Search Results
Results 401 - 450 of 779
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Kooijman Ron - - 2002
Granulocytes are key cells in inflammatory processes that are recruited to sites of inflammation by chemoattractants such as IL-8 produced by neutrophils and monocytes. Programmed cell death (apoptosis) of granulocytes and subsequent recognition and phagocytosis by macrophages is a crucial mechanism for resolution of inflammation. Because IGF-I is a potent ...
Park Sang Chul - - 2002
Human diploid fibroblasts (HDF) do not divide indefinitely and eventually lead to an arrest of cell division by a process termed cellular or replicative senescence. Irreversible growth arrest of senescent cells is strongly related to the attenuated response to growth factors. Recently, we reported that up-regulation of caveolin in the ...
Christopher Scott A - - 2002
Elevated plasma homocysteine is associated with a variety of diseases in humans including coronary heart disease, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, and birth defects. However, the mechanism by which plasma homocysteine affects cells is unknown. We have examined the growth of isogenic wild-type and cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) deficient yeast in response ...
Sirotkin A V - - 2002
The action of growth hormone (GH) on the production of hormones, growth factors, growth factor binding protein and the occurrence of apoptosis in porcine ovarian granulosa cells, as well as the role of cAMP-stimulated protein kinase A (PKA) in the mediation of these effects, were studied. For this purpose, the ...
Welniak Lisbeth A - - 2002
Growth hormone (GH), directly or through GH-induction of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, has been implicated in lymphocyte development and function. Recent studies have questioned the role of GH and IGF-1 in immune responses. This review examines experimental data describing the immunoregulatory function of GH and attempts to reconcile the literature.
Huynh Hung - - 2002
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common malignancy, but treatment outcomes have generally remained poor. Specific factors important for the pathogenesis of HCC are incompletely understood. Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) are potent autocrine and paracrine mitogens for liver cancer cell proliferation, and their bioactivity is reduced by IGF-binding protein 3 (IGFBP-3). ...
Beierle Elizabeth A - - 2002
BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: Aggressive neuroblastomas avoid apoptosis and have increased expression of the antiapoptotic protein, Bcl-2. Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) is mitogenic and may promote tumor survival by inhibiting apoptosis. The authors hypothesize that IGF-I may protect neuroblastoma cells from apoptosis by upregulating their Bcl-2 expression. METHODS: Human neuroblastoma cells (IMR-32) are ...
Srinivasan Suseela - - 2002
After alveolar formation, >20% of interstitial lung fibroblasts undergo apoptosis, a process that is of critical importance for normal lung maturation. The immature lung contains two morphologically distinct fibroblast populations, lipid-filled interstitial fibroblasts (LIF) and non-LIF (NLIF), which differ with respect to contractile protein content, proliferative capacity, and expression of ...
Dhandapani Krishnan M - - 2002
The aim of the current study was to determine whether basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), regulates the release of transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) from C6 glioma cells. The results of the study show that bFGF (2, 5 and 10 ng/ml) dose dependently induced the release of TGF-beta1 from C6 glioma ...
Hardy K - - 2002
There is increasing evidence that even before implantation, human development is regulated by embryonically and maternally derived growth factors. Studies in other mammalian species have shown that growth factors and their receptors are expressed by the preimplantation embryo and the reproductive tract. Furthermore, a number of growth factors have been ...
Féger Frédéric - - 2002
Mastocytosis is a heterogeneous group of hematopoietic disorders characterized by abnormal growth and accumulation of mast cells (MC) in one or more organs. Clinical symptoms occur as a result of the release of chemical mediators and/or of pathologic infiltration of MC in various tissues. Although the initial events leading to ...
Burchill S A - - 2002
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) is a potent mitogen for a number of different cell types. Its over-expression has been implicated in transformation and malignant progression. The use of bFGF to treat malignancy is therefore counterintuitive. However, recent studies have shown bFGF-induces cell death in some tumour types. This mini ...
