Background/aims: The liver is the central organ of the endocrine growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor I (GH/IGF-I) axis and cirrhosis effects a state of acquired GH resistance. Low IGF-I levels are associated with adverse clinical outcomes in cirrhotic patients and may be pathogenic to the complications of cirrhosis. We examined the impact of cirrhosis on hepatic mRNA and serum protein levels for the GH receptor (GHR)/binding protein (GHBP), IGF-I, IGF binding protein (IGFBP)-3 and the acid-labile subunit (ALS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of GH replacement therapy in GH-deficient adults is to optimize response with minimum incidence of adverse reactions, but optimal therapy regimens are still to be established. This two-arm parallel study examined effects of two GH dose algorithms in adults with GH deficiency of adult or childhood onset. Patients on low dose (LD; n = 302) received GH at 3 microg/kg per day for 3 months increasing to 6 microg/kg per day for 3 months, and those on conventional dose (CD; n = 293) started on 6 microg/kg per day for 3 months increasing to 12 microg/kg per day for 3 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF2-Amino-3-(3-hydroxy-5-methyl-isoxazol-4-yl)propanoic acid (AMPA) potentiators are ligands that act as positive allosteric modulators at the AMPA receptors. We recently disclosed a novel series of 2-arylpropylsulfonamides that were potent potentiators of responses mediated through AMPA receptors. To further define the structural requirements for activity in this series, new ring-constrained analogues were prepared and a new stereocenter was introduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Because there is discordance between different immunoassay values for serum hGH, and because clinical state may not correlate with immunoreactive hGH, we have developed an assay to accurately measure serum hGH somatogenic bioactivity. The results of this assay were compared with the Elegance two-site ELISA assay across 135 patient samples in a variety of clinical states.
Design: The somatogenic assay was based on stable expression of hGH receptor in the murine BaF line, allowing these cells to proliferate in response to hGH.
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf)
March 2002
Objectives: Galanin (GAL) is a neuropeptide widely expressed in the central and peripheral nervous system and in neuroendocrine tissue, including the adenohypophysis where, in humans, it is expressed in corticotrophs and in ACTH-producing adenomas. Previous analyses of human tissue have used antiserum against porcine GAL for detection of GAL immunoreactivity (GAL-IR) and no pathophysiological correlates have been reported. Given significant differences between the sequence of porcine and human GAL peptides, the aim of this study was to use antiserum raised against synthetic human GAL to investigate GAL-IR in non tumorous pituitaries and in pituitary adenomas, and to correlate GAL-IR with the clinical and hormonal characteristics of patients with Cushing's disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Hypopituitary Control and Complications Study is an international surveillance study evaluating efficacy and safety of GH therapy of adult GH-deficient patients in clinical practice. The present report examined baseline data from 1,123 adult onset (AO) and 362 childhood onset (CO) patients, as well as efficacy in 242 patients who had completed 3 yr of GH treatment. At study entry, mean height, body mass index, waist to hip ratio, and lean body mass were significantly (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Endocrinol Metab
February 2002
Adult GH deficiency (GHD) is currently diagnosed in patients with either a history of childhood-onset GHD or acquired hypothalamic-pituitary disease by GH stimulation testing. However, GH stimulation tests are invasive, time consuming, and associated with side effects. Based on preliminary analyses of patients enrolled in the U.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReplication-deficient lentiviral vectors (LV) have been shown to enable the stable genetic modification of multiple cell types in vivo. We demonstrate here that vascular and hepatic delivery of a third-generation HIV-derived lentiviral vector encoding human Factor IX (LV-hFIX) produced potentially therapeutic serum levels of hFIX protein with no vector-mediated local or systemic toxicity of adult mice. Portal vein administration produced the highest serum levels of hFIX and demonstrated proportionally higher levels of gene transfer to the liver with up to 4% of hepatocytes expressing hFIX.
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