrogen and progesterone receptors in primary breast canecr and lacks prognostic significance. Ten year results of the Naples adjuvant (GUN) study
- Author
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DE PLACIDO S, PERRONE F, MARINELLI, Alessandra, PAGLIARULO C, CARLOMAGNO C, PETRELLA G, D'ISTRIA M, DELRIO G, BIANCO AR, GALLO, Ciro, DE PLACIDO, S, Gallo, Ciro, Perrone, F, Marinelli, Alessandra, Pagliarulo, C, Carlomagno, C, Petrella, G, D'Istria, M, Delrio, G, and Bianco, Ar
- Published
- 1990
12. Steroid hormone receptor levels and adjuvant tamoxifen in early breast cancer
- Author
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DE PLACIDO S, MARINELLI, Alessandra, PERRONE F, PAGLIARULO C, PETRELLA C, DELRIO G, D'ISTRIA M, DEL MASTRO L, BIANCO AR, GALLO, Ciro, DE PLACIDO, S, Gallo, Ciro, Marinelli, Alessandra, Perrone, F, Pagliarulo, C, Petrella, C, Delrio, G, D'Istria, M, DEL MASTRO, L, and Bianco, Ar
- Published
- 1990
13. Functional role of sigma opiate receptors: evidence from studies in the rat pineal gland
- Author
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Monteleone, Palmiero, Steardo, L, D'Istria, M, Serino, I, and Maj, M.
- Published
- 1995
14. Dopamine receptor blockade decreases nocturnal pineal activity in rats
- Author
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Monteleone, Palmiero, Steardo, L., Serino, I., Tortorella, A., D'Istria, M., and Maj, M.
- Published
- 1995
15. 2-[125]Iodomelatonin binding sites in the brain retina and Harderian gland of the green frog Rana esculenta
- Author
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Serino, I, Fuschino, A, Monteleone, Palmiero, and D'Istria, M.
- Published
- 1994
16. Melatonin circadian rhythms in Rana esculenta
- Author
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D'Istria, M, Monteleone, Palmiero, Serino, I, and Chieffi, G.
- Published
- 1992
17. Hormonal changes induced by Tamoxifen and cytotoxic chemotherapy in women with breast cancer
- Author
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Bianco AR, Citarella F, Contegiacomo A, Delrio G, De Placido S, D'Istria M, Iaffaioli V, Nunziata V, Pagliarulo C, Petrella G, Ricciardi I., FASANO, Silvia, Bianco, Ar, Citarella, F, Contegiacomo, A, Delrio, G, De Placido, S, D'Istria, M, Fasano, Silvia, Iaffaioli, V, Nunziata, V, Pagliarulo, C, Petrella, G, and Ricciardi, I.
- Published
- 1982
18. Profilo endocrino della scrofa durante il ciclo estrale
- Author
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Enne G, Perotti L, Delrio G, Genazzani AR, d'Istria M, Inaudi P, Caliendo F, Musarò MA, PIERANTONI, Riccardo, Enne, G, Perotti, L, Delrio, G, Genazzani, Ar, D'Istria, M, Inaudi, P, Pierantoni, Riccardo, Caliendo, F, and Musarò, Ma
- Published
- 1982
19. Endocrine profiles of sows during the oestrous cycle
- Author
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Enne, G., Perotti, L., Delrio, G., Inaudi, P., D Istria, M., Riccardo PIERANTONI, Citarella, F., Musaro, M. A., Monittola, C., Genazzani, A. R., Enne, G, Perotti, L, Delrio, G, Inaudi, P, D'Istria, M, Pierantoni, Riccardo, Citarella, F, Musaro, Ma, Monittola, C, and Genazzani, Ar
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Estradiol ,Swine ,Androstenedione ,Diestrus ,Luteinizing Hormone ,Estrus ,Pregnancy ,Hydroxyprogesterones ,Animals ,Female ,Testosterone ,Proestrus ,Gonadal Steroid Hormones ,Progesterone - Abstract
We measured the plasma concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH), oestradiol (E2), progesterone (P), 17 alpha-hydroxy progesterone (17P), androstenediona (A) and testosterone (T) at oestrus and during the oestrous cycle for four consecutive cycles in a group of 15 normal sows. The results show that at oestrus the peak LH value was preceded, 24 hours earlier, by an E2 peak, and indicate that the LH rise begins when E2 concentrations reach their highest value. During diestrus, concentrations of LH and E2 were constantly low, P and 17P were characterized by lowest concentrations during the oestrous period which showed significant (p less than 0.001), progressive increases from the second day after the LH ovulatory peak, to reach their highest values after 8-14 days. The 17P decrease in proestrus precedes that of P.T and A concentrations showed a significant (p less than 0.001) increase 2 days before the LH ovulatory peak; high plasma concentrations of both androgens were maintained until the LH peak occurred. Measurements taken in consecutive cycles in the same animals showed a high reproducibility of the hormone concentrations examined, which showed similar patterns and values in each of the cycles studied. This high reproducibility suggests that these hormones have an important physiological role and may affect oestrous behaviour.
- Published
- 1981
20. The harderian gland of the frog, Rana esculenta, during the annual cycle: histology, histochemistry and ultrastructure
- Author
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Di Matteo, L., Sergio MINUCCI, Chieffi Baccari, G., Pellicciari, C., D Istria, M., Chieffi, G., Di Matteo, L., Minucci, S., Chieffi, Gabriella, Pellicciari, C., D’Istria, M., and Chieffi, Giovanni
- Subjects
Male ,Periodicity ,Harderian Gland ,Lacrimal Apparatus ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Animals ,Proteins ,Rana esculenta ,Female ,DNA ,Seasons - Abstract
The Harderian gland in Rana esculenta has been studied during the annual cycle at the histological, histochemical and ultrastructural levels. The Harderian gland has an acinar structure and is the only orbital gland in anuran amphibia. It develops at the medial corner of the orbit from the conjunctival epithelium at the premetamorphic stage. In the adult the glandular secretion reaches a maximum during the months of July and August, drops in September and resumes slowly from October onwards. The secretion is seromucoid and the secretory granules are released into the acinar lumen, mainly by exocytosis. Porphyrins were not detected. No sexual dimorphism was observed in the glandular cells. The resumption of secretory activity in October and the enhancement of secretion in May are marked by the appearance of "blue nuclei" (Mallory stain) in a relatively high percentage of glandular cells. This unusual blue colour, using the Mallory stain (by which nuclei stain red), disappears after digestion of paraffin sections with RNAase, but not with DNAase and trypsin. The blue staining may, therefore, indicate an increased amount of nuclear RNA. The Harderian gland in the frog most probably serves to lubricate and moisten the eye in the absence of the lacrimal gland. However, the gland may also represent an immunoactive organ owing to the presence of numerous mast cells and plasma cells in the interacinar spaces.