Satyamoorthy Kapaettu - - 2002
Successive events of growth factor-induced autocrine and paracrine activation promote tumor growth and metastasis. Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) stimulates melanoma cells to grow, survive, and migrate. Interleukin-8 (IL-8) is produced by melanoma cells and has been correlated with melanoma metastasis, but the biological functions of this cytokine have not been ...
Xie Jianwu - - 2002
Genetic studies in mice have established a critical role for prolactin receptors and transcription factor Stat5 in mammary gland differentiation. However, the enzymatic coupling between prolactin receptors and Stat5 in this process has not been established. In addition to Jak2, several other tyrosine kinases reportedly also are associated with prolactin ...
Agnese Doreen M - - 2002
BACKGROUND: Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a potent activator of human monocytic cells. We have determined that LPS stimulation of the human monocytic cell line, THP-1, results in an increased apoptotic rate. We hypothesized that cDNA expression array analysis could be used to identify target genes involved in the regulation of this ...
Shav-Tal Yaron - - 2002
Activin A, a cytokine member of the transforming growth factor-beta superfamily, is expressed locally by the mesenchymal component of the hemopoietic microenvironment. Its expression is regulated on the mRNA level by different cytokines, and the biological activity of the protein is tightly controlled by several inhibitory molecules. Activin A affects ...
Auernhammer C J - - 2002
BACKGROUND: Recent studies have shown that immunocompetent cells synthesize and express growth hormone (GH), growth hormone receptors (GH-R), insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), IGF-I receptors (IGF-I-R) and different insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (IGFBPs). The aim of the current study was to evaluate the regulation of IGFBP and IGF-I secretion ...
Ikuno Yasushi - - 2002
Contraction of fibroblasts and the resultant tractional force is a contributing factor to fibrotic diseases of the eye, such as proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR). Transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta is abundant in the eye, and is one of the growth factors thought to contribute to the development of PVR. A second is ...
Romeo Paul-Henri - - 2002
The neuropilin-1 (NRP1) and neuropilin-2 (NRP2) receptors can bind the class 3 semaphorin subfamily and the heparin-binding forms of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and placenta growth factor (PlGF). The functions of NRP1 and NRP2 have been extensively studied in neurons where they act in axon guidance and in endothelial ...
Dahl G E - - 2002
Photoperiod is the most common environmental factor monitored by animals to alter long-term physiological processes, particularly reproduction. As cattle are not strict seasonal breeders, the influence of photoperiod on cattle has been studied less extensively than in other large mammals, but the lack of effect of daylength on reproduction enhances ...
Mattiske D - - 2002
Ovaries from a marsupial, the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii), were grafted into a eutherian recipient at known stages of development to ascertain whether normal development would occur. Xenografted ovaries from pouch young < 20 days old, before the onset of meiosis, retained few germ cells and developed tubule-like structures reminiscent ...
Eales-Reynolds L J - - 2001
Several malignancies over-express the epidermal growth factor receptor, ligation of which results in cellular differentiation and multiplication. Mononuclear phagocytes secrete this cytokine and its receptor has been detected on microglial cells. This communication describes the expression (and its regulation) of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) on U937 cells. We have ...
Booth B W - - 2001
Remodeling of the airways, as occurs in asthmatic patients, is associated with the continual presence of inflammatory mediators and Th2 cytokines, especially interleukin (IL)-13, during cycles of epithelial injury and repair. In this study, we examined the effect of IL-13 on well-differentiated normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells maintained in ...
Liu C - - 2001
The potential roles of human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) cytokines in HHV-8 pathogenesis were investigated by determining the expression of the HHV-8 chemokines viral macrophage inflammatory protein 1A (vMIP-1A) and vMIP-1B in primary effusion lymphoma (PEL)-derived cell lines and examining the signaling activities of these chemokines and HHV-8-encoded vIL-6 in these ...
Tezuka M - - 2001
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between apoptotic activity and clonogenic radiosensitivity in vitro using an insulin-like growth factor I receptor (IGF-IR) signaling model, which is known to exert tumorigenic and antiapoptotic effects. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We used mouse embryo fibroblast cell lines expressing either human ...
