Publications by authors named "Merchenthaler I"

Background: Elevated FSH often occurs in women of advanced maternal age (AMA, age ≥ 35) and in infertility patients undergoing controlled ovarian stimulation (COS). There is controversy on whether high endogenous FSH contributes to infertility and whether high exogenous FSH adversely impacts patient pregnancy rates.

Methods: The senescence-accelerated mouse-prone-8 (SAMP8) model of female reproductive aging was employed to assess the separate impacts of age and high FSH activity on the percentages (%) of viable and mature ovulated oocytes recovered after gonadotropin treatment.

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Letrozole, an aromatase inhibitor preventing estrogen synthesis from testosterone, is used as an adjuvant therapy in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer patients. However, like other aromatase inhibitors, it induces many side effects, including impaired cognition. Despite its negative effect in humans, results from animal models are inconsistent and suggest that letrozole can either impair or improve cognition.

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While there is consensus that advanced maternal age (AMA) reduces oocyte yield and quality, the notion that high FSH reduces oocyte quality and causes aneuploidy remains controversial, perhaps due to difficulties controlling the confounding variables of age and FSH levels. Here, contributions of age and gonadotrophin elevation were separately controlled using a mouse model of human female reproductive aging. Ovulated oocytes were collected from young and midlife mice after 0-, 2.

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Immunocytochemical (ICC) techniques are frequently used in basic and clinical research. Here, we focus on the importance of using antisera/antibodies at optimal dilutions to achieve specificity and reduce costs. Unfortunately, the basic principle, the necessity to test method specificity of the staining by a series of increasing dilutions of primary antiserum/antibodies, is only occasionally seen in papers using ICC.

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Morphological and pharmacological studies indicate that hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) and proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons communicate with each other in rats and regulate a variety of hypothalamic and extrahypothalamic functions. Indeed, electron microscopic studies revealed NPY-immunoreactive (NPI-IR) synapses on β-endorphin-IR neurons in the hypothalamus. However, no such connections have been reported in humans.

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Neuropeptides participate in the regulation of numerous hypothalamic functions that are aimed for sustaining the homeostasis of the organism. These neuropeptides can act in two different levels. They can influence the release of hormones from the adenohypophysis via the portal circulation; in addition, they can act as neurotransmitters/neuromodulators modulating the functioning of numerous hypothalamic neurotransmitter systems.

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Substance P (SP) is a member of the tachykinin family. In the central nervous system, SP participates among others, in the regulation of pain, learning, memory, emotion, and sexual functions. In the periphery, SP affects the gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and urinary systems.

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Menopause affects the quality of life of millions of women. With modern lifespan the postmenopausal attenuation of circulating estrogen levels can negatively impact a women's life for 30-40 years. The major hypoestrogenic consequence is hot flushes but decline in cognitive function, sleep disorders, depression/anxiety, cardiovascular disease, and osteoporosis are also characteristic for the menopause.

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Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) has a critical role in the central regulation of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) from the anterior pituitary, and subsequently, thyroid hormone secretion from the thyroid gland. In addition to its role in the regulation of HPT axis, TRH is a potent regulator of prolactin (PRL) secretion by stimulating PRL secretion either directly from lactotrophs or indirectly via its action on the tuberoinfundibular dopamine (TIDA) neurons. In rodents, the TRH neurons which regulate TSH and thyroid hormone secretion, called hypophysiotropic TRH neurons, are in the medial subdivision of the parvicellular paraventricular nucleus (PVN).

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Hot flushes are best-known for affecting menopausal women, but men who undergo life-saving castration due to androgen-sensitive prostate cancer also suffer from these vasomotor symptoms. Estrogen deficiency in these patients is a direct consequence of androgen deprivation, because estrogens (notably 17β-estradiol, E) are produced from testosterone. Although estrogens alleviate hot flushes in these patients, they also cause adverse systemic side effects.

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Substance P is an undecapeptide affecting the gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and urinary systems. In the central nervous system, substance P participates in the regulation of pain, learning, memory, and sexual homeostasis. In addition to these effects, previous papers provided solid evidence that substance P exhibits regulatory effects on growth.

