Publications by authors named "Rerup C"

Helodermin is a vasoactive intestinal peptide-like peptide in the salivary gland venom of the lizard Heloderma suspectum. Helodermin-like immunofluorescence was observed in the parafollicular (C) cells in several mammals and in the C cell homologues of the chicken ultimobranchial gland. Thus, helodermin-like peptides coexist with calcitonin.

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Whereas the phosphorolytic breakdown of liver glycogen is known to be of great physiological importance, the functional role of the hydrolytic glycogenolysis in the lysosomal system is less well understood. In the present study the effects of fasting, alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor antagonism and insulin-induced hypoglycaemia on liver lysosomal glycogen-hydrolysing enzyme activity were investigated in mice. In freely fed mice the glycogen-hydrolysing activity (acid amyloglucosidase) was only 50% of the maltose-hydrolysing activity (acid maltase).

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The kinetics of free and hormone bound blood iodine after stimulation with endogenous thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) are not satisfactorily characterized. We studied these kinetics in mice injected with 125I and thyroxine. In control mice, the injected 125I is organified within the thyroid and incorporated into thyroid hormones, whereas in mice treated with the thyreostatic drug propylthiouracil (PTU), most 125I remains inorganic, since the thyroperoxidase activity is inhibited by PTU.

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Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the thyroid has a dual localization to nerve fibers around blood vessels and follicles and to parafollicular (C) cells. CGRP was found to coexist with substance P (SP) in most of the nerve fibers; a few CGRP fibers seemed to lack SP, and a few SP fibers seemed to be devoid of CGRP. In the C cells, CGRP coexisted with calcitonin (CT).

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Peptide histidine isoleucine amide (PHI) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) are fragments of the same precursor molecule, prepro-VIP, and coexistence of the two peptides is, therefore, to be expected. Nerve fibers displaying PHI and VIP immunoreactivity occurred around blood vessels and follicles in the thyroid gland of several species. Sequential staining with antibodies against PHI and VIP revealed coexistence of the two peptides in the same population of nerve cell bodies in ganglia situated along the laryngeal nerves and in intrathyroid nerve fibers.

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Nerve fibers displaying neuropeptide Y (NPY) immunoreactivity occurred around blood vessels and follicles in the thyroid gland of several mammals, including man. Removal of the superior cervical ganglia or chemical sympathectomy (6-hydroxydopamine treatment) markedly reduced the number of NPY-containing nerve fibers in the thyroid and eliminated norepinephrine-containing fibers. NPY-immunoreactive nerve cell bodies were numerous in the superior cervical ganglia of mouse, rat, and guinea pig.

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The effects of various beta-adrenoceptor agents on radioiodine release from the thyroid were studied in mice pretreated with 125I and thyroxine. The non-selective beta-adrenoceptor agonist isopropylnoradrenaline and the selective beta 2-adrenoceptor agonist terbutaline both, and with the same efficacy, enhanced radioiodine release, whereas the selective beta 1-adrenoceptor agonist prenalterol had no such effect. The non-selective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist L-propranolol and the selective beta 2-adrenoceptor antagonist ICI 118,551 both abolished the radioiodine release induced by isopropylnoradrenaline or by terbutaline.

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The purgative effect of bisacodyl, anthraquinone glycosides (Cascara), and sodium picosulfate, alone or in combination with a saline purge and a tap water enema, was studied in 1200 patients. The cleansing effect was scored with regard to retained fecal residue evident on double-contrast studies of the colon. The combination of a contact laxative and a saline purge produced good cleansing effect in 52%-80% of the patients.

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Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) is known to have powerful effects on the secretion from several endocrine and exocrine glands, and occurs in nerves with a ubiquitous distribution in the body. This infers that neuronal VIP may be a regulator of such secretion, and there is evidence that it is involved in the regulation of exocrine pancreatic function. Previous studies have shown that adrenergic and cholinergic nerves participate in the regulation of thyroid hormone secretion.

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The influence of food intake on the bioavailability of a frequently used short-acting sulfonamide, sulfaisomidine (Elkosin), has been examined in eight healthy volunteers. The drug was administered as a single oral dose, both on an empty stomach and together with a standardized breakfast. Numerous venous blood samples were drawn for the first eight hours after ingestion of the drug, and the concentration of unmetabolized sulfonamide in serum was assessed by spectrophotometry.

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Serum growth hormone was significantly higher in rats fed on a non-protein than on a 25% casein diet. In both dietary groups, hypophysectomy provoked a decrease in the RNA/DNA ratio of the liver, and, especially in the protein-deprived rats, a decrease in the RNA synthesis per liver cell, measured as the product of the RNA/DNA ratio, and the ratio of specific RNA activity to specific nucleotide activity, two hours after administration of [3H]orotic acid. In the protein-deprived rats, full reconstitution of these figures was obtained with a combination of growth hormone, hydrocortisone and triiodothyronine, but not quite with growth hormone alone.

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