Ecdysteroids are not endogenous to mammals, but are normal components of the food intake of many mammalian species consuming phytoecdysteroid-containing plants. The most frequently encountered phytoecdysteroid is 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E). Several pharmaceutical effects have been observed after ecdysteroid injection or ingestion, but it is not clear to what extent metabolites generated in the mammalian body contribute to these effects. The C21-ecdysteroid poststerone (Post) is a metabolite of 20E in rodents. Post analogues are key intermediates in the metabolism of exogenous ecdysteroids possessing a C20/22-diol. The pharmacokinetics, bioavailability and metabolism of Post have been assessed in male rats after ingestion and injection. The bioavailability of Post is significantly greater than that of 20E and the presence of an efficient entero-hepatic cycle allows Post to be effectively metabolised to a wide range of metabolites which are excreted mainly in the faeces, but also to some extent in the urine. Several of the major metabolites in the bile have been identified unambiguously as 3-epi-poststerone, 16α-hydroxypoststerone, 21-hydroxypoststerone and 3-epi-21-hydroxypoststerone. Conjugates are also present. Parallels are drawn to the metabolism of endogenous vertebrate steroid hormones, to which Post bears more similarity than 20E.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsbmb.2021.105897 | DOI Listing |
Shock
January 2025
The University of Alabama, Birmingham, Department of Surgery and Center for Injury Science, Division of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, Birmingham, AL.
Introduction: Trauma and hemorrhagic shock (T/HS) are associated with multiple organ injury. Antithrombin (AT) has anti-inflammatory and organ protective activity through its interaction with endothelial heparan sulfate containing a 3-O-sulfate modification. Our objective was to examine the effects of T/HS on 3-O-sulfated (3-OS) heparan sulfate expression and determine whether AT-heparan sulfate interactions are necessary for its anti-inflammatory properties.
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January 2025
Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Research, HUN-REN Institute of Experimental Medicine, Budapest, Hungary.
Rewards are essential for motivation, decision-making, memory, and mental health. We identified the subventricular tegmental nucleus (SVTg) as a brainstem reward center. In mice, reward and its prediction activate the SVTg, and SVTg stimulation leads to place preference, reduced anxiety, and accumbal dopamine release.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
Department of Biochemistry, College of Medicine, Shihezi University, Shihezi, Xinjiang, China.
Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are among the most abundant types of non-coding RNAs in the genome and exhibit particularly high expression levels in the brain, where they play crucial roles in various neurophysiological and neuropathological processes. Although ischemic stroke is a complex multifactorial disease, the involvement of brain-derived lncRNAs in its intricate regulatory networks remains inadequately understood. In this study, we established a cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury model using middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in male Sprague-Dawley rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: One of the principles of prevention and non-drug treatment of liver diseases, including hepatitis of various etiologies, is the normalization of the diet, including the use of daily diet foods with physiologically active ingredients, in particular betulin, which helps to reduce metabolic and oxidative processes within liver cells. The aim of the work was to evaluate the in vivo effect of triterpene alcohol betulin Roth isolated from the bark of birch Betula pendula Roth. added to fat-containing products (for example, mayonnaise) on the biochemical parameters of blood and the morphological structure of the liver of rats with initiated acute toxic hepatitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDokl Biochem Biophys
January 2025
I.M. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia.
Graves' disease is caused by overactivation of the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR). One approach for its treatment may be the use of negative allosteric modulators (NAM) of TSHR, which normalize TSHR activity and do not cause thyroid hormone (TH) deficiency. The aim of the work was to study the effect of a new compound 5-amino-4-(4-bromophenyl)-2-(methylthio)thieno[2,3-d]pyrimidine-6-carboxylic acid N-tert-butylamide (TPY4) on the basal and TSH-stimulated TH production in cultured FRTL-5 thyrocytes and on basal and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH)-stimulated TH levels in the blood of rats.
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