- Published
- 1989
21. Identification and Bioshyntesis of Androgens in Non-Mammalian Vertebrates
- Author
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Delrio G, d'Istria M, FASANO, Silvia, PIERANTONI, Riccardo, B.Lofts and WN Holmes, Delrio, G, D'Istria, M, Pierantoni, Riccardo, and Fasano, Silvia
- Published
- 1985
22. Effect of adjuvant tamoxifen and CMF on endocrine function of patients with operable breast cancer
- Author
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Bianco, A. R., Placido, S., Pagliarulo, C., SILVIA FASANO, D Istria, M., Sio, L., Ricciardi, I., Delrio, G., Bianco, ANGELO RAFFAELE, DE PLACIDO, Sabino, Pagliarulo, Clorindo, S., Fasano, M., D'Istria, L., De Sio, I., Ricciardi, Delrio, Giovanni, Bianco, Ar, DE PLACIDO, S, Pagliarulo, C, Fasano, Silvia, D'Istria, M, DE SIO, L, Ricciardi, I, and Delrio, G.
- Subjects
Adult ,Tamoxifen ,Methotrexate ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,Menopause ,Middle Aged ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Cyclophosphamide ,Hormones - Abstract
The effect of adjuvant CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil) and tamoxifen (TM) on endocrine function was studied in 120 women with stage I-II operable breast cancer. Sixty patients were premenopausal, of whom 25 were treated with CMF for 9 months, 25 received CMF for 9 months + TM for 2 years, started concurrently, and 10 TM alone for 2 years. In all groups treatment was started within 4 weeks from mastectomy. Sixty patients were postmenopausal and they were all treated with TM alone for 2 years. Plasma levels of estrone + estradiol -17 beta (E1 + E2), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), prolactin (Prl), and testosterone (T) were determined in all patients before surgery and again at 3-month intervals from initiation of the adjuvant therapy. In ten patients of each treatment group FSH-LH and Prl-TSH release was determined following stimulation with releasing hormones. CMF and CMF + TM therapy resulted in amenorrhea in the majority of premenopausal patients with decrease of E1 + E2 and elevation of FSH-LH plasma concentration to levels of the post-menopausal. In premenopausal women treated with TM a marked increase of E1 + E2 was observed with unaltered FSH-LH plasma concentration. A significant fall of Prl was also present in these patients. In postmenopausal women and premenopausal patients with CMF-induced amenorrhea TM produced a marked fall of FSH-LH and a decrease of Prl plasma level. In no patients was plasma T affected by any of the treatment regimens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1985
23. Endocrine effects of adjuvant therapy of operable breast cancer
- Author
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Bianco AR, Citarella F, Contegiacomo A, Delrio G, De Placido S, D'Istria M, Iaffaioli V, Pagliarulo, Petrella G, Ricciardi I., FASANO, Silvia, Bianco, Ar, Citarella, F, Contegiacomo, A, Delrio, G, De Placido, S, D'Istria, M, Fasano, Silvia, Iaffaioli, V, Pagliarulo, Petrella, G, and Ricciardi, I.
- Published
- 1982
24. PROFILO ENDOCRINO DELLA SCROFA DURANTE IL CICLO ESTRALE
- Author
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Enne G., Perotti L., Genazzani A. R., d’Istria M., Inaudi P., Musarò M. A., DELRIO, GIOVANNI, PIERANTONI, RICCARDO, CALIENDO, MARIA FILOMENA, Enne, G., Perotti, L., Delrio, Giovanni, Genazzani, A. R., D'Istria, Michela, Inaudi, P., Pierantoni, Riccardo, Caliendo, MARIA FILOMENA, Musarò, M. A., and D’Istria, M.
- Subjects
estrogeni ,ciclo estrale ,progesterone - Abstract
PER LA PRIMA VOLTA E' STATO DOSATO IL PROFILO DEGLI O. SESSUALI DELLA SCROFA DURANTE IL CICLO ESTRALE
- Published
- 1982
25. Expression of prothymosin alpha in meiotic and post-meiotic germ cells during the first wave of rat spermatogenesis
- Author
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Aldo Donizetti, Diana Ferrara, Paolo Pariante, Michela d'Istria, Sergio Minucci, Francesco Aniello, Gaia Izzo, Ferrara, D, Izzo, G, Pariante, P, Donizetti, Aldo, D'Istria, M, Aniello, Francesco, Minucci, S., Ferrara, D., Izzo, G., Pariante, P., Donizetti, A., D'Istria, M., Aniello, F., and Minucci, Sergio
- Subjects
Male ,Cell type ,Aging ,Physiology ,Spermiogenesis ,spermatogenesi ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Biology ,Prothymosin Alpha ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Meiosis ,Testis ,Animals ,rat ,RNA, Messenger ,Protein Precursors ,Acrosome ,Spermatogenesis ,Gametogenesis ,Epididymis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Cell Biology ,germ cell ,Molecular biology ,Spermatozoa ,Rats ,Thymosin ,Animals, Newborn ,Germ line development - Abstract
Prothymosin alpha (PTMA) is a highly acidic small polypeptide, that is, widely distributed and conserved among mammals. Its possible involvement in male gametogenesis has been mentioned but not clarified yet; in particular, it has been suggested that, in non-mammalian vertebrates, it could play a role during GC meiosis and differentiation. In the present work we investigated the possible association between PTMA and meiotic and post-meiotic phases of mammalian spermatogenesis. Three different time points during postnatal development of rat testis were analyzed, that is, 27 dpp (completed meiosis), 35 dpp (occurring spermiogenesis), and 60 dpp (first wave of spermatogenesis definitely ended). RT-PCR and Western blot analyses showed that the expression levels of both Ptma mRNA and corresponding protein decrease in total extracts from 27 to 60 dpp. The in situ hybridization localized the transcript in interstitial Leydig cells, peritubular myoid cells and, inside the tubules, in germ cells from pachytene spermatocytes to newly formed haploid spermatids. The immunohistochemistry analysis localized the protein in the same cell types at 27 dpp, while at 35 and 60 dpp the haploid cells remain the only germ cells that still express it. In particular, PTMA specific localization in the heads of spermatids and epididymal spermatozoa, associated with the acrosome system, supports for the first time the hypothesis of a direct function in male germ cells.
- Published
- 2010
26. Evidence for the involvement of prothymosin α in the spermatogenesis of the frogRana esculenta
- Author
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Gaia Izzo, Sergio Minucci, Michela d'Istria, Francesco Aniello, Diana Ferrara, Lucia Liguori, Ferrara, D., Izzo, G., Liguori, L., D'Istria, M., Aniello, F., and Minucci, Sergio
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prothymosin alpha ,spermatogenesi ,Physiology ,medicine.drug_class ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Prothymosin Alpha ,Meiosis ,Spermatocytes ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Protein Precursors ,Cyproterone Acetate ,Spermatogenesis ,Molecular Biology ,In Situ Hybridization ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Analysis of Variance ,Leydig Cells ,Rana esculenta ,Small acidic protein ,Immunohistochemistry ,frog ,Cell biology ,Thymosin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Cytoplasm ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Gonadotropin ,Germ cell - Abstract
Prothymosin alpha (PTMA) is a small acidic protein abundantly and ubiquitously expressed in mammals and involved in different biological activities. Until now, its specific function in spermatogenesis has never been properly investigated. Recently, the isolation of a cDNA encoding for PTMA from the testis of the frog Rana esculenta has been reported: ptma transcript is highly expressed throughout the frog reproductive cycle, peaking in September/October, in concomitance with the germ cell maturation; it is specifically localized in the cytoplasm of primary and secondary spermatocytes and, at a lower level, in the interstitial compartment, in Leydig cells.In this article we support the involvement of PTMA in the meiotic phases of frog spermatogenesis. The expression of ptma mRNA increases in the testis of frogs treated with the antiandrogen cyproterone acetate, which blocks the II meiotic division and induces an increase in SPC cysts; on the contrary, it highly decreases in the testis of animals kept at 4 degrees C and treated with human corionic gonadotropin, in concomitance with the induced block of spermatogenesis and the disappearance of meiotic cells in the tubules. Furthermore, for the first time we have also evidenced by immunohistochemistry the expression of PTMA in the nuclei of secondary spermatocytes, spermatids, and spermatozoa, as well as in the cytoplasm of interstitial Leydig cells. Taken together our data suggest for an important role of PTMA in germ cell maturation and/or differentiation during R. esculenta spermatogenesis.
