Publications by authors named "Cibele Nunes Peroni"

In a previous work, the common gonadotrophic hormone α-subunit (ag-GTHα), the ag-FSH β- and ag-LH β-subunit cDNAs, were isolated and characterized by our research group from pituitaries, while a preliminary synthesis of ag-FSH was also carried out in human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells. In the present work, the cDNA sequence encoding the ag-growth hormone (ag-GH) has also been isolated from the same giant Arapaimidae Amazonian fish. The ag-GH consists of 208 amino acids with a putative 23 amino acid signal peptide and a 185 amino acid mature peptide.

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Previous non-viral gene therapy was directed towards two animal models of dwarfism: Immunodeficient (lit/scid) and immunocompetent (lit/lit) dwarf mice. The former, based on hGH DNA administration into muscle, performed better, while the latter, a homologous model based on mGH DNA, was less efficient, though recommended as useful for pre-clinical assays. We have now improved the growth parameters aiming at a complete recovery of the lit/lit phenotype.

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Under physical activity a wide variety of cellular metabolic products and hormones are altered in the blood stream, including lactate, a metabolite of pyruvate reduction, and growth hormone (GH). Although a positive correlation between lactate and GH seems to exist during exercise, the role of lactate as a mediator of GH production has never been investigated. Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate whether lactate could activate the somatotropic axis and stimulate GH synthesis/release, contributing to the enhanced somatotropic activity described in exercise conditions.

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A CHO cell line, previously genetically modified by the introduction of rat alpha2,6-sialyltransferase cDNA, generated for the first time a human-like sialylated recombinant hTSH (hlsr-hTSH) more similar to the native hormone, with 61% of alpha2,3- and 39% of alpha2,6-linked sialic acid residues. The best clone, when submitted to gene amplification with up to 8 microM methotrexate, presented a secretion level of approximately 2 microg hTSH/10(6)cells/day, useful for product purification and characterization. The relative molecular masses (M(r)) of the heterodimer and of the alpha- and beta-subunits of purified hlsr-hTSH, determined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, and the relative hydrophobicities, determined by RP-HPLC, were not remarkably different from those presented by two r-hTSH preparations secreted by normal CHO cells.

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Background: Keratinocytes are a very attractive vehicle for ex vivo gene transfer and systemic delivery because proteins secreted by these cells may reach the circulation via a mechanism that mimics the natural process.

Methods: An efficient retroviral vector (LXSN) encoding the mouse growth hormone gene (mGH) was used to transduce primary human keratinocytes. Organotypic raft cultures were prepared with these genetically modified keratinocytes and were grafted onto immunodeficient dwarf mice (lit/scid).

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A gene therapy clinical trial for treatment of growth hormone (GH) deficiency has not been reached yet, but several strategies using different gene transfer methodologies and animal models have been developed and showed successful results. We have set up an ex vivo gene therapy protocol using primary human keratinocytes transduced with an efficient retroviral vector (LXSN) encoding the human (hGH) or mouse GH (mGH) genes. These stably modified cells presented high in vitro expression levels of hGH (7 microg/106 cells/d) and mGH (11 microg/106 cells/d) after selection with geneticin.

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Primary human keratinocytes, stably transduced with the human growth hormone (hGH) gene (under control of the retroviral LTR promoter) and selected via geneticin secreted as much as 7 microg hGH/106 cells/day. Their grafting onto immunodeficient dwarf mice (lit/scid) led to hGH levels in the circulation that did not go below 0.2-0.

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