Publications by authors named "Lasano S"

Background: Although significant accumulation of prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) in the human prostate cancer tissues has been reported, there is lack of substantial evidence regarding the key role of PGE(2)-induced E-prostanoid-4 receptor (EP4) on Snail, a master regulator of epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT). In this study, we investigated a novel connection between PGE(2)-induced EP4 and Snail (encodes DNA binding zinc finger protein that acts as transcriptional repressor) signaling in prostate cancer.

Materials And Methods: To investigate the key role of serum PGE(2), EP4, p-Akt and Snail in prostate cancer progression, we used prostate-specific phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN)-knockout (PTEN-KO) mice of different age groups from 4 to 28 weeks.

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Article Synopsis
  • - A study proposed that nursing in pigs delivers maternally derived relaxin (RLX) into newborns through colostrum, as RLX was found in both colostrum and the serum of nursing piglets.
  • - RLX levels in milk were highest during the early lactation period and significantly decreased by postnatal day 14, but it’s unclear if the RLX in milk is bioactive.
  • - Research aimed to evaluate the bioactivity of RLX in porcine milk, identify its form, and determine if the mammary gland produces RLX; findings indicated that proRLX is predominant in milk and was present in mammary tissue.
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The objectives of this study were to validate a relaxin and progesterone RIA for use in bottlenose dolphins, and quantify and characterize both hormones in extracts of placental tissue and serum collected during pregnancy and the post-partum period, and compare the results between dolphins with live and stillborn calves. In Experiment 1, validation of a heterologous relaxin and progesterone RIA involved specific displacement of antibody-bound radiolabeled human relaxin or progesterone in response to increasing volumes of pooled pregnant dolphin serum and amounts of respective hormone standards added to a fixed volume of serum. The displacement curves were considered parallel and additive relative to respective standard curves.

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Previous studies with selenium and/or vitamin E in prostate carcinogenesis animal models have been negative, but these models may not involve oxidative stress mechanisms. In this study, we examined the potential of selenomethionine and alpha-tocopherol to modulate prostate cancer development in the testosterone plus estradiol-treated NBL rat, a model that does involve sex hormone-induced oxidative stress mechanisms and prostatic inflammation. One week following the implantation with hormone-filled Silastic implants, rats were fed diets containing l-selenomethionine (1.

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The human population explosion has pushed many mammalian wildlife species to the brink of extinction. Conservationists are increasingly turning to captive breeding as a means of preserving the gene pool. We previously reported that serum immunoactive relaxin provided a reliable means of distinguishing between true and pseudopregnancy in domestic dogs, and this method has since been found to be a reliable indicator of true pregnancy in endangered Asian and African elephants and Sumatran rhinoceroses.

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The milk of many mammalian species contains hormones and growth factors in addition to nutrients and immunocompetent substances. These factors can be absorbed into the circulation of suckling neonates to exert important effects on metabolism and promote tissue and organ growth. Frequently, there is uncertainty as to whether such substances are gene products of the mammary glands themselves or are produced elsewhere and concentrated from the systemic circulation.

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Relaxin, a 6-kDa polypeptide hormone, is excreted in the urine during pregnancy in several mammalian species. A recent study showed that detection of urinary relaxin using a bench-top serum assay (Witness relaxin kit, Synbiotics Corp., San Diego, California 92127, USA) can be diagnostic for pregnancy in domestic cats (Felis silvestris catus), but it is unknown whether the bench-top kit is applicable with urine across felid species.

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Relaxin is a pregnancy-specific hormone in the queen and is produced by the placenta. Both serum and urinary relaxin levels can be used to diagnose and monitor pregnancy in the cat; however, only serum levels are commonly measured in practice. The present study aimed to assess whether urine could be used for the rapid diagnosis of pregnancy at an early stage in domestic cats using a bench-top kit to detect relaxin.

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Epidemiologic evidence indicates that maternal smoking increases the risk of preterm birth. While a number of plausible mechanisms for early delivery have been offered, the role of gestational hormones in this smoke-induced outcome is uncertain. Thus, a toxicologic study was performed to examine the effects and underlying hormonal mechanisms of mainstream cigarette smoke (MCS) exposure on gestational duration.

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Estrogen receptor-dependent organizational events between birth [postnatal day (PND) 0] and PND 14 affect development and function of porcine uterine tissues. Observations that uterotrophic effects of relaxin (RLX) in neonatal gilts were inhibited by the antiestrogen ICI 182,780 suggested that a RLX signaling system, capable of cross-talk with the estrogen receptor, evolves during a critical period for uterine programming (PND 0-14). Objectives were to determine 1) effects of age and estrogen exposure from birth on porcine uterine RLX/insulin-like 3 receptor (LGR7/LGR8) expression and 2) whether milk serves as a natural source of RLX in neonatal pigs.

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Changes in a host's environment (i.e. physical or chemical) can alter normal immune function.

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Many nondomestic felids are highly endangered, and captive breeding programs have become essential components of holistic conservation efforts for these species. The ability to diagnose pregnancy early in gestation is fundamental to developing effective breeding programs. The purpose of this study was to develop a radioimmunoassay (RIA) for the detection of urinary relaxin in felids and assess its applicability for early, noninvasive pregnancy diagnosis in domestic cats (Felis silvestris catus) and leopards (Panthera pardus).

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Early pregnancy is a powerful negative risk factor for breast cancer (BCa) in women. Pregnancy also protects rats against induction of BCa by carcinogens such as N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU), making the parous rat a useful model for studying this phenomenon. Smoking during early pregnancy may lead to an increased risk of BCa in later life, possibly attributable to carcinogens in cigarette smoke (CS), or to reversal of the parity-related protection against BCa.

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Early pregnancy and childbirth protects women against future development of breast cancer by an unknown mechanism. Parity likewise reduces mammary cancer incidence in rats exposed to the carcinogen, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU), providing a model for the human phenomenon. We hypothesized that relaxin, a 6KD luteal mammotropic hormone of pregnancy, might be the anti-cancer pregnancy factor, and that induced relaxin deficiency during rat gestation would restore carcinogen sensitivity.

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Four pairs of rhesus monkeys and five pairs of baboons were cross-transfused with large volumes of blood given at intervals varying from 3 weeks to 30 months. Although no acute transfusion reactions were observed, there was a significant reduction in survival rate of the transfused erythrocytes correlated with the level of antibodies in recipient's serum. The immune response of the recipient animal depended on the interval between transfusions and, to some extent, on the number and kind of erythrocyte incompatibilities between the recipient and the donor.

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A rhesus monkey family is described in which a group A offspring was born from a group AB mother and a group B male parent. Discovery of A and O genes in rhesus monkeys indicates that this species of macaques is polymorphic for the A-B-O blood groups, and not monomorphically B, as previously believed.

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