- Published
- 2009
27. Effects of melatonin treatment on Leydig cell activity in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta
- Author
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Sergio Minucci, Michela d'Istria, Diana Ferrara, Gaia Izzo, Gianluca De Rienzo, Ismene Serino, D'Istria, M., Serino, Ismene, Izzo, G., Ferrara, D., DE RIENZO, G., and Minucci, Sergio
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Indoles ,androgen ,In situ hybridization ,testis ,Rana ,Melatonin ,Paracrine signalling ,Leydig cell ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Testosterone ,In Situ Hybridization ,Relaxin ,Analysis of Variance ,Sertoli Cells ,Chemistry ,Leydig Cells ,Rana esculenta ,Cell Biology ,Sertoli cell ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,GnRH ,Steroids ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This study was conducted to verify the effect(s) of melatonin treatment on frog Leydig cells. Morphological observation after melatonin treatment indicates that many frog Leydig cells show degenerative changes (i.e. heterochromatic nuclei, loss of cellular adhesion) while in adjacent germinal tubules several Sertoli cells show heterochromatic nuclei, confirming the presence of a paracrine effect between interstitial and germinal compartments. The effect of melatonin on frog Leydig cell steroidogenesis was investigated in in vitro experiments; after 6 h of incubation melatonin severely inhibits both control and GnRH-induced testosterone secretion. In addition, in order to verify the effect of indolamine on frog Leydig cell activity, we investigated, by in situ hybridization, the presence of frog relaxin (fRLX, a transcript specifically expressed by these cells) in the testes of melatonin-injected animals after 48 h. fRLX signal completely disappeared from the testis of melatonin-injected frogs. The results of the present study indicate that melatonin treatment provokes Leydig cell morphological changes, blocks GnRH-antagonist-induced testosterone secretion and decreases fRLX expression. Taken together these results strongly indicate that melatonin acts on Leydig cells in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta.
- Published
- 2004
28. Inhibition of the increased 17β-estradiol-induced mast cell number by melatonin in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta, in vivo and in vitro
- Author
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Gaia Izzo, Michela d'Istria, Ismene Serino, Sergio Minucci, Izzo, G., D'Istria, M., Serino, Ismene, and Minucci, Sergio
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Estrogen receptor ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Rana ,Melatonin ,17 beta estradiol ,In vivo ,Internal medicine ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,Mast Cells ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Estradiol ,Estrogen Antagonists ,Rana esculenta ,17beta estradiol ,Mast cell ,testi ,In vitro ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Insect Science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,mast cell ,Estradiol treatment ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SUMMARY In the present study, we have utilized 17β-estradiol to induce the increase of mast cell number in order to verify the melatonin effect on mast cell accumulation in the frog testicular interstitium. Data obtained from in vivo experiments confirm that 17β-estradiol increases the mast cell number and indicate a melatonin-inhibitory role in their accumulation in the frog testis. In addition, melatonin interferes with the effects of estradiol on the increase of mast cell number in short-term cultured testes, and this result has also been obtained in a dose-response experiment at physiological concentration. The data suggest that melatonin acts on mast cell number directly via its local action in the frog gonads. In conclusion, our study shows, for the first time, that melatonin may interfere, probably via estrogen receptors, with the differentiation and/or proliferation of mast cells induced by estradiol treatment either in vivo or in vitro in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta.
- Published
- 2004
29. Ethane 1,2-dimethane sulphonate is a useful tool for studying cell-to-cell interactions in the testis of the frog, Rana esculenta
- Author
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Carmela Palmiero, Diana Ferrara, Michela d'Istria, Gianluca De Rienzo, Sergio Minucci, Palmiero, C, Ferrara, D, DE RIENZO, G, D'Istria, M, and Minucci, Sergio
- Subjects
Male ,Cell signaling ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell type ,Blotting, Western ,Cell Communication ,Biology ,Paracrine signalling ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,Dimethyl Sulfoxide ,Cell adhesion ,Mesylates ,Gap Junctions ,Leydig Cells ,Proteins ,Rana esculenta ,Seminiferous Tubules ,Sertoli cell ,Immunohistochemistry ,Cell biology ,Blot ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Connexin 43 ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Spermatogenesis - Abstract
Ethane 1,2-dimethane sulphonate (EDS), a toxin which specifically destroys Leydig cells (LC), has been used to study cellular interactions in the testis of the frog Rana esculenta. Animals received three consecutive EDS injections and were sacrificed on day 4, 8, and 28 from the first injection. No significant morphological differences were observed between present observation and that obtained, in a previous experiment, after four consecutive EDS injections. In fact, on day 4, in the germinal tubules adjacent to apparently normal LC, Sertoli cells surrounding primary spermatogonia (I SPG) show heterochromatic nuclei and loss of cellular adhesion. Interestingly, I SPG surrounded by the heterochromatic Sertoli cells present grossly swollen mitochondria with ballooned cristae. On day 8, sometimes in the interstitium many LC appear strongly damaged and the germinal tubules appear disorganized; the only cell type still distinguishable is the I SPG. On day 28 from the first EDS injection a new population of LC reappear in the interstitium and spermatogenesis normalizes. These data confirm the close relationship between the interstitial and the geminal compartments. Immunocytochemical data obtained using a polyclonal antibody anticonnexin-43 (Cx-43, the most abundant Cx found in mammalian testis) demonstrate the presence of Cx-43 in the frog testis. In particular, Cx-43 is present between LC in the interstitium, between Sertoli and germ cells in the cysts and between Sertoli cells and I SPG. Cx-43 immunopositivity sharply decreases on day 4 from the first EDS injection simultaneously with the loss of cellular adhesion between Sertoli and germ cells. On day 8 and 28 from the first EDS injection Cx-43, immunopositivity is restored and, this data is also supported by Western blot analysis. Our data provide, for the first time, evidence that Cx-43 protein is present in the frog testis and confirm that EDS is a useful tool for studying cellular communication at the paracrine pathway or through direct contact depending on the gap junctional pathway in R. esculenta testis
- Published
- 2003
30. First evidence of a cDNA encoding for a melatonin receptor (mel 1b) in brain, retina, and testis of Pelophylax esculentus
- Author
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Sergio Minucci, Gaia Izzo, Ismene Serino, Diana Ferrara, Michela d'Istria, Serino, Ismene, Izzo, G, Ferrara, D, Minucci, Sergio, and D'Istria, M.
