Carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase deficiency is a newly recognized inborn error of metabolism that involves transport of long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria, which in turn impairs mitochondrial beta-oxidation, and ketogenesis. We report a new familial example; the affected twins had neonatal distress, hyperammonemia, and transient intracardiac conduction defects. Clinical and biochemical analysis of both our patients and the two previously reported patients revealed that this inherited defect could be manifested during the neonatal period without any of the signs classically associated with fatty oxidation defects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAliment Pharmacol Ther
August 1995
Background: The various components of pain and quality of life in duodenal ulcer patients receiving antisecretory drugs have not been studied to date.
Methods: Ninety-five patients with epigastric pain and duodenal ulcer at endoscopy completed this prospective, multicenter, open-study. All were treated with effervescent ranitidine 300 mg daily for 4 weeks.
A method based on the release of tritiated water from [9,10(n)-3H] palmitic and myristic acids previously described for fibroblasts, was adapted for lymphocytes for the rapid diagnosis of fatty acid oxidation disorders. Optimal concentrations for both substrates and linearity of the assay were established. Normal values were established in control subjects of different age groups (58 children and 117 adults) and 16 patients with known fatty acid oxidation disorders were tested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSomatostatin was discovered for its ability to inhibit growth hormone (GH) secretion. Later, it was found to be widely distributed in other brain regions, in which it fulfills a neuromodulatory role, and in several organs of the gastrointestinal tract where it can act as a paracrine factor or as a true circulating factor. In mammals, two molecules of 14 (somatostatin 14) and 28 (somatostatin 28) amino acids are the only biologically active members of the family.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe temporal pattern of distribution of somatostatin receptor was investigated using the somatostatin analogue [125I]Tyr0-DTrp8-somatostatin14 as a ligand and compared with that of somatostatin immunoreactivity during early developmental stages in the spinal cord and the sensory derivatives in rat fetuses. Qualitative and quantitative analysis showed that somatostatin receptors were detected in a transient manner. In the neural tube, they were clearly associated with immature premigratory cells and with the developing white matter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gynecol Obstet Biol Reprod (Paris)
September 1994
Objective: This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of antibiotic prophylaxy on decreasing the frequency of postoperative infections after cesarean sections performed in cases with no prior indication of a high risk of infection.
Methods: A prospective randomized study included 269 cesarean sections without a high risk of infection performed in the Maternity and Neonatology Ward of the Sousse Hospital from February 1991 to July 1991. The patients were randomly divided into two groups.
The present study was undertaken to determine whether the enkephalinergic hypothalamoseptal tract originating in the magnocellular dorsal nucleus in the guinea-pig brain is under the influence of somatostatin. In the first step, double immunocytochemical labeling of enkephalinergic cells and somatostatinergic fibers was combined at the light and electron microscopic levels in the magnocellular dorsal nucleus. As a second step, an in vitro radioautography was used to determine whether somatostatin receptors are present in the same area.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaintenance treatment of duodenal ulcer (DU) with ranitidine 150 mg/day was compared with placebo in a two year prospective multicentre randomised study. Three hundred and ninety nine patients were included (mean age: 44.7 years, M/F ratio = 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe regional brain distribution of 125I-somatostatin (SRIH) binding sites was determined by quantitative radioautography in neonatally monosodium glutamate (MSG) treated adult male rats, a procedure which selectively destroys most neurons of the arcuate nucleus. Neonatal MSG treatment did not modify the extrahypothalamic distribution of 125I-SRIH-binding sites. In contrast, the number of 125I-SRIH-labeled cells in the ventrolateral part of the arcuate nucleus was strongly reduced in MSG-treated animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeficiency of the enzymes of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation and related carnitine dependent steps have been shown to be one of the causes of the fasting-induced hypoketotic hypoglycemia. We describe here carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase deficiency in a neonate who died eight days after birth. The proband showed severe fasting-induced hypoketotic hypoglycemia, high plasma creatine kinase, heartbeat disorder, hypothermia, and hyperammonemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe adenohypophysis contains high-affinity binding sites for antidiabetic sulfonylureas that are specific blockers of ATP-sensitive K+ channels. The binding protein has a M(r) of 145,000 +/- 5000. The presence of ATP-sensitive K+ channels (26 pS) has been demonstrated by electrophysiological techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroendocrinology
August 1992
