Publications by authors named "B Cantau"

Changes to the chemical senses of taste and smell that accompany ageing are widely believed to influence food preferences and consumption in the elderly. The possibility that interactions between the residual senses of texture and trigeminal perception can compensate for specific losses was explored using a complex liquid food system, soup. A consumer panel of twenty-four young people (20-35, mean age 27.

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Xenopus laevis oocytes were used to express angiotensin receptors encoded by mRNAs extracted from rat liver, adenohypophysis and brain. Groups of ten mRNA-injected oocytes were loaded with 45Ca2+ and the responsiveness to angiotensin II (A II) and related molecules tested by monitoring 45Ca2+ outflux. A II and angiotensin III (A III) induced a marked and transient increase in 45Ca2+ outflux from mRNA, but not from control, water-injected, oocytes.

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Two selective radioligands for oxytocin receptors, [3H]-[4-threonine,7-glycine]oxytocin [( 3H]-[Thr4,Gly7]OT) and 125I-[1-(beta-mercapto-beta,beta-cyclopentamethylenepropionic acid), 2-(O-methyl)tyrosine, 4-threonine, 8-ornithine, 9-tyrosine amide]-oxytocin (125I-OTA), were used to characterize oxytocin receptors from two pig kidney-derived cell lines, LLC-PK1 and LLC-PK1L. [3H]-[Thr4,Gly7]OT and 125I-OTA bind with high affinity (mean Kd values of 14 and 0.06 nM, respectively) to the same population of sites on LLC-PK1 cell membranes [maximum binding (Bmax) of 100 fmol/mg membrane protein].

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The aim of this study was to examine in Hep G2, a human hepatoma-derived cell line, the presence of angiotensin II (ANG II) receptors and the effect of ANG II and its analogues on angiotensinogen production. The presence of ANG II receptors was demonstrated using a long-acting ANG II analogue, 125I-labeled [Sar1]ANG II. A single class of specific binding sites was identified in these cells with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 2 nM.

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Both dose-response curves and time-courses of plasma glucose levels after single maximal doses showed that in vivo glycogenolytic responsiveness to glucagon and epinephrine was significantly higher in developing hypothyroid rats, whereas it remained unchanged after vasopressin and angiotensin II injections. In contrast with the decreased basal activity of phosphorylase(a), the glucagon-stimulated activity increased in hypothyroid rats, whereas it was only slightly modified under vasopressin stimulation. Daily thyroxine treatment abolished these abnormalities.

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