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system ,DNA, Complementary ,Physiology ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Receptors, Melatonin ,Biology ,Melatonin receptor ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Retina ,Melatonin ,Pineal gland ,Internal medicine ,Complementary DNA ,Testis ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Binding site ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,DNA Primers ,Base Sequence ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Brain ,Rana esculenta ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,In vitro ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Italy ,Melatonin binding ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Melatonin, Testis, Frog, Local control ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Melatonin, nocturnally secreted by the pineal gland, regulates a variety of physiological functions, including reproduction. Here, we investigated the evidence of melatonin binding sites in frog tissue (brain, retina, and testis) through saturation and competition binding experiments. In the frog, Pelophylax esculentus, our results confirm the presence of a single class of melatonin-specific binding sites in the brain and retina, but not in the testis. Further experiments have been done using biomolecular approaches (PCR analysis). Here, we report the isolation of a cDNA encoding for a melatonin receptor type (mel1b) from brain, retina, and testis of the P. esculentus. PCR analysis revealed that melatonin expression is higher in the brain and retina, whereas it is lower in the testis. The presence of a melatonin receptor transcript in the frog testis corroborates our previous results obtained in in vitro experiments that suggest that melatonin might act directly in male vertebrate gonads, and indicates that the frog testis may be a suitable model to verify the role of indolamine in testicular activity. J. Exp. Zool. 315:520–526, 2011. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2011
31. The effects of gonadectomy and testosterone treatment on the Harderian gland of the green frog, Rana esculenta
- Author
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L. Di Matteo, Bruno Varriale, Michela d'Istria, Sergio Minucci, G. Chieffi-Baccari, Ismene Serino, Chieffi, Gabriella, DI MATTEO, Loredana, D’Istria, M., Minucci, Sergio, Serino, Ismene, and Varriale, Bruno
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Histology ,medicine.drug_class ,Ovariectomy ,Biology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Rana ,Harderian gland ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Salientia ,Internal medicine ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,Testosterone ,Castration ,Harderian Gland ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Ovary ,Rana esculenta ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Androgen ,Androgen receptor ,Microscopy, Electron ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Ultrastructure ,Rana esculenta (Anura) ,Female ,Seasons ,Orchiectomy - Abstract
The effects of gonadectomy and testosterone treatment on the fine structure of the Harderian gland in male and female green frogs were investigated in different periods of the year. Gonadectomy, carried out when the glands are in the lowest secretory phase (September), causes degenerative changes consisting of a reduction of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, the appearance of autolysosomes, and an increase of nuclear heterochromatin. These effects can be prevented by testosterone treatment. No castration effects are found during the recovery (November) and enhancement (April-May) phases of secretory activity. The results suggest that the frog Harderian gland's sensitivity to testosterone changes during the annual cycle. The androgen dependence of the Harderian gland is correlated with the presence of androgen receptors in both male and female forgs. © 1993 Springer-Verlag.
- Published
- 1993
32. Expression of melatonin (MT1, MT2) and melatonin-related receptors in the adult rat testes and during development
- Author
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Michela d'Istria, Sergio Minucci, Ismene Serino, Diana Ferrara, Gaia Izzo, Aniello Francesco, Maria Rosaria Campitiello, Izzo, G., Aniello, F., Ferrara, D., Campitiello, M. R., Serino, Ismene, Minucci, Sergio, D'Istria, M., Izzo, Gaia, Aniello, Francesco, Ferrara, Diana, Campitiello, Mr, and D'Istria, Michela
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system ,media_common.quotation_subject ,testes ,Biology ,Melatonin ,reproduction ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Internal medicine ,biology.animal ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,rat ,RNA, Messenger ,Receptor ,development ,media_common ,Regulation of gene expression ,Receptor, Melatonin, MT2 ,Receptor, Melatonin, MT1 ,Vertebrate ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Cell Biology ,Melatonin metabolism ,Rats ,Sprague dawley ,Melatonin receptor ,Adult life ,Endocrinology ,Reproduction ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SummaryIt is well known that melatonin provokes reproductive alterations in response to changes in hours of daylight in seasonally breeding mammals, exerting a regulatory role at different levels of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis. Although it has also been demonstrated that melatonin may affect testicular activity in vertebrates, until now, very few data support the hypothesis of a local action of melatonin in the male gonads. The aim of this study was to investigate whether MT1, MT2 melatonin receptors and the H9 melatonin-related receptor, are expressed in the adult rat testes and during development. A semi-quantitative RT-PCR method was used to analyse the expression of MT1, MT2 and H9 receptors mRNAs in several rat tissues, mainly focusing on testes during development and adult life. Our results provide molecular evidences of the presence of both MT1 and, for the first time, MT2 melatonin receptors as well as of the H9 melatonin-related receptor in the examined tissues, including adult testes. During development MT1 and MT2 transcripts are expressed at lower levels in testes of rats from 1 day to 1 week of age, lightly increased at 2 weeks of age and remained permanently expressed throughout development until 6 months. These data strongly support the hypothesis that melatonin acts directly in male vertebrate gonads suggesting that rat testes may be a suitable model to verify the role of indolamine in vertebrate testicular activity.
- Published
- 2010
33. Influence of light and temperature on the secretory activity of the harderian gland of the green frog, Rana esculenta
- Author
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L. Di Matteo, C Marmorino, Michela d'Istria, Giovanni Chieffi, Sergio Minucci, G. Chieffi Baccari, Minucci, S, Chieffi, Gabriella, DI MATTEO, L, Marmorino, C, D'Istria, M, and Chieffi, Giovanni
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Light ,Period (gene) ,Stimulation ,medicine.disease_cause ,Rana ,Harderian gland ,Salientia ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Secretion ,photoperiodism ,biology ,Harderian Gland ,Lacrimal Apparatus ,Temperature ,Environmental factor ,Rana esculenta ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Seasons - Abstract
1. 1. The secretory activity of the Harderian gland in Rana esculenta varies during the year, reaching its highest activity during the hottest period (July-August). Therefore, secretion may be modulated by temperature and/or photoperiod. 2. 2. Adult males and females were placed under several combinations of light and temperature in two different periods of the year (February and July) in order to elucidate their respective roles, if any, on the stimulation of secretion. 3. 3. Under experimental conditions, high temperature (24°C), irrespective of the photoperiod selected, stimulates secretion shown both at histological and histochemical levels. 4. 4. Low temperature (8°C) impairs secretory activity, again independently of the photoperiod selected. 5. 5. This data suggests that the secretion of the Harderian gland in Rana esculenta is modulated mainly by temperature. © 1990.