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Substance P is an eleven-amino acid neuropeptide (undecapeptide) with multiple effects on the gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and urinary systems as well as complex central nervous system functions such as pain, learning, memory, and sexual homeostasis. Previous studies also revealed that substance P exhibits regulatory effects on growth possibly via influencing hypothalamic GHRH release in human. However, the morphological substrate of this phenomenon has not been elucidated yet.

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Post mortem examination of the hypothalamus of a 79-year-old woman, deceased in cardiac arrest without recorded neurological symptoms, revealed well-defined spherical protrusions located rostro-laterally to the mammillary bodies that appear to be regular size when compared to normal. Cytoarchitectonically, these accessory mammillary bodies are formed by the enlarged lateral mammillary nucleus that is normally a thin shell over the medial. The mammillary nuclei appear to function synergistically in memory formation in rats; however, the functional consequences of the present variation are difficult to interpret due to lack of human data.

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Embryonic neurodevelopment involves inhibition of proliferation of multipotent neural stem cells (NSCs) followed by differentiation into neurons, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes to form the brain. We have identified a new neurotrophic factor, NF-α1, which inhibits proliferation and promotes differentiation of NSC/progenitors derived from E13.5 mouse cortex.

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It is a general consensus that stress is one of the major factors that suppresses growth. Previous studies revealed that the catecholaminergic and neuropeptide Y (NPY) systems, involved in the activation of stress-related neuronal circuits, influence growth hormone (GH)-release via modulating growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) secretion. Indeed, catecholaminergic and NPY-immunoreactive (IR) axon varicosities abut on the surface of the GHRH neurons forming contacts.

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Estrogen deprivation has a profound effect on the female brain. One of the most obvious examples of this condition is hot flushes. Although estrogens relieve these typical climacteric symptoms, many women do not want to take them owing to unwanted side-effects impacting, for example, the uterus, breast and blood.

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Women of advanced maternal age (AMA) (age ≥ 35) have increased rates of infertility, miscarriages, and trisomic pregnancies. Collectively these conditions are called "egg infertility." A root cause of egg infertility is increased rates of oocyte aneuploidy with age.

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Many neurological and psychiatric maladies originate from the deprivation of the human brain from estrogens. However, current hormone therapies cannot be used safely to treat these conditions commonly associated with menopause because of detrimental side effects in the periphery. The latter also prevents the use of the hormone for neuroprotection.

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Somatostatin is a 14-28 amino acid peptide that is located not only in the gastrointestinal system but also in multiple sites of the human brain. The inhibitory effect of somatostatin on the growth hormone (GH) secretion of the pituitary gland is a well-established phenomenon. There is a general consensus that somatostatin is released into the hypophysial portal blood and modulates GH secretion by hormonal action.

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Objective: An increase in the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and/or serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) to relieve menopausal hot flashes (HFs) has been observed recently. However, response to them has been heterogeneous. We hypothesized that this heterogeneity might be partially attributed to genetic variations in genes encoding the serotonin and/or norepinephrine transporters (SLC6A4 and SLC6A2).

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Women experience a series of specific transitions in their reproductive function with age. Shortening of the menstrual cycle begins in the mid to late 30s and is regarded as the first sign of reproductive aging. Other early changes include elevation and increased variance of serum FSH levels, increased incidences of oocyte spindle aberrations and aneuploidy, and declining fertility.

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Although it is a general consensus that opioids modulate growth, the mechanism of this phenomenon is largely unknown. Since endogenous opiates use the same receptor family as morphine, these peptides may be one of the key regulators of growth in humans by impacting growth hormone (GH) secretion, either directly, or indirectly, via growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) release. However, the exact mechanism of this regulation has not been elucidated yet.

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Prolonged chronic stress causing elevated plasma glucocorticoids leads to neurodegeneration. Adaptation to stress (allostasis) through neuroprotective mechanisms can delay this process. Studies on hippocampal neurons have identified carboxypeptidase E (CPE) as a novel neuroprotective protein that acts extracellularly, independent of its enzymatic activity, although the mechanism of action is unclear.

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