Ball E M - - 2001
Development of glandular organs such as the kidney, lung, and prostate involves the process of branching morphogenesis. The developing organ begins as an epithelial bud that invades the surrounding mesenchyme, projecting dividing epithelial cords or tubes away from the site of initiation. This is a tightly regulated process that requires ...
Lai L - - 2001
Pre-pro-B cell growth-stimulating factor (PPBSF) is a heterodimer of IL-7 and a 30-kDa cofactor. Unlike monomeric IL-7, PPBSF selectively induces proliferation and differentiation of pre-pro-B cells and up-regulates IL-7Ralpha-chain expression. Here we clone the PPBSF cofactor from bone marrow stromal cells and identify it as a variant beta-chain of hepatocyte ...
Callahan C A - - 2001
Epithelial organs such as the vertebrate hair control periodic self-renewal by regulating the growth of progenitor cells. Recent studies implicate Sonic hedgehog target gene induction in the growth of multipotent hair follicle epithelium and the development of a variety of hair follicle tumors such as basal cell carcinomas. These studies ...
Dias S - - 2001
Antiangiogenic agents block the effects of tumor-derived angiogenic factors (paracrine factors), such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), on endothelial cells (EC), inhibiting the growth of solid tumors. However, whether inhibition of angiogenesis also may play a role in liquid tumors is not well established. We recently have shown that ...
Weinstein-Oppenheimer C R - - 2001
The precise molecular events involved in the development of drug resistance (DR) remain largely unknown. Raf is an intermediate in the signal transduction cascades initiated by growth factors. The hypothesis behind the following studies is that deregulated Raf-1 expression plays a role in the development of drug resistance. A positive ...
Blanc-Brude O P - - 2001
The coagulation cascade protease thrombin is a fibroblast mitogen, but the proliferative potential of other coagulation proteases is not known. In this study we show that factor Xa stimulated human fetal lung fibroblast DNA synthesis in a concentration-dependent manner from 1 nM onward with a fourfold increase at 200 nM. ...
Berk B C - - 2001
Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) exhibit several growth responses to agonists that regulate their function including proliferation (hyperplasia with an increase in cell number), hypertrophy (an increase in cell size without change in DNA content), endoreduplication (an increase in DNA content and usually size), and apoptosis. Both autocrine growth mechanisms ...
Nowak R A - - 2001
Leiomyomas are a significant problem in women's health. An understanding of the biology of these tumors and how their growth is regulated is emerging from in vitro studies using tissue specimens and cultured cells. These studies have clarified how the ovarian steroid hormones regulate growth of uterine SMCs and how ...
Chun S Y - - 2001
P11, a member of the S100 family of calcium-binding proteins, has been shown to interact with BAD (Bcl-xL/Bcl-2-associated death promoter) in the yeast two-hybrid protein-protein interaction assay. Because overexpression of P11 dampens the proapoptotic activity of BAD in transfected cells, we tested the possibility that the expression of this antiapoptotic ...
Benini S - - 2001
Innovative treatment modalities are needed for Ewing's sarcoma (ES), a neoplasm with a disappointingly low survival rate despite the use of aggressive multimodal therapeutic approaches. We and others (D. Yee et al., J. Clin. Investig., 86: 1806-1814, 1990; K. Scotlandi et al., Cancer Res., 56: 4570-4574, 1996) have previously shown ...
Mathis L - - 2001
Previous analyses of labelled clones of cells within the developing nervous system of the mouse have indicated that descendants are initially dispersed rostrocaudally followed by more local proliferation, which is consistent with the progressing node's contributing descendants from a resident population of progenitor cells as it advances caudally. Here we ...
Nakagawa H - - 2001
Diallyl disulfide (DADS) is an oil-soluble organosulfur compound found in garlic. The effect of synthetic DADS on the growth of estrogen receptor (ER)-positive (KPL-1 and MCF-7) and -negative (MDA-MB-231 and MKL-F) human breast cancer cell lines was examined. In an in vitro MTT assay, regardless of ER status, DADS at ...