- Published
- 1990
34. Inhibition of the basal and oestradiol-stimulated mitotic activity of primary spermatogonia by melatonin in the testis of the frog, Rana esculenta, in vivo and in vitro
- Author
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Sergio Minucci, Michela d'Istria, Carmela Palmiero, Ismene Serino, Gaia Izzo, D'Istria, M, Palmiero, C, Serino, Ismene, Izzo, G, and Minucci, Sergio
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,Embryology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mitotic index ,Mitosis ,Stimulation ,Biology ,Melatonin ,Paracrine signalling ,Endocrinology ,In vivo ,Internal medicine ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,Spermatogenesis ,Cells, Cultured ,Estradiol ,Rana esculenta ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Cell Biology ,Sertoli cell ,Spermatozoa ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,Depression, Chemical ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Melatonin has a direct inhibitory effect on the basal and oestradiol-stimulated mitotic activity of primary spermatogonia in the testis of the frog, Rana esculenta. In this study oestradiol was used to induce spermatogonial proliferation to verify the anti-proliferative effect of melatonin. The colchicine metaphase arrest technique was used. The results obtained from in vivo experiments confirm that oestradiol increases the mitotic index of primary spermatogonia and, for the first time, indicate that melatonin has an inhibitory role on the proliferation of primary spermatogonia in the frog testis. Similar results were obtained from testes of melatonin-injected frogs that were exposed to oestradiol in vitro; in fact spermatogonia were unresponsive to hormonal stimulation. In addition, in short-term cultured testes, melatonin (at physiological concentration) interferes with the effects of oestradiol on spermatogonial proliferation, supporting the hypothesis that melatonin exerts the inhibitory effect directly via its local action on the frog gonads. Morphological observation after in vivo or in vitro melatonin treatments indicates that Leydig cells display degenerative features, whereas in adjacent germinal tubules, Sertoli cells show heterochromatic nuclei. These results indicate that melatonin may act on Leydig cells and confirm that there is a paracrine interaction between interstitial and germinal compartments. The results of the present study indicate, for the first time, that melatonin may be directly involved in the inhibitory control of spermatogonial proliferation in the testis of the frog, R. esculenta.
- Published
- 2003
35. Aggressive behavioral characteristics and endogenous hormones in women with Bulimia nervosa
- Author
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Paolo Cotrufo, Mario Maj, Palmiero Monteleone, Ismene Serino, Michela d'Istria, Antonio Fuschino, Cotrufo, Paolo, Monteleone, P, D'Istria, M, Fuschino, A, Serino, Ismene, and Maj, Mario
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Serotonin ,Adolescent ,medicine.drug_class ,Poison control ,Body Mass Index ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Testosterone ,Bulimia ,Amenorrhea ,Biological Psychiatry ,Hydrocortisone ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Estradiol ,Bulimia nervosa ,Testosterone (patch) ,Estrogens ,medicine.disease ,Androgen ,Hormones ,Aggression ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Endocrinology ,Estrogen ,Female ,Psychology ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Psychopathology ,medicine.drug ,Hormone - Abstract
Increased aggressiveness frequently occurs in patients with bulimia nervosa (BN), but its neurobiological correlates have been poorly investigated. In this study, we investigated possible relationships between such clinical measure and blood levels of endogenous hormones in patients with BN. Morning plasma levels of testosterone, 17β-estradiol, prolactin (PRL) and cortisol were measured in 33 bulimic women and 22 healthy female controls. The eating-related psychopathology, depression and aggressiveness were rated by specific psychometric scales. Bulimic patients showed decreased plasma levels of PRL and 17β-estradiol, and increased concentrations of cortisol and testosterone. Moreover, patients scored higher than healthy controls on rating scales assessing eating-related psychopathology, depressive symptoms and aggressiveness. A significant positive correlation was found between testosterone plasma levels and aggressiveness in patients but not in controls. These findings suggest that in BN, increased plasma levels of testosterone may play a role in the modulation of aggressiveness.
- Published
- 2000
36. Cell biology of the harderian gland
- Author
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Bruno Varriale, Gabriella Chieffi Baccari, Michela d'Istria, Di Matteo L, Giovanni Chieffi, Sergio Minucci, Kwang Jeon, Chieffi, Giovanni, Chieffi, Gabriella, DI MATTEO, L., D'Istria, M., Minucci, S., and Varriale, B.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Harderian gland ,Experimental model ,Ontogeny ,Pheromone ,Zoology ,Photoreception ,Lacrimal gland ,Biology ,Thermoregulation ,Comparative anatomy and physiology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Osmoregulation ,stomatognathic system ,Phylogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Sex pheromone ,medicine ,Nictitating membrane ,Gene expression ,Immunocompetence - Abstract
The harderian gland is an orbital gland of the majority of land vertebrates. It is the only orbital gland in anuran amphibians since the lacrimal gland develops later during phylogenesis in some reptilian species. Perhaps because it is not found in man, little interest was paid to this gland until about four decades ago. In recent years, however, the scientific community has shown new interest in analyzing the ontogenetic and morphofunctional aspects of the harderian gland, particularly in rodents, which are the preferred experimental model for physiologists and pathologists. One of the main characteristics of the gland is the extreme variety not only in its morphology, but also in its biochemical properties. This most likely reflects the versatility of functions related to different adaptations of the species considered. The complexity of the harderian gland is further shown in its control by many exogenous and endogenous factors, which vary from species to species. The information gained so far points to the following functions for the gland: (1) lubrication of the eye and nictitating membrane, (2) a site of immune response, particularly in birds, (3) a source of pheromones, (4) a source of saliva in some chelonians, (5) osmoregulation in some reptiles, (6) photoreception in rodents, (7) thermoregulation in some rodents, and (8) a source of growth factors.
- Published
- 1996
37. EFFECTS OF SINGLE AND REPEATED ELECTROCONVULSIVE SHOCK ON ISOPROTERENOL-STIMULATED PINEAL N-ACETYLTRANSFERASE ACTIVITY AND MELATONIN PRODUCTION IN RATS
- Author
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Michela d'Istria, Palmiero Monteleone, Ismene Serino, Luca Steardo, Mario Maj, Monteleone, P, Steardo, L, D'Istria, M, Serino, Ismene, and Maj, Mario
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,beta-adrenoceptors ,electroconvulsive shock ,isoproterenol ,melatonin ,nat ,pineal gland ,β-adrenoceptors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Toxicology ,Pineal Gland ,Biochemistry ,N-acetyltransferase activity ,Pinealocyte ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Melatonin ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Pineal gland ,Electroconvulsive therapy ,Acetyltransferases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptor ,Saline ,Biological Psychiatry ,Pharmacology ,Electroshock ,Chemistry ,Isoproterenol ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mechanism of action ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The response of the pineal gland to acute isoproterenol administration represents a useful tool to investigate beta 1-adrenoceptor function, because the production of melatonin and the activity of its main synthesizing enzyme, N-acetyltransferase (NAT), are regulated by beta 1-adrenergic receptors. In the present study, rats underwent single electroconvulsive shock (ECS) administration (0.80 mA, 0.5 s, at midday), chronic ECS treatment (0.80 mA, 0.5 s, once daily for 8 days), or sham treatments. On the day after the last ECS or sham ECS, animals were injected with isoproterenol hydrochloride (1 mg.kg-1 SC) or volume-matched saline at 1600 h. After single ECS, isoproterenol injection induced a clear-cut increase in both pineal NAT activity and melatonin levels with no significant differences between ECS-treated rats and the sham-treated ones. In rats chronically treated with ECS, the isoproterenol-induced increases in both pineal NAT activity and melatonin content were significantly lower than in sham-treated animals (p0.001 for NAT activity; p0.005 for melatonin levels; Turkey's test). These data show that the pinealocyte beta-adrenoceptor function is reduced by chronic, but not acute ECS administration, and that this change is not due to the nonspecific stress effect of animal handling or to the acute effects of the last of a series of ECS.
- Published
- 1995
38. Effects of gonadectomy and temperature on the N-acetyltransferase activity in the harderian gland of the green frog Rana esculenta
- Author
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Palmiero Monteleone, Ismene Serino, Michela d'Istria, Serino, Ismene, Monteleone, P, and D'Istria, M.