Somatostatin receptors on lactotroph cells of the anterior pituitary are positively regulated by estradiol. In the present work, we investigated whether estradiol regulation of somatostatin receptors also occurred in the female rat brain. 125I-Tyr0-DTrp8-somatostatin (125I-SRIF: 780 Ci/mM) was used as a ligand.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe hepatic asialoglycoprotein receptor is the first studied mammalian lectin. Modulations in vivo by diabetes and in vitro by the carboxylic ionophore monensin gave rise to similar apparent alterations on its biosynthesis, structure and ligand binding capacity. In normal rats, the receptor (whether purified by ligand or antibody-affinity chromatography) presented a similar pattern in SDS-PAGE analysis, with a major 42-kDa band and two minor ones (49 and 52-54 kDa).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present work we characterized the kinetic properties of [125I]somatostatin pericellular binding sites in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus of the rat by quantitative high-resolution light microscopic radioautography. In order to determine whether these pericellular binding sites corresponded to functional receptors, their properties were compared with those of previously well-characterized [125I]somatostatin binding sites present on neuronal processes on the same sections in the stratum radiatum of the CA1 of the hippocampus. Radiolabelled sections were analysed by densitometry using a Biocom image analysis system coupled with a Leitz orthoplan microscope.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing in vitro quantitative autoradiography and [125I]Tyr0-D-Trp8SRIF 14 as radioligand, we characterized the detailed distribution of somatostatin binding sites in human hypothalamus of both infants and adults. Guanosine triphosphate pretreatment, before incubation, allowed us to detect higher [125I]Tyr0-D-Trp8SRIF 14 binding site densities in hypothalamic structures such as preoptic and anterior hypothalamic areas and ventromedial and dorsomedial nuclei. In contrast, guanosine triphosphate was without effect in the other hypothalamic regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo peptides that have been previously colocalized in the gonadotrops (LeuEnkephalin with LH and ACTH with FSH) can stimulate the release of gonadotropins in primary culture of anterior pituitary cells. In presence of both substances, and in contrast to LHRH induced secretion, the augmentation of LH release is never dose dependent. It is always significantly higher than controls, for high (10(-6) M) or low concentrations (10(-12) M).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe metabolic turnover of the Hepatic Binding Protein (HBP) was investigated in streptozotocin-diabetic rats. We have already shown that diabetes induced a decreased ligand binding capacity while the immunoreactive HBP was normal. To explore the eventual modifications due to diabetic state upon the turnover of HBP, we followed the in vivo degradation of HBP and its biosynthesis in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present work, we have characterized by film radioautography the effects of divalent cations and guanine nucleotide on specific receptor for somatostatin (SRIF) using 125I-TyrO-DTrp8-SRIF14 (125I-ToD8-SRIF) as a ligand. The experiments were performed on coronal 20-microM-thick sections cut at the level of the amygdala, thus allowing to study binding sites in several regions enriched in binding sites (frontal cortex, hippocampus CA1 and dentate gyrus, habenula, basolateral nucleus of the amygdala). In a preliminary set of experiments using brain cortical membranes it was found that 3 mM Mg2+ ions doubled the specific binding of 125I-ToD8-SRIF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe number of cell surface and total asialoglycoprotein receptors was investigated in normal and diabetic rat hepatocytes using 2 methods: ligand and polyclonal antibody binding. An identical number of immunoreactive receptors was found in both types of cells, while the ligand binding activity of cell surface receptors was reduced by 58% in diabetic rats compared with normal ones, or by 33% for total cell receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevention of testosterone aromatization in the female rat pups by perinatal treatment with 1,4,6 androstatriene-3,17-dione (ATD) induces an important defeminization as shown by a reduction of fluctuations of LH release after castration and estradiol implantation. The fact that, under our in vitro experimental conditions, ATD is able to displace testosterone binding in the hypothalamus whereas estradiol does not, confirms the hypothesis that ATD acts on aromatase. The most attractive explanation for the defeminization effect of ATD is then an estrogen-like action of ATD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreasing concentrations of LHRH or its active analog des-gly10 (D-ala6) LHRH induced a bimodal pattern of FSH and LH release from incubated male rat pituitaries. A low amplitude response (40% increase of LH over baseline levels) was observed for concentrations of LHRH and the agonist in the range of 10(-12) and 10(-13) M respectively. After a plateau of gonadotropin stimulation, a further high amplitude response (180-240% increase over baseline levels) occurred between 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTestosterone secretion in the male rat was high during the late fetal and immediate postnatal periods. It then showed a rapid decrease 3h after birth and remained low until puberty. Male rats from mothers given daily injections of an antibody to testosterone during the week before delivery displayed an LH peak when they were adult, orchidectomized and implanted with oestradiol.
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