Davies J A - - 2001
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are linear polymers of amino sugar uronic acid disaccharides, and are generally attached to protein cores to form proteoglycans. GAGs interact with a large number of proteins and can participate in matrix organization, cell adhesion, differentiation, growth and apoptosis. Proteoglycans are expressed in tightly regulated spatio-temporal patterns during ...
Goldberg A - - 2001
Articular cartilage has limited intrinsic repair potential. The relative failure of many synthetic solutions has led to the growing interest in the development of cell-based repair systems for solving a number of clinical problems to articular cartilage. Many factors will dictate the success of these approaches, namely surgical technique and ...
Comoglio P M - - 2001
Scatter factors are unequivocal signals governing a genetic program that includes cell detachment, repulsion, protection from apoptosis, invasiveness of extracellular matrices and proliferation. This pleiomorphic response is defined as 'invasive growth'. Under physiological conditions, it leads to morphogenic cell movements through the matrix, and--primarily--to ordered building of epithelial tubules. Dysfunctions ...
Niikura T - - 2001
It has been found that insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) exerts cytoprotection against Abeta amyloid-induced neuronal cell death. Deposits of Abeta amyloid are one of the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we examined whether IGF-I exerts protective activity against cell death induced by a familial AD (FAD)-linked mutant ...
Green W B - - 2001
Proteases like urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) play an important role in tumor invasion. Cells derived from ultraviolet radiation (UVR)-induced corneal sarcomas of Monodelphis domestica produce relatively high levels of uPA compared to the untransformed keratocytes suggesting a mechanism for their invasiveness. Because UVR is known to stimulate uPA production in ...
Wittwer F - - 2001
Members of the AF4/FMR2 family of nuclear proteins are involved in human diseases such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia and mental retardation. Here we report the identification and characterization of the Drosophila lilliputian (lilli) gene, which encodes a nuclear protein related to mammalian AF4 and FMR2. Mutations in lilli suppress excessive ...
Buenemann C L - - 2001
Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGFbeta) is involved in the regulation of liver cell proliferation and apoptosis, and escape of hepatoma cells from the growth restraining signals of TGFbeta has been suggested to contribute to tumor development. TGFbeta modulates gene transcription by receptor-mediated activation of Smad proteins which act as transcription factors. ...
Platten M - - 2001
Characteristics of human malignant glioma are excessive proliferation, infiltrative growth, angiogenesis and suppression of anti-tumor immune surveillance. Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), a versatile cytokine, is intimately involved in the regulation of these processes. Here, we discuss the interactions of TGF-beta with growth factors, such as basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), ...
Mira E - - 2001
Complex cell responses require the integration of signals delivered through different pathways. We show that insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I induces specific transactivation of the Gi-coupled chemokine receptor CCR5, triggering its tyrosine phosphorylation and Galpha recruitment. This transactivation occurs via a mechanism involving transcriptional upregulation and secretion of RANTES, the natural ...
Nielsen J H - - 2001
Substantial new information has accumulated on molecular mechanisms of pancreas development, regulation of beta-cell gene expression, and the role of growth factors in the differentiation, growth, and regeneration of beta-cells. The present review focuses on some recent studies on the mechanism of action of cytokines such as growth hormone (GH) ...
Bodo M - - 2001
BACKGROUND: Previous studies show that macrophages, lung fibroblasts, and their soluble mediators are responsible for the onset and development of pulmonary fibrosis. This study was conducted to determine whether airway epithelial cells are also directly involved in response to fibrogenic agents and consequently in the pathogenesis of lung fibrosis. To ...
Dahler A L - - 2001
Transforming growth factor beta1 treatment of keratinocytes results in a suppression of differentiation, an induction of extracellular matrix production, and a suppression of growth. In this study we utilized markers specific for each of these functions to explore the signaling pathways involved in mediating these transforming-growth-factor-beta1-induced activities. In the first ...
Stenn K S - - 2001
Nearly 50 years ago, Chase published a review of hair cycling in which he detailed hair growth in the mouse and integrated hair biology with the biology of his day. In this review we have used Chase as our model and tried to put the adult hair follicle growth cycle ...
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