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Arylamine N-Acetyltransferase ,Ovariectomy ,Hamster ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,N-acetyltransferase activity ,Melatonin ,Harderian gland ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Specific enzyme ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sex Characteristics ,Harderian Gland ,fungi ,Temperature ,Rana esculenta ,Enzyme assay ,Sexual dimorphism ,Enzyme ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,Orchiectomy ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Since, in the Harderian gland (HG) of the hamster, the N-acetyltransferase (NAT), the specific enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of melatonin, exhibits a sexual dimorphism, in the present study, we investigated whether such a dimorphism is present also in the HG of the green frog Rana esculenta. In intact frogs, no significant differences emerged between males and females in the HG NAT activity under both cold (10 degrees C) and warm (22 degrees C) temperature conditions. In female frogs, the HG NAT activity was significantly decreased by both gonadectomy (P0.001) and warm temperature (P0.001), the two effects being not additive. In male animals, neither gonadectomy nor temperature alone significantly affected the activity of the NAT enzyme in the HG. However, gonadectomized male frogs exposed to warm temperature exhibited a significant drop in the HG NAT activity (P0.005). These data show that, in Rana esculenta, although no sexual dimorphism exists in the HG NAT activity, a sex difference is evident in the modulation of the enzyme activity by gonads and temperature, the female frogs being more sensitive to the impairing effects of both gonadectomy and higher temperature.
- Published
- 1995
39. Seasonal variations in the daily rhythm of melatonin and NAT activity in the Harderian gland, retina, pineal gland, and serum of the green frog, Rana esculenta
- Author
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Palmiero Monteleone, Michela d'Istria, Ismene Serino, Giovanni Chieffi, D'Istria, M, Monteleone, P, Serino, Ismene, and Chieffi, G.
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arylamine N-Acetyltransferase ,Biology ,Pineal Gland ,Retina ,Rana ,Melatonin ,Pineal gland ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Harderian gland ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Circadian rhythm ,photoperiodism ,Harderian Gland ,fungi ,Rana esculenta ,Retinal ,Circadian Rhythm ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Seasons ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Day-night variations of melatonin content and N-acetyltransferase (NAT) activity were studied in the Harderian gland (HG), retina, pineal gland, and serum of the green frog Rana esculenta. Throughout the year the retinal melatonin content was correlated with retinal NAT activity and was always higher than those in the pineal gland and HG. On the other hand, in these structures diurnal fluctuations in NAT activity were observed. There were clear seasonal differences in the magnitude of the nocturnal increase of retinal melatonin levels as well as in the nocturnal pattern of retinal NAT activity. In summer day-night variations of melatonin and NAT are absent. The prevailing photoperiod seems to affect melatonin and NAT circadian rhythms in R. esculenta.
- Published
- 1994
40. Role of seizure activity in the decreased pineal response to isoproterenol in rats chronically treated with electroconvulsive shock
- Author
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Palmiero Monteleone, Ismene Serino, Bruno De Luca, Michela d'Istria, Mario Maj, S. Amaro, Monteleone, P, Amaro, S, DE LUCA, B, D'Istria, M, Serino, Ismene, and Maj, Mario
- Subjects
Male ,Agonist ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Stimulation ,Pineal Gland ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Norepinephrine (medication) ,Melatonin ,Norepinephrine ,Pineal gland ,Seizures ,Internal medicine ,Isoprenaline ,Convulsion ,medicine ,Animals ,Biological Psychiatry ,Electroshock ,business.industry ,Isoproterenol ,Rats ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Shock (circulatory) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Chronic electroconvulsive shock (ECS) has been previously reported to blunt the melatonin response to acute isoproterenol administration in rats. To assess whether electrically induced seizures are indeed required for the appearance of the blunted pineal response to isoproterenol, pineal and serum melatonin levels were measured after isoproterenol stimulation in rats treated with ECS (80 mA, 0.5 sec), subconvulsive shock (15 mA, 0.5 sec), or sham-ECS once per day at 11:30-12:00 h for 8 days. In ECS-treated rats, both pineal and serum melatonin levels after isoproterenol administration were significantly lower than those in sham-treated animals and in rats receiving subconvulsive shock. Moreover, as compared with sham treatment, chronic subconvulsive shock did not affect the melatonin response to isoproterenol. These data show that seizure activity is indeed required for the ECS-induced decrease in the pineal response to acute β-adrenergic stimulation.
- Published
- 1994
41. A comparative study of melatonin production in the retina, pineal gland and harderian gland of Bufo viridis and Rana esculenta
- Author
-
Palmiero Monteleone, Michela d'Istria, Ismene Serino, Serino, Ismene, D'Istria, M, and Monteleone, P.
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Period (gene) ,Immunology ,Pineal Gland ,Retina ,Rana ,Melatonin ,Pineal gland ,Harderian gland ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Circadian rhythm ,Bufo ,Pharmacology ,biology ,urogenital system ,Harderian Gland ,Rana esculenta ,biology.organism_classification ,Bufonidae ,Circadian Rhythm ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,sense organs ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Endocrine gland ,medicine.drug - Abstract
1. The circadian patterns of melatonin and of its synthesizing enzyme N-acetyltransferase (NAT) were investigated in the serum, retina, pineal gland and Harderian gland (HG) of two amphibian species, Bufo viridis and Rana esculenta. 2. Serum melatonin levels showed no diurnal fluctuations in Bufo viridis, whereas, in Rana esculenta, they exhibited a circadian rhythm, with the highest values occurring during the night. Retina melatonin exhibited characteristic circadian patterns in both species, with the highest values occurring during the day, in Bufo, and the highest concentrations occurring at night in Rana. 3. In the retina, NAT activity peaked at night in both amphibians, but in Bufo the levels were up to 30 times higher than in Rana. In the HG and in the pineal gland, NAT activity showed different patterns in the two species with no diurnal variations in Bufo, and characteristic circadian rhythms in Rana. 4. In the HG and pineal gland of both species, melatonin was only occasionally detectable over the 24-hr period. 5. This is the first report exploring melatonin production in Bufo viridis and Rana esculenta. In our experimental conditions, marked differences emerged between the two species.
- Published
- 1993
42. Pineal response to isoproterenol in rats chronically treated with electroconvulsive shock
- Author
-
Palmiero Monteleone, Dargut Kemali, Michela d'Istria, Ismene Serino, B. De Luca, Mario Maj, Monteleone, P, D'Istria, M, DE LUCA, B, Serino, Ismene, Maj, Mario, and Kemali, D.
