The present review focuses on what is known of basic serotonin physiology in the human body. Here, we describe serotonin biochemistry and metabolism and summarize the results of studies that have contributed significantly to our understanding of serotonin physiology. We report the well-established role of serotonin in cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, and circulatory physiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To report a unique case of a peripherally located pulmonary atypical carcinoid tumor with metastatic involvement of the pituitary, manifesting with evidence of functional hypopituitarism and compressive symptoms of dysarthria, bitemporal loss of vision, and ataxia.
Methods: We present a case report, including detailed laboratory, radiologic, and pathologic findings in a 50-year-old woman with a peripherally located pulmonary atypical carcinoid tumor and a lesion metastatic to the pituitary gland. The pertinent literature is also reviewed.
J Cell Physiol
December 2007
The CM cell line is derived from a human pancreatic insulinoma and is used as a beta cell model for the study of the pathogenesis of diabetes, as it appears to maintain the characteristics of beta cells. However, a karyotype study of the CM cell line was not previously performed. We aimed at karyotyping the CM cell line to confirm its human origin, diploid karyotype, and chromosomal structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImpaired axonal transport in motor neurons has been proposed as a mechanism for neuronal degeneration in motor neuron disease. Here we show linkage of a lower motor neuron disease to a region of 4 Mb at chromosome 2p13. Mutation analysis of a gene in this interval that encodes the largest subunit of the axonal transport protein dynactin showed a single base-pair change resulting in an amino-acid substitution that is predicted to distort the folding of dynactin's microtubule-binding domain.
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