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adrenergic ,Pineal Gland ,Pinealocyte ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Melatonin ,Pineal gland ,Internal medicine ,Isoprenaline ,Receptors, Adrenergic, beta ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptor ,Analysis of Variance ,Electroshock ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Isoproterenol ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Shock (circulatory) ,Epilepsy, Tonic-Clonic ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Endocrine gland ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Chronic electroconvulsive shock (ECS) has been shown to induce a downregulation of beta 1-adrenergic receptors in the rat cerebral cortex. Because the secretion of melatonin in the pineal gland is regulated primarily by beta 1-adrenoceptors, in the present study we investigated the effect of chronic administration of ECS on pineal beta-adrenergic responsiveness to isoproterenol. To this purpose, young adult male rats received once daily for 8 days ECS (80 mA, 0.5 s) or sham ECS. On the day after the last ECS or sham treatment, they were injected with isoproterenol hydrochloride (1 mg/kg SC) or volume-matched saline at 1600 h. Two hours later they were killed by decapitation. Results showed that the isoproterenol-induced increase in the pineal melatonin content was blunted in rats treated with ECS as compared to sham-treated animals (shock x drug interaction = p < 0.01). These data indicate that chronic ECS treatment affects beta 1 receptor-mediated melatonin production in the pineal gland. Further studies need to elucidate whether the blunted melatonin response to isoproterenol in ECS-treated rats is due to a downregulation of pinealocyte beta-adrenergic receptors.
- Published
- 1993
43. Sex steroid binding proteins in the Harderian gland of nonmammalian tetrapods
- Author
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Bruno Varriale, Loredana Di Matteo, Sergio Minucci, Gabriella Chieffi Baccari, Michela d'Istria, D’Istria, M., Chieffi, Gabriella, DI MATTEO, Loredana, Minucci, Sergio, and Varriale, Bruno
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Harderian gland ,medicine.drug_class ,Binding protein ,Sex hormone receptor ,Toad ,Biology ,Androgen ,Androgen receptor ,Endocrinology ,Tetrapod ,Sex steroid ,Internal medicine ,biology.animal ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Estrogen binding ,Sex steroid binding protein ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
The presence of sex hormone receptors in the Harderian gland (HG) of nonmammalian tetrapods has been investigated. In the male and female green frog, Rana esculenta, androgen receptors were found in both nuclear and cytosolic extracts (Kd = 1.8 ± 1.2 nM); their seasonal variations correlate with plasmatic androgen profiles as well as with the cyclic secretory activity of the gland. These findings suggest a direct participation of intracellular androgens in the seromucoidal secretion of frog Harderian gland. No estradiol specific binding was detectable. In the toad, Bufo viridis, an androgen-estrogen binding protein (Kd = 1.8 ±0.7 nM) was evidenced only in the cytosolic fraction of the both sexes. Androgen and/or estrogen binding proteins were undetectable in the lizard Podarcis s. sicula and the chicken. © 1991 Accademia nazionale dei Lincei.
- Published
- 1991
44. Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Ovarian Axis in Women with Operable Breast Cancer Treated with Adjuvant CMF and Tamoxifen
- Author
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Giovanni Delrio, Sabino De Placido, Clorindo Pagliarolo, Michela d'Istria, Silvia Fasano, Alfredo Marinelli, Franca Citarella, Livia De Sio, Alma Contegiacomo, Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli, Giuseppe Petrella, Italo Ricciardi, A. Raffaele Bianco, Delrio, G, DE PLACIDO, S, Pagliarulo, C, D'Istria, M, Fasano, Silvia, Marinelli, A, Citarella, F, DE SIO, L, Contegiacomo, A, Iaffaioli, Rv, Delrio, Giovanni, DE PLACIDO, Sabino, Pagliarulo, Clorindo, M., D'Istria, S., Fasano, Marinelli, Alfredo, F., Citarella, L., De Sio, Contegiacomo, Alma, and R. V., Iaffaioli
- Subjects
Adult ,Oncology ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,endocrine system ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Pituitary Function Tests ,Breast Neoplasms ,Estrone ,Hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,Amenorrhea ,Cyclophosphamide ,Mastectomy ,Testosterone ,Ovarian Function Tests ,business.industry ,Ovary ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prolactin ,Tamoxifen ,Methotrexate ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,Menopause ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Luteinizing hormone ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effect of adjuvant CMF (cyclophopshamide, methotrexate, and 5-fluorouracil) and tamoxifen (TM) on hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian function was studied in 120 women with stage I-II operable breast cancer. Sixty patients were premenopausal, of whom 25 were treated with CMF for 9 cycles, 25 with CMF for 9 cycles + TM for 2 years, started concurrently, and 10 with TM alone for 2 years. Sixty patients were postmenopausal and they were all treated with TM alone for 2 years. In all groups treatment was started within 4 weeks of mastectomy. Plasma levels of estrone (E1), estradiol-17β (E2), follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone (LH), prolactin (Prl), testosterone (T) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) were determined in all patients before surgery and again at 3-month intervals from initiation of the adjuvant therapy. In ten patients of each treatment group FSH-LH and Prl-TSH release was determined following stimulation with releasing hormones. CMF and CMF + TM therapy resulted in amenorrhea in 42/50 premenopausal patients with decrease of E1 + E2 (p < 0.001) and elevation of FSH (p < 0.001) and LH (p < 0.01) plasma concentration to postmenopausal levels. In premenopausal women treated with TM a marked increase of E1 + E2 (p < 0.001) was observed with unaltered FSH-LH plasma concentration. A significant fall of Prl also occurred in these patients. In postmenopausal women and premenopausal patients with CMF-induced amenorrhea TM produced a marked fall of FSH-LH and a decrease of Prl plasma level. Plasma TSH and T were not affected in any patient by any of the treatment regimens. The results of the stimulatory tests are in agreement with the hormonal changes observed under basal conditions and indicate that, whereas CMF suppresses the ovary and does not alter hypothalamic-pituitary function, TM induces profound changes of the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis.
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- 1986
45. Plasma levels of luteinizing hormone, estradiol and androstenedione in sows with inadequate plasma progesterone
- Author
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G. Delrio, M. A. Musarò, Riccardo Pierantoni, G. Enne, M. d’lstria, L. Perotti, P. Inaudi, Silvia Fasano, A. R. Genazzani, F. Citarella, Pierantoni, Riccardo, Genazzani, Ar, Perotti, L, Enne, G, Inaudi, P, D'Istria, M, Musaro, Ma, Citarella, F, Fasano, Silvia, and Delrio, G.
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Swine ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Radioimmunoassay ,Luteal phase ,Endocrinology ,Estrus ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Androstenedione ,Follicular maturation ,Progesterone ,High rate ,Estradiol ,Chemistry ,Plasma levels ,Luteinizing Hormone ,Female ,Plasma progesterone ,Luteinizing hormone ,Hormone - Abstract
The authors report the profiles of luteinizing hormone (LH), estradiol (E2), progesterone (P) and androstenedione (A) in some female pigs with altered plasma hormonal levels. Twenty cycles are described and 19 out of them are characterized by low plasma P in luteal phase of different etiology, at least as measured by hormone concentrations. The following disorders are observed: a) possible impairement of follicular maturation; b) impaired LH secretion in presence of too high E2; c) low LH base-line values; d) inadequate luteal phase; e) short luteal phase; f) heat disorders. An attempt is made to correlate the altered hormonal profiles with the high rate of summer conception failure in sows.
- Published
- 1983
46. Prolactin receptors in the male Rana esculenta
- Author
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Silvia Fasano, G. Delrio, Michela d'Istria, D'Istria, M, Fasano, Silvia, and Delrio, G.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypophysectomy ,Receptors, Prolactin ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biology ,Kidney ,Rana ,Endocrinology ,Microsomes ,Skin Physiological Phenomena ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Testosterone ,Receptor ,Rana esculenta ,Androgen ,Prolactin ,Dissociation constant ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Receptors, Androgen ,Microsomes, Liver ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Seasons - Abstract
The binding of 125I-labeled ovine prolactin (oPRL) to membrane preparations of several tissues from the male green frog, Rana esculenta, collected during the year is reported. PRL binding to kidney fractions was generally high (range 5-45%). A maximum was observed in the month of October, whereas the lowest value was found during the summer season. The binding to skin fractions was equally high (range 5-25%) and the annual profile parallels that of renal fractions. In the liver, a lower specific binding (range 3-4%) occurred consistently during the year, whereas no detectable binding was found in the muscle. The 125I-oPRL binding was inhibited by oPRL and oGH but not by oFSH or oLH. Scatchard analysis gave dissociation constants of 0.4-1 x 10(-10) M and binding capacity of about 20 fmol/mg of membrane proteins was observed in both the skin and kidney fractions. No receptor sites were detectable in 30-day hypophysectomized animals. The administration of oPRL or a crude homogenate of the frog hypophysis induced the appearance of specific PRL binding. Testosterone is able to restore prolactin binding in hypophysectomized animals, as PRL treatment does.
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- 1987
47. Androgen and progesterone receptors in colonic and rectal cancers
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Mazzeo F, G. Delrio, F. Catuogno, F. Gaeta, Giacomo Benassai, Silvia Fasano, Michela d'Istria, Luigi Bucci, D'Istria, M, Fasano, S, Catuogno, F, Gaeta, F, Bucci, Luigi, Benassai, Giacomo, Mazzeo, F, Delrio, G., Fasano, Silvia, Bucci, L, and Benassai, G
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Estrogen receptor ,Rectum ,Colonic Polyps ,Receptors, Estradiol ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Radioligand Assay ,Surgical oncology ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Receptor ,Aged ,Colorectal Cancer ,business.industry ,Rectal Neoplasms ,Gastroenterology ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Androgen ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Colonic cancer ,Endocrinology ,Receptors, Androgen ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Female ,business ,Androgen and progesterone receptors ,Receptors, Progesterone ,Rectal disease - Abstract
Androgen, progesterone and estrogen receptors were analyzed in 12 primary colonic cancers and 16 primary rectal cancers. Androgen and progesterone receptors were positive in some colonic cancers and rectal carcinomas; however, none of the specimens analyzed showed estradiol receptor. Sourcerecord Id Scopus 21088-------http://apps.webofknowledge.com/full_record.do?product=UA&search_mode=GeneralSearch&qid=1&SID=Q1i@gpCm9b3mdEmO@n6&page=6&doc=60------- 25 citazioni Web of Knowledge
- Published
- 1986
48. The effects of thyroidectomy on androgen and prolactin receptors in the dorsal skin and caudal fin of Triturus cristatus carnifex
- Author
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Michela d'Istria, F. Citarella, Riccardo Pierantoni, Alberto Peyrot, Silvia Fasano, G. Delrio, Camillo Vellano, D'Istria, M, Pierantoni, Riccardo, Citarella, F, Fasano, Silvia, Vellano, C, Peyrot, A, and Delrio, G.
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Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptors, Steroid ,Thyroid Hormones ,medicine.drug_class ,Receptors, Prolactin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thyroid Gland ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Biology ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptor ,Testosterone ,Skin ,Thyroid ,Thyroidectomy ,Androgen ,Triturus ,Prolactin ,Androgen receptor ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Receptors, Androgen ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Seasons ,Hormone - Abstract
The interactions between thyroid hormones and receptors for steroid hormones and prolactin in dorsal skin and caudal fin of Triturus cristatus carnifex were studied during the annual cycle. Thyroidectomy induces an increase of prolactin binding in the dorsal skin and caudal fin in the animals captured in March. In these thyrodectomized animals the androgen receptors became undetectable. Results indicate that in Triturus cristatus carnifex the thyroid induces an increase of androgen receptors and a decrease, that is removed by thyroidectomy, of prolactin receptors.
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- 1984
49. Seasonal testosterone profile and testicular responsiveness to pituitary factors and gonadotrophin releasing hormone during two different phases of the sexual cycle of the frog (Rana esculenta)
- Author
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Silvia Fasano, L. Iela, Riccardo Pierantoni, Rakesh K. Rastogi, Michela d'Istria, G. Delrio, Pierantoni, Riccardo, Iela, L, D'Istria, M, Fasano, Silvia, Rastogi, Rk, and Delrio, G.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Biology ,In Vitro Techniques ,Buserelin ,Rana ,Endocrinology ,Pituitary Gland, Anterior ,Internal medicine ,Gonadotrophin releasing hormone ,Testis ,medicine ,Animals ,Testosterone ,Hypophysectomy ,Tissue Extracts ,Rana esculenta ,Radioimmunoassay ,Luteinizing Hormone ,Androgen ,Seasons ,Hormone - Abstract
Plasma and testicular testosterone concentrations in the frog, Rana esculenta, were studied by radioimmunoassay and showed similar seasonal fluctuations. The increase in testicular androgen during November preceded that occurring in the plasma by 2 months. Pituitary products and gonadotrophin releasing hormone, and the responsiveness of the testis to these substances play an important role in determining the hormone profile. J. Endocr. (1984) 102, 387–392
50. σ Receptor modulation of noradrenergic-stimulated pineal melatonin biosynthesis in rats
- Author
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Vincenzo Cuomo, M. Maj, Luca Steardo, Michela d'Istria, Ismene Serino, P. Monteleone, Steardo, L, Monteleone, P, D'Istria, M, Serino, Ismene, Maj, Mario, and Cuomo, V.
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rimcazole ,Arylamine N-Acetyltransferase ,Sigma receptor ,n-acetyltransferase ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Guanidines ,Pineal Gland ,Melatonin ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pineal gland ,Norepinephrine ,Phenazocine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptors, sigma ,Circadian rhythm ,Rats, Wistar ,Sympathomimetics ,Receptor ,Isoproterenol ,Aralkylamine N-acetyltransferase ,Darkness ,sigma receptors ,Circadian Rhythm ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,melatonin ,pineal gland ,Catecholamine ,Anticonvulsants ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
Because sigma receptors are richly concentrated in the rat pineal gland, the present study was performed to investigate their possible role in the modulation of melatonin production. To this purpose, we assessed in vivo the effects of the sigma-receptor ligands 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine and (+)-N-allylnormetazocine on the rat pineal gland activity during either the daytime or the nighttime. Compared with vehicle, 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine and (+)-N-allylnormetazocine potentiated the enhancement of N-acetyltransferase activity and pineal melatonin content induced by isoproterenol administration during the daytime, whereas they did not affect the diurnal basal biosynthetic activity of the gland. Conversely, at night, 1,3-di(2-tolyl)guanidine and (+)-N-allylnormetazocine enhanced significantly the physiological increases in both pineal N-acetyltransferase activity and melatonin levels. This enhancement was prevented by pretreatment with rimcazole, a specific sigma-receptor antagonist. These findings suggest that, in rats, the activation of pineal sigma-receptor sites does not affect the biosynthetic activity of the pineal gland during daytime, whereas it potentiates the production of melatonin when the gland is noradrenergically stimulated either by isoproterenol administration or by the endogenously released norepinephrine at nighttime.
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